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Tue, 19 Oct 2021
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Red Flag

USDA moves to approve "Agent Orange" GMO seeds

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© Peter Wynn Thompson / The New York Times
Jody Herr, who believes his tomato field has been poisoned by 2,4-D, the powerful herbicide that was an ingredient in Agent Orange, the Vietnam War defoliant, in a field that he farms in Lowell, Indiana, April 17, 2012.
The US Department of Agriculture is leaning toward approving varieties of corn and soybean seeds that are genetically engineered to be resistant to several herbicides, including the controversial chemical known as 2,4-D.

Dow Chemical developed the genetically engineered seeds with the brand name Enlist to address the growing problem of "superweeds" that have become resistant to Monsanto's Roundup herbicide. Roundup is widely used on genetically engineered crops, which are also known as genetically modified organisms, or GMOs.

Dow claims that Enlist seeds will give farmers an important tool to fight weeds, but pesticide critics and independent researchers say that 2,4-D is linked to health problems. Fighting resistant weeds with tougher chemicals, critics say, is not a sustainable solution to the challenges of modern agriculture.

Just before the start of the weekend January 3, 2014, the USDA released a draft environmental impact statement on the genetically engineered corn and soy seeds, which have been under a strict review since 2011 because of pressure from organic farmers and activists who are concerned about widespread use of 2,4-D. The USDA found that the GMO seeds do not pose a "plant pest risk," and the agency is expected to approve the seeds for general use.

Red Flag

Don't drink the water: Chemical spill contaminates tap water in West Virginia

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Up to 300,000 people in West Virginia have been banned from using tap water after a chemical spill in a river, which has also forced schools, bars and restaurants to close.

The state's governor has declared a state of emergency in nine counties following the industrial leak, leading to queues for bottled water. Locals are reporting that stores are running dry, and people are fighting over the bottles that are available.

Residents in a growing number of affected areas have been told not to drink, wash or cook with the tap water and only use it for flushing toilets.

Laura Jordan, external affairs manager for West Virginia American Water, said: "It could be potentially harmful if swallowed and could potentially cause skin and eye irritation."

The spill of 4-Methylcyclohexane Methanol, a chemical used in the coal industry, into the Elk River happened above a water treatment plant in Charleston - the largest in West Virginia - and affects 100,000 homes and businesses.

Heart - Black

Study: Aspartame linked to blood cancers

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© Owall.net
A new human study shows that aspartame use is linked to increased risk of leukemia, non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), and multiple myeloma in men.

A newly published long term study that spans 22 years shows that drinking one or more aspartame-sweetened soft drinks per day increases the risk of several blood cancers in men.

The study was led by Dr. Eva S. Schernhammer of the Channing Division of Network Medicine, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School in Boston.

Men who consumed one or more aspartame-sweetened sodas per day had an increased risk of NHL and multiple myeloma, compared to men who didn't drink diet soda. There was no increased risk of these cancers in women.

There was also an increased risk of NHL with a high use of sugar-sweetened soda in men. When data on aspartame-sweetened soda for both men and women was combined, an increased risk of leukemia was observed.

This study was published in The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. Some researchers claim the data is too weak to implicate aspartame as a cause of these cancers.

Comment:

Aspartame linked to leukemia and lymphoma: only one diet soda per day significantly increases risks


Syringe

Why is the CDC ignoring explosion of Recorded HPV Vaccine injuries, as other countries move to take protective action?

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Last month (December 2013), Katie Couric's popular daytime television show aired an episode on "The HPV Controversy." Both sides of the controversy were represented, but the show was widely criticized in the mainstream media for simply suggesting there was a controversy. Vaccine damaged families were interviewed (watch the interviews here), but according to the medical community, Gardasil and the HPV vaccine are completely safe.

So Katie Couric issued what was basically an apology and then aired a follow-up show which featured the one-sided standard government position, with an interview of Dr. Anne Schuchat, Assistant Surgeon General and Director of the CDC's National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases.

Dressed in military attire, the whole interview was basically an appeal to authority: Trust us, we are the authorities, and we know what's best.

Comment: See:
Lead developer of HPV vaccines comes clean, warns parents & young girls it's all a giant deadly scam


Smoking

Sugar health risk cannot be compared to smoking, says ignorant former secretary Andrew Lansley


Comment: No, sugar cannot be compared to tobacco because tobacco actually provides health benefits while sugar is deadly across the board. Obviously, this so-called "health secretary" is not up to speed on the research and thus should be totally ignored.


Andrew Lansley

Andrew Lansley. He doesn't look all that healthy himself, does he?
Health experts are wrong to claim that sugar is as dangerous as smoking, the former health secretary Andrew Lansley has said as he clashed with one of his old advisers on obesity.

The senior Conservative, now leader of the house, said people would not accept a rapid reduction in the sugar content of familiar foods, as he rejected calls from the Action on Sugar group for a 20% to 30% drop in the amount added to products.

Comment: And now the facts

- about sugar:

It's not just rotting teeth and obesity you're risking: from dementia to liver damage, the real toll of sugar
Sugar and your brain: Is Alzheimer's disease actually type 3 diabetes?
10 disturbing reasons WHY sugar is bad for you
Is sugar a drug? Addiction explained

- about tobacco:

The devious plan of anti-smoking campaigns to control people and stop them from using their brain
Smoke, Lies and the Nanny State
Let's All Light Up!
5 Health Benefits of Smoking
Nicotine Lessens Symptoms Of Depression In Nonsmokers
Nicotine helps Alzheimer's and Parkinson's Patients
Brain Researchers: Smoking increases intelligence


Beaker

Ancient cholera mysteriously disappeared

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© McMaster University
Preserved intestine from a cholera victim yielded the genome of the bacterium behind Philadelphia's 1849 epidemic.
Strains that plagued Europe and the United States in the nineteenth century were distinct from those prevalent today.

A deadly cholera outbreak gripped Philadelphia and other metropolises along the Eastern seaboard in early 1849, the second in 20 years. About 1,000 of the city's residents died as result of infection with the water-borne pathogen that year, a figure that might have been considerably higher were it not for a programme to wash the city's filthy streets with clean reservoir water. Now DNA isolated from the preserved 165-year-old intestine of a victim has yielded a complete genome sequence of the bacterium responsible - the first from a nineteeth-century strain of Vibrio cholerae.

The genome shows that most cholera strains in circulation today, known as El Tor, are genetically distinct from the 'classical' cholera that plagued European and North American cities in the nineteenth century, and was responsible for the 1849 outbreak in Philadelphia. (It would be five more years before the British physician John Snow showed that London's cholera was caused by water contaminated with faecal matter.)

Arrow Down

CDC not legally required to tell the truth about anything, including vaccines

Since the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) and the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) aren't legally required to tell the truth about anything, why should they? Maybe this is just one of many reasons the public is unaware of the many problems revolving around America's health system.
CDC
© Natural Society
The CDC is perhaps the most malicious in their information-twisting. Consider this recent upheaval about flu vaccinations. According to Dr. Peter Doshi in a British Medical Journal article review (BMJ 2013; 346:f3037):
". . .perhaps the cleverest aspect of the influenza marketing strategy surrounds the claim that 'flu' and 'influenza' are the same. The distinction seems subtle, and purely semantic. But general lack of awareness of the difference might be the primary reason few people realize that even the ideal influenza vaccine, matched perfectly to circulating strains of wild influenza and capable of stopping all influenza viruses, can only deal with a small part of the 'flu' problem because most 'flu' appears to have nothing to do with influenza. Every year, hundreds of thousands of respiratory specimens are tested across the US. Of those tested, on average 16% are found to be influenza positive."
So - if you didn't catch the significance of that - while the CDC is reporting flu outbreaks across the country and thus our need for vaccines, only a flu-virus would require a vaccine, and only a small percentage of 'flu' is actually 'flu.' Additionally, there are only a few strains of any particular flu virus in any vaccine created seasonally and there are hundreds of flu viruses. No wonder many people feel 'flu' vaccines don't work. It would be impossible for them to. Yet every year they publish a seasonal map with 'flu' outbreaks, which aren't even accurately reporting the situation.

Or consider the recent documents unearthed in the UK that reveal over 30 years of cover-up regarding the link between vaccine hazards and their ineffectiveness in preventing the diseases they are trying to control. The CDC isn't the only culprit, though.

Smoking

Study publishes smoker demographics: Smoking population has increased despite global anti-smoking campaign - Higher prevalence of smokers in Eurasia

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© JAMA
Since the surgeon general's report laid bare the health hazards from smoking 50 years ago, the proportion of Americans who smoke has fallen dramatically.

About 19 percent of adults smoke these days, compared with about 42% in 1965.

Smoking has become less prevalent in other countries, too, including Canada, Mexico and Iceland.

Overall, the prevalence of smoking has gone down worldwide over the past few decades. For men, smoking dropped 10 percentage points to 31 percent in 2012, from 41 percent in 1980. For women, it has been almost halved, falling from about 11 percent to 6 percent over the same period.

But that's not the case everywhere. So where is smoking still common?

Comment: These smoker demographics, without intending it of course, may have uncovered something very interesting about Eurasian resistance to fascism...


Attention

Confirmed: DNA From GMOs can be transferred into humans who eat them

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"Based on the analysis of over 1000 human samples from four independent studies, we report evidence that meal-derived DNA fragments which are large enough to carry complete genes can avoid degradation and through an unknown mechanism enter the human circulation system." - Spisák S et al. (2013) Complete Genes May Pass from Food to Human Blood. PLoS ONE 8(7): e69805. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0069805
In a new study published in the peer reviewed Public Library of Science (PLOS), researchers emphasize that there is sufficient evidence that meal-derived DNA fragments carry complete genes that can enter into the human circulation system through an unknown mechanism. (0) I wonder if the scientists at these biotech corporations have already identified this method? In one of the blood samples the relative concentration of plant DNA is higher than the human DNA. The study was based on the analysis of over 1000 human samples from four independent studies. PLOS is an open access, well respected peer-reviewed scientific journal that covers primary research from disciplines within science and medicine. It's great to see this study published in it, confirming what many have been suspecting for years.

When it comes to genetically modified crops and foods, we really have no idea of what the long term effects will be on the public. The very first commercial sale of genetically modified foods was only twenty years ago in the year 1994. There is no possible way that our health authorities can test all possible combinations on a large enough population, over a long enough period of time to be able to say with certainty that they are harmless. Geneticist David Suzuki recently expressed his concern, saying that human beings are part of a "massive genetic experiment" over many years, as thousands of people continue to consume GMO's, and it makes sense.

Smoking

Despite worldwide anti-smoking propaganda campaign, the percentage of people who smoke appears to be increasing

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Stop me
Despite a steep drop in the number of smokers in the United States over the last three decades, researchers say that cigarettes remain a growth industry for the rest of the world because of expanding population.

In a package of studies published online Tuesday in the Journal of the American Medical Association, researchers found that the total number of world smokers with a pack-a-day habit had "increased significantly."

Even though the global smoking rate has declined since 1980 by roughly 25 percent for men and 42 percent for women, the total number of smokers has grown from 721 million to 967 million. The total number of cigarettes consumed annually has risen from 4.96 trillion to 6.25 trillion.

"The number of smokers has increased steadily worldwide, and there are preliminary indications that global prevalence among men increased in recent years," wrote lead study author Marie Ng, a world health statistician at the University of Washington, and her colleagues.

The studies in JAMA were published to mark the 50th anniversary of the U.S. surgeon general's first report on smoking, a landmark document that first laid out the health dangers of the habit.

Comment: The real tug of war is between people who submit to government propaganda and those who resist tyranny.

The main goal of tobacco smoking bans is "to change societal behavior" by stigmatizing smoking, making it less convenient and less socially acceptable. By raising the stakes, it helped transform a complaint into a right, so that people annoyed by tobacco smoke now felt justified in demanding that it be eliminated everywhere they might want to go, including other people's property.

In short, they have conditioned the majority of the people on the planet to behave like Nazis and think it is normal.

See also:

The devious plan of anti-smoking campaigns to control people and stop them from using their brain

Let's All Light Up!

5 Health Benefits of Smoking

Nicotine Lessens Symptoms Of Depression In Nonsmokers

Nicotine helps Alzheimer's and Parkinson's Patients

Brain Researchers: Smoking increases intelligence