Health & Wellness
The plant-based burger company called regenerative grazing the "clean coal of meat" in a recent report. That hasn't gone over well amongst carbon ranchers.
Rancher Will Harris says he was "stunned" when he got wind last week that Impossible Foods, the makers of the plant-based Impossible Burger, called regenerative grazing "the 'clean coal' of meat" in their 2019 Impact Report.
Speaking by phone from White Oak Pastures, his 153-year-old farm in Bluffton, Georgia, Harris said, "I think there were many mis-truths in that attack."
The feud is the latest in an ongoing discussion about whether regenerative meat production and high-tech plant-based alternatives can co-exist. And for holistically managed animal operations like Harris's, the suggestion that all meat production should be seen as having the same impact on the environment constitutes a battle cry.
There are three main ways in which vaccines can sometimes cause harm to some individuals.
One is the presence in some vaccines of preservatives to protect against contamination by bacteria. Being toxic to bacteria, they can also be toxic to higher forms of life. A commonly used preservative, thimerosal, is a mercury-containing organic substance, and organic-mercury compounds are indeed often toxic to human beings.
Comment: Professor Bauerr is taking a 'middle of the road' stance on the vaccine issue, while addressing 'possible harm' that cause concern. It should be noted that there is much more to consider when in comes to whether or not one should get vaccinated. Read the following for more information:
- The greatest medical controversy of our time: Vaccines, are they safe & effective?
- It's time to put the vaccine sacred cow out to pasture
- Vaccine safety: How much do we really know?
- The U.S. Congress is "Out to Lunch" about vaccine science
- Adult vaccine schedule: More shots mean more illness and more deaths
- Saying 'No' to Vaccines? What to expect from your doctor
On June 21, a consumer interest group issued concerns around one of the ingredients in Beyond Meat's production process. And earlier in June, the World Health Organization said that eating heme — a main ingredient in the Impossible Foods burger — is linked with the formation of carcinogens in the gut.
Comment: All this discussion of customer perception and acceptance really comes down to how to get people to incorporate poisoned propaganda into their psyches in order to change their behavior. Plant-based meats are genetically modified lab-created food-like substances - they're not food. Getting people to consider them food, rather than follow their own instincts, requires some master-level manipulation. Resist the putsch.
See also:
- Rat feeding study suggests the Impossible Burger may not be safe to eat
- Impossible Burger attacks Moms Across America for publishing glyphosate results
- GMO-derived Impossible Burger uses deceptive marketing to promote it's product at the world's largest 'natural food' trade show
- The Meat-Guilt Industry: The Quest For The Perfect Veggie Burger Can't Remove The Taste of Lies
- Impossible foods: The lab-grown meat industry just got the regulatory oversight it's been begging for
The study, led by researchers from the University of Liverpool, involved a detailed analysis of five key chapters of the latest edition of the widely used Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM), on 'schizophrenia', 'bipolar disorder', 'depressive disorders', 'anxiety disorders' and 'trauma-related disorders'.
Diagnostic manuals such as the DSM were created to provide a common diagnostic language for mental health professionals and attempt to provide a definitive list of mental health problems, including their symptoms.
The main findings of the research were:
Comment: See also:
- Sidetracked by Dabrowski: An introduction to the Theory of Positive Disintegration
- 'Dozens of mental disorders don't exist' and DSM-5 is 'a fiction,' of ideology, U.S. therapist claims ahead of World Mental Health Day
- Inside the DSM: The Drug Barons' Campaign to Make Us All Crazy
- Meet the DSM: Big Pharma's Psychiatric Bible
- The Truth Perspective: Dabrowski's theory of positive disintegration
- The Truth Perspective: Diving Into the Collective Unconscious: Where Jung Went Wrong
- The Truth Perspective: Lord of the Underworld: The Secret Life of Carl Jung

Experts have said the escalation was 'unexpected' and should serve as a reminder to the World Health Organization to declare a global emergency. Pictured, an Ebola treatment centre, Beni
The victim is a pastor who had arrived in the city by bus after visiting Butembo, a town around 200miles (320km) north in the centre of the outbreak.
He had been preaching at a church where he would have touched worshippers 'including the sick', the country's health ministry said on Sunday.
Authorities have urged people to remain calm after the government said the chances of the virus spreading were 'low'.
But tensions are high and two health workers were murdered in their homes over the weekend.
Experts have said the escalation was 'unexpected' and should serve as a reminder to the World Health Organization to declare a global emergency.
In this, the second worst outbreak in history, 1,665 people have died from Ebola since August last year.
Comment: More on Ebola and the outbreak in DRC:
- Ebola "popping up unexpectedly and proving impossible to control"
- Congo: Ebola vaccine being offered in exchange for sex, says taskforce
- Ebola - The true vaccine is knowledge of current state of affairs
- Vitamin C - A cure for Ebola
- New Light on the Black Death: The Viral and Cosmic Connection

Jerome Jester Jr., 31, died on March 17 this year on a short vacation to the Dominican Republic with his sister
Jerome Jester Jr. of Forsyth, Georgia, died on March 17 this year just a day after going sightseeing in the Caribbean nation, according to his family.
The 31-year-old had been on vacation with his sister, who called for an ambulance after he started having difficulty breathing.
Jester's sister told ABC News: 'He just dropped to his knees and started throwing up blood, and was calling for Mama.'
Jester's sister said he was vomiting blood before she called an ambulance and he later died
His mother Melody Moore told WSB-TV-2 she spoke to him the day before he died.
In fact, I found so many cases as I was doing research for this article that I had to simply stop reading at one point or I would have never gotten this article done in time. So in this article I will be sharing quite a few examples with you, but it is far from an exhaustive list.
Let's start with a Tennessee man that was just killed by flesh-eating bacteria after a trip to the Florida panhandle. This is what his daughter had to say about his death...
"About 4:00 a.m. Saturday morning, 12 hours after we were in the water, he woke up with a fever, chills and some cramping. ... They got to the hospital in Memphis around 8 p.m.," Wiygul said in the post. "They took him back immediately. As they were helping him get changed into his hospital gown they saw this terribly swollen black spot on his back that was not there before."That is how fast flesh-eating disease can kill you. If it is not treated immediately, there is a good chance you will die.
The man's condition worsened over the next several hours. His immune system had been weakened by a bout with cancer, the daughter said, and he died Sunday afternoon.
Comment: Outbreaks like this appear to be increasing all over the planet:
- Man dies from flesh-eating bacteria after swimming in Florida
- Rare flesh-eating STD discovered in Lancashire, UK
- 6 children dead after outbreak of life-threatening virus strain at New Jersey health facility - UPDATE: death toll now at 11
- Australia flesh-eating ulcer 'epidemic' a mystery, say doctors
- Alabama health officials warn of flesh-eating bacteria throughout the state
- Brain-eating amoeba found in Louisiana water system - Again
- Necrotizer: A deadly flesh-eating bacteria infects 525 in Japan
The Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) Cardiology published the article titled Fear-Based Medical Misinformation and Disease Prevention From Vaccines to Statins. The author, who receives research support to her institution from several drug companies, writes "While headlines shine the spotlight on vaccine refusal, the same fake medical news and fearmongering also plague the cardiovascular world through relentless attacks on statins."
William Bennett died after visiting his daughter Cheryl Bennett Wiygul in Florida last week. They swam in a number of different bodies of water, including a beach in Destin, then at Turkey Creek and at a swamp in Boggy Bayou.
Cheryl had heard reports of people becoming infected by the flesh-eating bacteria in the state and ensured her father took extra precautions, as he had previously suffered from cancer and could have a compromised immune system.
Comment: Whilst this man appears to have been vulnerable, outbreaks of all kinds appear to be on the rise all over the planet:
- Rare flesh-eating STD discovered in Lancashire, UK
- 6 children dead after outbreak of life-threatening virus strain at New Jersey health facility - UPDATE: death toll now at 11
- Australia flesh-eating ulcer 'epidemic' a mystery, say doctors
- US: 1 Dead, 164 sickened in ongoing turkey salmonella outbreak, 35 states affected
- Necrotizer: A deadly flesh-eating bacteria infects 525 in Japan
Start the day off with a piece of toast, a bit of margarine and jam, and a glass of fresh orange juice? Definitely not, says the cancer researcher David Harper.
The kinesiology professor hasn't eaten toast in more than six years: He started following a high-fat, low-carb ketogenic diet strategy in 2013, and he says he's never looked back.
Harper says both he and his wife, Dale Drewery, rely on fat to power them through the day.
"I eat full-fat cream in everything," Harper told Business Insider, adding that he consumed lots of nuts and seeds, green beans, "organ meats" like liver, and up to a dozen eggs each week.













Comment: Impossible Burger is pushing hard to get consumers to Ditch nature in favor of fake food