Michael Pollan: Cooking for yourself is the real independence
New Seattle law: No food in trash
(Seattle Pi) Starting Jan. 1, it will be illegal to throw food and food waste in the trash in Seattle, when a new ban takes effect to increase recycling and composting in the city.
Currently, Seattle residents are allowed to throw food and food waste – pizza boxes, dirty napkins, soiled paper towels – in the garbage. Residents are required to have a food and yard waste collection service, but they don't have to use it for food. (Backyard composters are exempt from that requirement.)
Similarly, multi-family building owners are required to provide a compost collection service for residents, but residents don't have to use it.
But on Jan. 1, Seattle will ban food and food waste in trash.
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composting,
law,
Seattle,
trash
Nanocolloidal Detox Factors may help remove heavy metals from the body
The secret to successful detoxification
According to the Simon Clinic in the U.K., NDF removes heavy metals through a process called Mucopolysaccharide Ion Exchange Resin (MIER). The nanonized chlorella in NDF bonds with toxic metals without stripping the body of essential minerals, like zinc and magnesium. NDF also crosses the blood brain barrier (unlike traditional drug chelators such as DMPS, DMSA and EDTA), which effectively detoxes heavy metals from the central nervous system. Nanocolloidal Detox Factors can be used daily, and safely eliminates up to 920 percent more metals per month than conventional chelators. Another unique feature of NDF is that it removes 95 percent of metals through the urine, instead of through the bowel, thereby protecting against reabsorption in the colon.
GMOs encourage weight gain and obesity, researchers discover
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GMOs,
obesity,
weight gain
Kick influenza and colds to the curb with garlic
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cold remedy,
garlic,
influenza
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