Breast cancer awareness grande dame Susan G. Komen claims organic food may be harmful




(MassReport) Before we start, let me give you a little bit of background information on Susan G. Komen. Komen is an organization that emerged in 1982 who’s mission was to fight breast cancer. In fact, their original name was “The Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation”. Since 1982, they have donated over $1 billion dollars to breast cancer awareness, support, and research programs. They’re even responsible for the famous pink ribbon logo you see everywhere during breast cancer awareness month.

A hug a day … boosts your immune system


By David R. Hamilton PhD

I’ve written about hugs in some past blogs and books, in particular about how they produce the hormone oxytocin, which is good for the heart. I coined the term, ‘A hug a day keeps the cardiologist away’. I love hugs so I couldn’t wait to share some exciting new research about how they can protect you from the common cold.

Michael Pollan: Cooking for yourself is the real independence


(The Splendid TablePsychologically and socially, cooking is good for you and your family -- not to mention the health benefits. But it’s also a political act, according to food writer Michael Pollan, author of Cooked: A Natural History of Transformation.

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. 

Nanocolloidal Detox Factors may help remove heavy metals from the body

Linked with a laundry list of disorders, heavy metal toxicity is the bane of modern health. To make matters worse, detoxifying from these metals can create more harm than good when the toxins are mobilized to more dangerous regions - such as the brain or heart. A painful healing crisis can also occur when our eliminatory pathways of the skin, lung, liver, kidney and bowel are impaired. And chelating therapies like DMPS, DMSA and EDTA are rife with harsh side-effects for those with compromised systems. So how do we detoxify safely and gently? Nanocolloidal Detox Factors (NDF) may provide an exceptional solution.

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


Looking around, it's no secret that Americans are putting on the pounds unlike any other time in history. Sure, we can't discount sedentary lifestyles, processed foods and outrageous sugar consumption as contributing factors. At the same time, an elephant in the room is often overlooked -- one known as genetically modified food. Researches are beginning to connect the dots, realizing that the possibility of GMOs contributing to weight gain is not as far-fetched as once thought.