23 Dec 2011

Dr Reverses advanced MS in 9 months with these foods

So inspiring



http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2011/12/23/overcoming-multiple-sclerosis-through-diet.aspx?e_cid=20111223_DNL_art_1

extract
Nutrition for Your Brain and Central Nervous System
Through her research into MS, Dr. Wahls discovered that, for some unknown reason, in addition to the commonly known symptoms, MS patients' brains also tend to shrink. This roused her curiosity, and led her to research other diseases that have similar brain shrinkage, namely Huntington's, Parkinson's and Alzheimer's Disease. One common denominator is poorly functioning mitochondria. Mitochondria are like little 'batteries' in your cells that manage the energy supply to the cell, and unless you consume the correct nutrients, eventual mitochondrial malfunction is the obvious result.
She discovered that three nutrients in particular are essential for proper mitochondrial function:
  1. Animal-based omega-3 fat
  2. Creatine
  3. Coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10) or better yet the reduced version known as Ubiquinol
Just by adding those three to her diet, her decline began to slow. But she wasn't improving, so she continued sleuthing through the medical research in search for an answer. When she discovered the Institute for Functional Medicine, Dr. Wahl began to find more clues.
As mentioned earlier, myelin is an insulating, waxy substance that sheathes the nerves in your central nervous system. Your myelin also needs specific nutrients to function properly, such as:
  • Vitamin B1
  • Vitamin B9
  • Vitamin B12
  • Animal-based omega-3 fat
  • Iodine
Furthermore, the neurotransmitters in your brain need sulfur and B6 for optimal functioning. Eventually, Dr. Wahls designed her own eating plan, based on the nutrients she now knew she needed for optimal mitochondrial-, myelin-, and neurotransmitter function, because while your body can create some nutrients, others must be provided through your diet.

22 Dec 2011

Alizbar & Ann"Sannat (на перекрестке балканских дорог)


:) wow

Solstice Blessingness

Stolen quote from a comment by 'flz' at DW blog comments - it just made my day/solstice :) thanxyou

Just about sums up the current state of play generally for me, kind of - obviously, the heavily armored men in the actual physical sense are bit of a bummer aswell. Peace.

"Unarmed vulnerability at the feeling level is the door to the infinite.

It makes sense to me that the attacks against David for expressing his unarmed feeling come from heavily emotionally armored men.

If our collective evolution is currently moving us to a greater internal balance of masculine and feminine, it would also make sense to me that heavily emotionally armored men might feel *deeply* threatened by displays of unarmored feeling.

Conscious heart love is a difficult and rude awakening to the ego. Anyone who displays its signs will likely attract negative reactions from others. And the thing is this: the armored self actively believes it is doing the right thing by taking aim at another and shooting its rejection of them.

To lose the armor and be restored to truly infinite vulnerability to our feeling dimension of being is to risk total rejection by many.

This is the price and risk love is."

19 Dec 2011

What is the Best "Drug" for Slashing Your Risk of Cancer?

Lovely Mercola article (answer =vitamin D3)

http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2011/12/19/why-are-cancer-cases-rising-by-nearly-50-in-the-next-20-years.aspx?e_cid=20111219_DNL_art_1

My Word on David Wilcock

After last weeks drama over at DivineCosmos.com i felt to add my personal comment to the affray. In Hollys words, DW just 'does it for me' -  and i know he doesn't 'do it' for everyone but i like part of my incoming news stream to be like an Indiana Jones movie,  to be honest its about all i can stomach these days without loosing it to extreme pessimism/depression/powerlessness/wtv. DW said a little while back that without his input into the so called conspiracy/alt. news web, that many 'lightworkers' would have left planet through suicide over the last few, to be fair, i count myself among this number. He is constantly reminding his readers that all of this is a FREQUENCY WAR, which in itself is worth all the tea/gold/wtv in China. And, well basically cuts to the chase, you know, the one where the good guys actually do win. (i jest but you get the drift). Hes been a light in the dark and a shoulder of the best kind. I have massive appreciation for him.

I am aware that his information is disappointing to some people. For instance if you like the Alex Jones and David Icke style news streams, you are likely to feel starved of intensity and drama over at Divine Cosmos - even in the current climate of death threats, mistaken abductions and secret Chinese gold hoarding - compared to AJ and DI its basically calm and reassuring over there. Its a personal preference but really, i feel i am of far more use when i am cultivating a sense of optimism....and David feeds that. What does AJ and DI feed?  Nuff said.

Heres the latest installment

 The Trillion-Dollar Lawsuit That Could End Financial Tyranny, Part II: History Lesson

13 Dec 2011

David Wilcock: CONFIRMED: The Trillion-Dollar Lawsuit That Could End Finanical Tyranny

http://divinecosmos.com/start-here/davids-blog/995-lawsuit-end-tyranny

DW - always kicking ass - includes audio and transcript of a recent interview with Benjamin Fulford, who as mentioned in the articles recent update. Share link/article far and wide, publicity is protection!

8 Dec 2011

And Now for Something Completely Predictable- War with Iran

http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article29908.htm


By Terry Jones

December 07, 2011 "
The Age" --  In the 14th century there were two pandemics. One was the Black Death, the other was the commercialisation of warfare. Mercenaries had always existed, but under Edward III they became the mainstay of the English army for the first 20 years of what became the Hundred Years War.
Then, when Edward signed the Treaty of Bretigny in 1360 and told his soldiers to stop fighting and go home, many of them didn't have any homes to go to. They were used to fighting, and that's how they made their money. So they simply formed themselves into freelance armies, aptly called ''free companies'', that proceeded around France pillaging, killing and raping.
One of these armies was called the Great Company. It totalled, by one estimate, 16,000 soldiers, larger than any existing national army. Eventually it descended on Pope Innocent VI, in Avignon, and held him to ransom. The pope made the mistake of paying off the mercenaries with huge amounts of cash, which only encouraged them to carry on marauding. He also suggested they move on into Italy, where his arch-enemies, the Visconti, ran Milan. This they did, under the banner of the Marquis of Monferrato, again subsidised by the pope.
The nightmare had begun. Huge armies of brigands rampaging through Europe was a disaster second only to the plague. It seemed as if the genie had been let out of the bottle and there was no way of putting him back in. Warfare had suddenly turned into a profitable business; the Italian city states became impoverished as taxpayers' money was used to buy off the free companies. And since those who made money out of the business of war naturally wished to go on making money out of it, warfare had no foreseeable end.
Wind forward 650 years or so. The US, under George W. Bush, decided to privatise the invasion of Iraq by employing ''contractors'' such as the Blackwater company, now renamed Xe Services. In 2003 Blackwater won a $US27 million no-bid contract for guarding Paul Bremer, then head of the Coalition Provisional Authority. For protecting officials in conflict zones since 2004, the company has received more than $US320 million. This year the Obama government contracted to pay Xe Services a quarter of a billion dollars for security work in Afghanistan. This is just one of many companies making its profits out of warfare.
In 2000 the Project for the New American Century published a report, Rebuilding America's Defenses, whose declared aim was to increase the spending on defence from 3 per cent to 3.5 per cent or 3.8 per cent of American gross domestic product. In fact it is now running at 4.7 per cent of GDP. Britain spent about $US57 billion a year on defence, or 2.5 per cent of GDP, while Australia spends just under $20 billion, or 2 per cent of GDP.
Just like the taxpayers of mediaeval Italian city-states, we are having our money siphoned off into the business of war. Any responsible company needs to make profits for its shareholders. In the 14th century the shareholders in the free companies were the soldiers themselves. If the company wasn't being employed by someone to make war on someone else, the shareholders had to forgo their dividends. So they looked around to create markets for themselves.
Sir John Hawkwood's White Company would offer its services to the pope or to the city of Florence. If either turned his offer down, Hawkwood would simply make an offer to their enemies. As Francis Stonor Saunders writes in her wonderful bookHawkwood: Diabolical Englishman: ''The value of the companies was the purely negative one of maintaining the balance of military power between the cities.'' Just like the Cold War.
In 1989 I picked up an in-house magazine for the arms industry. Its editorial was headed ''Thank God for Saddam''. It explained that, since the collapse of communism and end of the Cold War, the order books of the arms industry had been empty. But now there was a new enemy, the industry could look forward to a bonanza. The invasion of Iraq was built around a lie: Saddam Hussein had no weapons of mass destruction, but the defence industry needed an enemy, and the politicians duly supplied one.
And now the same war drums, encouraged by the storming of the British embassy last week, are beating for an attack on Iran. Seymour Hersh, in The New Yorker of November 21, wrote: ''All of the low enriched uranium now known to be produced inside Iran is accounted for.'' The recent International Atomic Energy Agency report which provoked such outcry against Iran's nuclear ambitions, he continued, contained nothing that proved that Iran was developing nuclear weapons.
In the 14th century it was the church that lived in symbiosis with the military. Nowadays it is the politicians. The US government spent a staggering $US687 billion on ''defence'' last year. Think what could be done with that money if it were put into hospitals, schools or to pay off foreclosed mortgages.
The retiring US president Dwight D. Eisenhower famously took the opportunity of his farewell to the nation address in 1961 to warn his fellow countrymen of the danger in allowing too close a relationship between politicians and the defence industry.
''This conjunction of an immense military establishment and a large arms industry is new in the American experience,'' he said. ''In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist.''
It exists. The genie is out of the bottle again.
Terry Jones is a comedian, director and member of the Monty Python team
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