POISON IN OUR FOOD

Fluoride: Miracle drug or toxic-waste killer?
Safety debate over public water treatments heats up with release of shocking new studies

Posted: May 05, 2008
9:20 pm Eastern

© 2008 WorldNetDaily


Water treatment plant
WASHINGTON – From Pennsylvania to Nebraska and from Europe to New Zealand, there is growing and fierce opposition to plans to fluoridate public drinking water, fueled by a battery of shocking new studies that seriously question a practice routine among U.S. municipalities for nearly the last 50 years.

  • In Clearfield, Pa., the municipal authority asked the state Department of Environmental Protection for permission to stop adding fluoride to its water. But before city officials got an answer, they got a lawsuit threat from the Pennsylvania Dental Association, which promised not only an injunction against any plans to stop adding the chemical to drinking supplies but litigation against the individual board members who approved the action. The city backed down and continues to fluoridate water. More......

Weed Killers Tied to Brain Cancer

Women whose jobs regularly expose them to weed killers may have a higher-than-normal risk of a particular form of brain cancer, results of a U.S. study suggest.

Researchers found that among more than 1,400 U.S. adults with and without brain cancer, there was no overall link between the disease and on-the-job exposure to pesticides or herbicides -- chemicals used to kill plants, usually weeds.More......

RAW MILK UNDER ATTACK by BIG BROTHER!

UDDERLY RIDICULOUS
Feds launch 'Gestapo raid' over raw milk
Rally planned for farmer whose dairy swept by government
Posted: May 04, 2008
9:24 pm Eastern

By Bob Unruh
© 2008 WorldNetDaily


A rally has been set for tomorrow in front of the magistrate's office in Mt. Holly, Pa., in support of a Mennonite farmer who has brought the wrath of the government on himself for selling raw milk and other products – an act government prosecutors say violates a number of regulations.

That's when the next court hearing is scheduled for Mark Nolt, a Pennsylvania farmer who turned in his state permit to sell raw milk because it didn't allow for the sale of the other products he offered.

"They swooped in ... like a bunch of Vikings, handcuffed me and stole $30,000 worth of my milk, cheese and butter," he told the New York Daily News.

More......

Too Much Healthy Eating Is As Bad For Children As Too Much Junk

It is no surprise that children love junk food. Its makers go to great lengths to make sure that their offerings deliver a full-on, unsubtle assault on taste buds, with plenty of salt or sugar to create the sense that it is “tasty”.

But a significant proportion of our nation's children are worryingly chubby and heading for potential obesity problems in later life, it seems that others are suffering from “muesli belt malnutrition”: the overzealous application of “healthy eating” rules imposed on their daily food intake. A recent study warns us that too much fibre and too little fat can lead to vitamin deficiencies and stunts growth in the under-fives. More..

Vitamin K2

 In 1945, Dr. Weston Price, the pioneer of nutritional epidemiology, published a revised edition of his masterwork, Nutrition and Physical Degeneration, including a new chapter called 'A New Vitamin-Like Activator.'  Price described his experiments with a fat-soluble substance vital to healthy bones and teeth found in the butter of cows raised on grass. The grass-fed butter was remarkably effective in curing a number of chronic conditions, including tooth decay, rickets, and seizures. It was even more powerful when combined with cod liver oil. Price called the magic ingredient Activator X. 

Some 60 years later, researchers have identified Activator X. It is vitamin K2, a fat-soluble vitamin essential for optimal dental, skeletal, and cardiovascular health. Vitamin K2 has an interesting role: it puts calcium where it belongs (in the bones and teeth) and keeps it away from the places it doesn't belong, such as the arteries, where plaques calcify. Vitamin K2 is essential for healthy development and growth in children. Its effects are subtle: though K2 makes bones dense and strong, it also prevents premature calcification of the cartilaginous parts of bones, the soft parts which allow your baby's bones to grow.

Vitamin K2 can be made in the body from vitamin K1, which is found in green vegetables, but ideally your diet will contain ample sources of K2 itself.  Animals who eat grass use K1 to make K2 and thus they are the best dietary source. Get your K2 from the butter, organ meats, and fat of animals raised on grass. A reliable sign of K2 is the rich yellow color of butter from cows on grass; K2's precursor is related to beta carotene. (If you prefer a supplement, you can also buy K2-rich butter oil.  Some bacteria also make K2, and you'll find that kind of K2 in fermented foods such as natto, a Japanese soy food.)
 
Now we know what Price could only surmise: why traditional people went to so much trouble to get fatty meats, organ meats, and grass-fed butter - the 'high vitamin' foods, as Price called them.

K2 is an interesting fellow among vitamins. K2 is made in your reproductive organs. Sperm contains a protein that relies on K2. There is a lot of K2 in your pancreas, brain, and saliva, where it builds healthy enamel and protects you from tooth decay.  K2 deficiency (good name for a band) causes fatigue and lethargy in lab animals. K2 prevents heart disease by inhibiting inflammation and calcification of the arteries.

Do you need more K2?  If you're vegan or vegetarian or trying to conceive, you probably do. Foods rich in K2 were the heart of fertility diets Price studied.  Recall that Price found the combination of cod liver oil and K2 butter powerfully effective. That's because cod liver oil is rich in vitamins A and D, which have several synergetic relationships with K2. In plain language, that means A, D, and K2 work together to build bones, among other vital tasks. A and D are less effective without K2 and vice versa.

If it's bone health you're after, consider one more virtue of traditional diets: saturated fat. You need saturated fat to lay down minerals (such as calcium) in your bones. Studies show that polyunsaturated fats (soybean oil) depress mineralization while saturated fats (butter and palm oil) stimulate bone density. That's why I don't drink skim milk and cannot recommend it, especially for women who are concerned about osteoporosis. 

If you're worried about the effects of natural saturated fats on your heart, fear not. The net effect of these traditional fats, such as butter, is to raise HDL. On the virtues of HDL, the National Cholesterol Education Program is clear: 'the higher, the better.'  New evidence suggests that LDL is not the villain either, but a repair molecule sent to damaged arteries to fix them.

You might instead choose to avoid the new, 'trans fat-free' non-butter, vegetable-oil based 'buttery' spreads. (I grimace as I type the hype, consoling myself that imitation of traditional foods is the sincerest form of flattery.) Now that trans-fats are known killers, Big Food brings you a new process for making industrial soy bean oil spreadable, because they know how much you want your butter.

How do they do it? By scrambling the fatty acids in a process called interesterification. It appears we won't have to wait 60 years to discover that these fats are not good for you, either.  In a recent study by K.C. Hayes, interesterified fats lowered HDL (that's bad), depressed insulin (that's bad), and raised blood sugar (also bad). Compared to what? Good question. Compared to palm oil - yes, the highly saturated tropical fat they taught you to fear.

Remember the rule: if your great-grandmother ate it, it's probably OK.

 

Turning to Kosher Cuts

As various health scares raise fears about the food supply, more consumers are viewing the strictly prepared meats as a safer alternative.
 
 Americans are snapping up kosher food products across the country, prompted by health concerns and a belief that kosher meats and poultry — prepared under strict Jewish dietary laws — are a safer choice amid fears of mad cow disease and bacterial contamination.
 
 Kosher laws are stricter than U.S. Department of Agriculture standards when it comes to the health of animals that can be eaten. They prohibit, for example, using cows with broken bones or animals that are visibly sick. The laws strictly dictate how the animals are fed, killed and processed.
 
 Harry Geedey, marketing vice president for Empire Kosher Poultry Inc., the nation's largest kosher poultry producer, said the religious requirements "add another level of safety" to the meat supply. After USDA inspectors at Empire's Pennsylvania plant finish their work, rabbis "trained in veterinary science" and kosher law perform additional inspections, rejecting "about three times more than what the USDA does," Geedey said.
 
 The number of health-conscious consumers who seek out kosher products has been steadily rising. The market has received an extra boost from several food scares, including beef contaminated with deadly E. coli bacteria and December's discovery of a cow in Washington state infected with bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or mad cow disease, food industry executives and local butchers say.
 
 Manes Wiezel, the founder of Los Angeles-based City Glatt Inc., a wholesale distributor of "glatt kosher" meats (processed at the strictest level of kosher), has noticed a steady and significant increase in sales. Because the U.S. Jewish population is holding steady, he and others in the kosher industry attribute the extra demand to buyers who are not motivated by religion but by health and food safety concerns.
 
 Among local butchers, Herschel Berengut, the owner of G&K Kosher Meat Market in Los Angeles, said non-Jewish Filipinos and African Americans recently became first-time customers after seeking confirmation that kosher meat is more rigorously inspected than regular meat.
 
 Like organic meat and poultry, kosher meats and poultry are hormone-free.
 
 Joseph Azizi, a co-owner of Santa MonicaKosher Market in West Los Angeles, said the meat scare had brought new Latino and Japanese customers from the surrounding neighborhood. He said sales had risen about 30% recently, noting that the regional supermarket labor strike, which has sent some people in search of new places to shop, was another possible factor in the upswing in business.
 
 After reports of mad cow disease in Washington, Azizi hoisted a yellow and red banner above the storefront that reads: "Don't Get 'Mad' Get Kosher / Kosher Meat Is Safe." That sign reassured some existing customers and brought in non-Jewish customers along with non-kosher Jews.
 
 Because kosher dietary laws prohibit the mixing of meat and milk products, kosher food labeling is particularly rigorous. Foods are categorized as meat, dairy or pareve — a neutral category containing neither meat nor dairy. The meticulous labeling has helped drive a steady 15% annual growth in the U.S. market for kosher products, according to market research firms that monitor the kosher food industry. Among the buyers: vegetarians who know that certified products don't contain hidden meat products; people with lactose intolerance who must avoid hidden milk products; Muslims, Hindus and Seventh-day Adventists whose dietary prohibitions overlap with kosher laws; and the growing group of Americans choosing kosher foods as a more healthful alternative.
 
 National supermarket chains, which sell roughly three-fourths of the nation's kosher products, are increasing their kosher offerings to meet this growing demand.
 
 Menachem Lubinsky, editor of Kosher Today, a New York-based newsletter, said the number of certified kosher products had soared from 16,000 in 1977 to 80,000 today, including such well-known food items as Oreo cookies. He said about a third of all supermarket items were certified kosher. In 2003, kosher foods comprised about $170 billion of the $500 billion in U.S. food sales.
 
 "Our non-Jewish customers are seeing the health benefits," said Terry O'Neil, a spokesman for Ralphs Grocery Co. in Compton, which has kosher butchers in eight of its stores, with plans to add more. "As we've expanded the departments to a lot of new stores, we've seen an increase in the cross-section of our customers purchasing kosher."
 
 Rabbi Eliezer Eidlitz, director of the Kosher Information Bureau in North Hollywood, has noticed the change among people who sign up for supermarket tours that his organization sponsors. The tour groups, which used to cater almost exclusively to Orthodox Jews, now include a lot of people who are not Jewish.
 
 Strict dietary laws govern certification
 
 To be certified kosher, animals must be raised, killed and processed according to strict Jewish dietary law. Symbols of kosher certification include the letter K, often in combination with other symbols, or a U surrounded by a circle. The word "pareve" on a label means that the food contains neither meat nor dairy products.
 
 Kosher poultry cannot show any signs of being pecked, sick or injured. The birds are killed with a slit to the neck, allowing the blood to drain out. They're never plunged into hot water (a theoretical source of bacterial contamination), but are washed in cold water before being soaked, salted and washed again. Experts in the koshering process say the extensive use of salt helps kill bacteria.
 
 To be kosher, cows must be younger than 30 months. Dairy cows are never used. Kosher laws preclude using a stun gun or a bullet to the brain, which could scatter brain and nerve tissue (a source of mad cow disease). The animal must be hand-slaughtered by slitting its neck. Religious inspectors look for signs of broken bones, disease or scarred or punctured organs, which disqualify the animal. Downer cattle are never used, and about only 40% of healthy cattle qualify as kosher. Meat can be taken from only the forequarters; it is then soaked and salted to draw out the blood.

 
 — Jane E. Allen, Times Staff Writer
 

Eating Five Tomatoes a Day Protects Against Sunburn

Getting protection from summer’s damaging sun could be as simple as eating foods made with tomato sauce. Researchers at Manchester and Newcastle universities in the United Kingdom found that eating five tomatoes a day helped protect against both sunburn and premature aging.Read More.........

What Causes Heart Attacks? Cholestrol? Smoking? You may be surprised

Sally Fallon

The "big" picture is more complex than simple cause and effect. In a multi-year British study involving several thousand men, half were asked to reduce saturated fat and cholesterol in their diets, to stop smoking and to increase the amounts of unsaturated oils such as margarine and vegetable oils. After one year, those on the "good" diet had 100 percent more deaths than those on the "bad" diet, in spite of the fact that those men on the "bad" diet continued to smoke.2 In a study of Indians from Bombay and Punjab, researchers found that those from Punjab had one-fifth the number of heart attacks even though they smoked eight times more cigarettes.3 And while smoking was widespread at the turn of the century, myocardial infarction was not. This suggests that there may be factors in traditional diets that protect against the negative effects of smoking. It also raises the question of whether additives now used in cigarette paper and filters and changes in the curing process itself have exacerbated the harmful effects of cigarette use.Read More.........

Sunlight and Melanoma - A Surprise!

Sunlight may be the best thing for melanoma. That's right, in spite of what you've been reading, the sun doesn't cause melanoma, in fact, it's actually good for you, as many studies have indicated.Read More.........

Cheese Making

While cheese making is theoretically a science, we also need to appreciate that it is an art.  Often cheese making instructions often appear simple, but there are skills and sensitivities which must be developed for successful cheese making.  I strongly suggest that you master the following projects in sequence before you progress to more difficult cheeses.  As an avid homesteader, I strive to keep the ingredients for these recipes relatively easily obtained from your local supermarket and to use the equipment commonly found in the kitchen.Read More.........