What Does Not Kill You

What Does Not Kill You

Read this and be afraid, be very afraid, of doctors, American medicine. we are 37th in international wellness rank, 27th in longevity and infant mortality, and spend twice as much as the other nation behind us, and are the most obese on earth.

READ THIS

In an article in Life Extension, August 2006: Death by Medicine By Gary Null, PhD; Carolyn Dean MD, ND; Martin Feldman, MD; Debora Rasio, MD; and Dorothy Smith, Phd., they disclosed statistical evidence from a deeply researched project that showed the following:

  1. In hospital adverse reactions to prescribed drugs: 2.2 million annually.
  2. Number of unnecessary antibiotics prescribed: 20 million per year.
  3. Unnecessary medical and surgical procedures 7.5 million a year
  4. Patients exposed to unnecessary hospitalization: 8.9 million a year.
  5. Deaths by conventional medicine: a stunning 800,000 per year.
    “It is now evident that the American medical system is the leading cause of death and injury in the US. By contrast, the number of deaths attributable to heart disease in 2001 was 699,697, while the number of deaths attributable to cancer was 553,251.”

Corporate Denial

Corporate Denial

This all too typical response from the main stream medical cartel to a devastating tragedy is reminiscent of a bad Star Wars remake of Obe Wan Kenobe’s lines, “There are no serious complications from vaccines. Nothing to see here. Move along.”

And the weak minded will robotically do so.

URGENT: Support Needed for Bill to Ban Pesticide that Harms Children!

Dear Tom,
Chlorpyrifos, manufactured by DowDuPont, is a neurotoxic organophosphate pesticide that’s been linked to severe birth defects, brain damage and mental disorders in children.
Yet despite these known risks, and despite new evidence suggesting that Dow knew for decades how toxic chlorpyrifos is to children, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) still allows chlorpyrifos to be sprayed on more than 50 fruits, vegetables and nuts, including strawberries, almonds, oranges, broccoli and apples.
If the EPA won’t do its job, it’s time for Congress to act.
TAKE ACTION: Ask your member of Congress to cosponsor the Ban Toxic Pesticides Act of 2019 ( H.R.230), a bill to ban chlorpyrifos.TAKE ACTION https://advocacy.organicconsumers.org/page/9140/action/
We thought we’d finally won the battle against this pesticide when toward the end of the Obama administration, the EPA finally proposed a ban on chlorpyrifos.
But Trump’s EPA director, Scott Pruitt (who since resigned after multiple scandals), overturned the ban.
Then, in August 2018, a federal appeals court ordered the EPA to prohibit the use of chlorpyrifos within 60 days.
You’d think that would have been the end of it. But on September 24, in an effort to stall once again, the EPA asked the court to rehear the case.
While the EPA does nothing to stop the use of a pesticide the agency itself has determined is unsafe for children and farmworkers, chlorpyrifos continues to be used widely on dozens of crops.
It’s time for Congress to ban this dangerous pesticide. But that won’t happen unless we get enough cosponsors for the Ban Toxic Pesticides Act.
TAKE ACTION: Ask your member of Congress to cosponsor the Ban Toxic Pesticides Act of 2019 ( H.R.230), a bill to ban chlorpyrifos.TAKE ACTION https://advocacy.organicconsumers.org/page/9140/action/
Thank you!
Katherine, for the OCA Team

Microplastics In Salt

Microplastics In Salt

A study “Global Pattern of Microplastics (MPs) in Commercial Food-Grade Salts: Sea Salt as an Indicator of Seawater MP Pollution” co-designed by Professor Kim, Seung-Kyu at Incheon University and Greenpeace East Asia found positive correlations between microplastics in seawater and microplastics in sea salts which people consume everyday. It is a global pattern that the sea salt containing higher microplastic numbers were mostly located at coasts polluted by microplastics. Greenpeace is urging corporations around the world to reduce and eventually phase out single-use plastics.

https://media.greenpeace.org/collection/27MZIFJWSZ6SV