The Growing Consolidation of Agricultural and Pharmaceutical Industries and Its Impact on Health

Big Pharma and Big Ag

  • Chronic disease rates in America have increased dramatically, from 7.5% of the population in the 1930s to 60% today, representing a 700% surge, while obesity now affects 40% of Americans
  • Four companies (Bayer, Syngenta, BASF, and Corteva) dominate the agricultural market, with Bayer controlling 18.2% of global agrochemicals and, together with Corteva, over half of U.S. retail seed sales for major crops
  • The concentration ratio (CR4) in U.S. agriculture has reached extreme levels — 85% in beef packing, 70% in pork packing, and 95% control of corn intellectual property by just four companies
  • In 2024, pharmaceutical companies spent $294 million on lobbying, while agribusinesses spent $32.7 million, with Bayer alone spending $6.46 million in the U.S.
  • Modern industrial agriculture mimics pharmaceutical business models by creating dependency cycles. Farmers must repeatedly purchase synthetic inputs while patients require ongoing medication rather than cure-focused treatments

https://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2025/02/11/consolidation-of-big-ag-and-big-pharma.aspx

Cellulitis

Cellulitis is usually caused by a bacterial infection. Group A streptococcus and staphylococcus aureus (‘staph’) are the most common bacteria involved. These bacteria normally live on your skin without causing any harm, but if your skin is broken they can infect your tissues and cause cellulitis. The infection usually happens when bacteria enter your skin through an ulcer, cut, scratch or insect bite. It can also happen if you already have a skin problem like eczema, psoriasis, scabies or acne, or after surgery. However, it may happen without any visible damage to your skin.

A common cause of cellulitis is scratching your skin with dirty fingernails that carry bacteria.

You’re more likely to get cellulitis if you have a skin condition that makes you itchy and are more likely to scratch. You’re also more likely to get cellulitis if you:
smoke
live with obesity
have diabetes
have poor circulation or a weakened immune system
have swelling in an arm or leg, such as with lymphoedema

It often affects your lower leg but can occur anywhere on your body.

You may have cellulitis if you have an area of skin that is warm, red, tender and very painful.

If your infection is severe, you may also have symptoms like fever and nausea.

If you think you or someone in your care has cellulitis, it’s important to get medical attention as soon as possible.

How is cellulitis treated?
Cellulitis is usually treated with:
antibiotics
rest
elevating or raising the affected part of your body, if possible

(A client told me that the most effective antibiotic by far is the original penicillin, one not easily prescribed by doctors.)

While cellulitis is not generally contagious, it’s important to always wash your hands before and after touching the infected area.

https://www.healthdirect.gov.au/cellulitis

Study Links Fiber Consumption to Epigenetic Changes with Anticancer Effects

Fiber

  • Fiber byproducts — short-chain fatty acids — physically attach to DNA regions, influencing how genes are turned on or off through epigenetic regulation
  • A comprehensive review of 11 meta-analyses found that higher fiber consumption correlates with reduced risk of several cancers, including gastric, esophageal, ovarian and endometrial tumors
  • Fiber helps regulate hormone pathways and curbs inflammation, with studies showing it may reduce estrogen reabsorption, lowering the risk of hormone-related cancers like breast cancer
  • Research indicates modern diets often lack adequate fiber, leading to chronic metabolic strain and disrupted digestive processes, making fiber optimization an important public health strategy
  • People with compromised gut health should introduce fiber gradually, starting with easily digestible carbohydrates like white rice and fruit juices before progressing to more fibrous foods. In severe cases, start with dextrose water

https://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2025/02/27/fiber-consumption-and-epigenetic-changes-anticancer-effects.aspx

Understanding Butyrate — The Key to Optimal Health and Well-Being

Butyrate Podcast

  • Butyrate is a short-chain fatty acid produced by gut bacteria when they ferment fiber, serving as the primary energy source for colon cells and maintaining gut barrier strength
  • Healthy butyrate levels support weight management, blood sugar control and brain health, with studies linking butyrate-producing bacteria to reduced Alzheimer’s risk and lower cancer risk
  • A diverse diet rich in various fiber sources, including fruits, vegetables and whole grains, promotes butyrate production, but increases should be gradual if your gut health is compromised
  • The gut barrier weakens with insufficient butyrate, allowing undigested food, bacteria and toxins to enter your bloodstream, triggering systemic inflammation and widespread health problems
  • Gradually increasing fiber intake and reducing mitochondrial toxins for increased cellular energy supports gut health and beneficial gut microbes, enhancing butyrate production and overall health

https://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2025/02/23/understanding-butyrate.aspx

12 high-yield garden crops that give you plenty for sharing

Garden Vegetable Woman Community Produce Bed

You don’t need a large garden to produce a large harvest. Sometimes, turning in armfuls of fresh crops from the garden is just a matter of choosing the right plants in the first place.

Knowing which crops produce the most food per square foot of soil is also a great approach to making the most out of small garden spaces for those residing in cities and urban communities.

Read on to learn more about the best crops that guarantee you a bountiful harvest by the end of the season.

https://nexusnewsfeed.com/article/self-sufficiency/12-high-yield-garden-crops-that-give-you-plenty-for-sharing/

Does Europe Yearn for Another General Bloodletting? by John Leake

Napoleonic Wars, Crimean, Franco-Prussian, World War I, World War II. Has it been too long? Do the Europeans now long for the cathartic release of mass killing?

The German philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer once remarked that “mankind is doomed to vacillate eternally between boredom and distress.” Have Europe’s leaders grown bored with the long period of peace that has prevailed on most of their Continent since 1945? Do they long for the cathartic release of pent up aggression and negative feelings?

It’s a notable fact that pretty much every serious combat veteran of the Second World War is now gone, which means there is no living witness of the horror of a general war on the European Continent.

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer has started using Churchillian language since Trump sent Zelensky packing, as though there is a shred of evidence that Vladimir Putin aspires to make a move against Great Britain in the way Hitler did in 1940. I suspect that Starmer is now scheming to escalate hostilities between Russia and Great Britain in whatever way he can.

For three years now I have been posing the question: Why didn’t the Biden administration and its European lackeys at least TRY to work out a neutrality deal like the neutrality deal the Americans and English struck with Russia for Austria in 1955—a deal the Russians have honored ever since?

If Putin had agreed to Ukrainian neutrality and then subsequently violated it, the U.S. and England would have then had a clear casus belli. To this day, not a single member of the pro war faction has even tried to answer my question.

https://open.substack.com/pub/petermcculloughmd/p/does-europe-yearn-for-another-general

Cord Storage Hack

Cord Storage Hack

If you find yourself with a lot of cords that are not only hard to keep track of but also constantly get tangled, then we’ve got the perfect idea for you. Just save those empty toilet paper rolls and, after you have enough, place a bunch of them in a big box. Grab your cords and roll them up, then insert them into an empty toilet paper roll.