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The World's Simplest Cure for Cancer

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Must see videos   We all know someone who has either died from, or is fighting cancer right now. If you are one of them, and are considering traditional western medicine treatment, or simply want to know as much about cancer as you can, you owe it to yourself to view this video first. "The Beautiful Truth." Prologue: This documentary follows the journey of Garrett Kroschel, an animal-loving teenager raised in Alaska who, after reading a book by Dr. Max Gerson, is inspired to investigate its premise that diet can cure cancer and other diseases. Garrett travels across the country, visiting with physicians, scientists and cancer survivors to discuss Gerson Therapy -- and Gerson's claim that the multi-billion dollar medical industry has suppressed natural cancer cures for years.  You can rent it for 7 days ($2.99)  or buy ($9.99)  the video on Amazon , or if you have Netflix , you can download it or stream it to your computer. Overall it received 4 out 5 sta...

Trash Lessons from the Greenest City

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S.F provides residents with green bins for food scrapes San Francisco has been called the "greenest city in America" and when it comes to keeping garbage out of landfills, it's a title the city has earned.  The city keeps an astonishing 80% of solid waste out of landfills, in part because residents not only use blue bins for their glass, plastic and papers but an additional green bin for all their compostable food waste.  The company Recology manages the city's solid waste and notes that its composting program "takes 650 tons per day of organic matter and turns it into compost that goes to farms, orchards, vineyards and landscaping businesses." The city is aiming to be zero waste by 2020.  More than 90 other cities have followed San Francisco's lead with curbside composting, including Portland, Oregon; Boulder, Colorado; and Seattle. Most recently, city councilors in Boston have been lobbying hard for curbside compost pickup in their city. ...

Unethical Journal Retraction Fuels Mistrust in GMO Science

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by Dr. Mercola  Last year, the first-ever lifetime feeding study assessing the health risks of genetically engineered Roundup Ready corn was published. Last month, Food and Chemical Toxicology retracted the study saying it “did not meet scientific standards.   While no errors or misrepresentation of data were found, the journal stated the study had too small a sample size to make any definite conclusion about health effects. This is in clear violation of retraction guidelines for scientific publishing.   Earlier this year, the publisher created a brand new editorial position, Associate Editor for Biotechnology Richard E. Goodman, a former Monsanto scientist got the job.   The bizarre justification for retracting the feeding study is enough to indicate that “corporate terrorism” has seized the field and is actively undermining science as we know it.  READ >>

Green Up, Get Moving

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Green Up, Get Moving was inspired by a survey, conducted by National Geographic, that found American consumers ranked DEAD LAST as consumers of renewable energy, recycling, transportation, food consumption, and everyday consumer goods and NUMBER ONE in obesity and related diseases. The Green Up promotion addresses both issues. It combines the green movement with fitness sports to help bring awareness to the importance of maintaining a sustainable planet and healthy body! It's designed to get people of all ages involved in physical activities and to serve as a platform to help promote zero-waste and the universal green marketing theme of Reduce-Reuse-Recycle. It's also about having fun! THIS IS HOW IT WORKS: In a nutshell Green Up, Get Moving is a hands-on promotion. We work with event promoters and attend as many fitness related sporting events, trade shows, markets and festivals as possible throughout the year. We assist participating promoters by advertising an...

Icelanders Overthrow Government and Rewrite Constitution After Banking Fraud ... No Word From US Media

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Can you imagine participating in a protest outside the White House and forcing the entire U.S. government to resign?  Can you imagine a group of randomly chosen private citizens rewriting the U.S. constitution to include measures banning corporate fraud? It seems incomprehensible in the U.S., but Icelanders did just that.   Icelanders forced their entire government to resign after a banking fraud scandal, overthrowing the ruling party and creating a citizen’s group tasked with writing a new constitution that offered a solution to prevent corporate greed from destroying the country.  The constitution of Iceland was scrapped and is being rewritten by private citizens; using a crowd-sourcing technique via social media channels such as Facebook and Twitter.  These events have been going on since 2008, yet there’s been no word from the U.S. mainstream media about any of them. In fact, all of the events that unfolded were recorded by international jo...

The Value of Being Green . . . .

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Just as natural resources are becoming scarce and costly; customers, employees and investors are increasingly environmentally-conscious.  A record-high 71 percent of Americans consider the environment as one of their top priorities when they shop.    Just think what it would be if businesses actually let consumers know they promote and demonstrate a commitment to green principles and policies.     Do the Green. Find out what a $25 promotion looks like. Call us 406-871-6282, or click here and we'll contact you  

Food is the New Tobacco

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It's Time to Confront the Corporate Giants that Are Hurting Americans' Health Jeffrey Hollender | salt, fat, sugar Recently Michael Moss in a New York Times Magazine cover story—“The Extraordinary Science of Addictive Junk Food”—examined how food companies have known for decades that salt, sugar and fat are not good for us in the quantities Americans consume them, and yet every year they convince most of us to ingest about twice the recommended amount of salt and 70 pounds of sugar – up to 22 teaspoons a day. As a critique of corporate behavior for 25 years, Michael Moss’s story convinced me to add US consumer food companies such as Pepsi, Kraft and General Mills to part of America’s evil corporate empire that already includes the banking and finance industry, the chemical industry, and the defense industry together with the US Chamber of Commerce. Is every company in these industries evil? Certainly not, but too many of them have acted with a blatant disregard for re...