View Full Version : Check out Fluoride and the Phosphate Connection
truthsupplier
14-02-2007, 02:09 AM
"The quality of a person`s life is in direct proportion to their commitment to excellence, regardless of their chosen field of endeavor."
-Vincent T Lombardi-
Healthy stuff... for your teeth and drinking water, right? Some stuff just won`t flush, ya know. If it`s poison, why ingest it... because you were told to?
It has been a "bill of goods" sold to the public for a long time now. EVERY Major population center (city) has been thoroughly fluoridated, from birth of it`s "water system".
Fluoride and the Phosphate Connection
http://www.purewatergazette.net/fluorideandphosphate.htm
limelady
14-02-2007, 02:19 AM
"The quality of a person`s life is in direct proportion to their commitment to excellence, regardless of their chosen field of endeavor."
-Vincent T Lombardi-
Healthy stuff... for your teeth and drinking water, right? Some stuff just won`t flush, ya know. If it`s poison, why ingest it... because you were told to?
It has been a "bill of goods" sold to the public for a long time now. EVERY Major population center (city) has been thoroughly fluoridated, from birth of it`s "water system".
Fluoride and the Phosphate Connection
http://www.purewatergazette.net/fluorideandphosphate.htm
Yes, fluoride is a true poison. Where I live we are lucky we don't have fluoride in our water, but we have such high levels of chlorine (because of our hot climate) the water smells like bleech and is totally undrinkable to me! We have been drinking only fresh spring water for years now, but even then we must contend with a certain amount of contamination (very low) from the 20 litre plastic pottles it comes in.
Best to go bush and find a block of land with its own deep spring huh?
Lime
jimijams
14-02-2007, 04:32 AM
Yes, fluoride is a true poison. Where I live we are lucky we don't have fluoride in our water, but we have such high levels of chlorine (because of our hot climate) the water smells like bleech and is totally undrinkable to me! We have been drinking only fresh spring water for years now, but even then we must contend with a certain amount of contamination (very low) from the 20 litre plastic pottles it comes in.
Best to go bush and find a block of land with its own deep spring huh?
Lime
I use a water distiler for all of my drinking water and also the water I use for cooking with. I like you used to buy bottled spring water but when I did the math it works out cheaper in the long run to distil and no nasty's from the plastic bottles mainly estrogen.
http://www.google.com/search?q=plastic+estrogen&start=0&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&client=firefox-a&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official
thoth
14-02-2007, 01:54 PM
I use a water distiler for all of my drinking water and also the water I use for cooking with. I like you used to buy bottled spring water but when I did the math it works out cheaper in the long run to distil and no nasty's from the plastic bottles mainly estrogen.
http://www.google.com/search?q=plastic+estrogen&start=0&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&client=firefox-a&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official
It makes sense that this is so because in my geology class last semester we learned that cars with the new car smell contain vocs, or volatile organic compounds which can be hazardous if breathed for too long. Its basically that new plastic like smell.
truthsupplier
21-02-2007, 10:36 PM
KODAK FILES PATENT FOR EDIBLE RFID TAG
-
To Monitor your govt.prescribed daily dose of tranquilizers, Birth Control etc. pills have been taken, as it is monitored dissolving in / coming out of you by your new RFID TAG reading toilet !!
Coming to a toilet near you soon !
And they thought we could Not immediately see the Real reason for these
edible RFID TAGS ?
NewScientist.com has uncovered a recently filed patent application
from camera and imaging technology giant Kodak that outlines a
compelling new application of RFID: ingestible tags that act as
monitors for health characteristics within the human body.
The idea is that the RFID tag antenna -- the critical component
which allows data to broadcast -- be composed of organic material that would
dissolve as a result of certain chemical reactions within the human
body.
Once dissolved, the tag antenna, and therefore the tag itself,
would stop transmitting a signal, indicating that the targeted
chemical reaction had occurred. Kodak calls them "fragile tags":
This invention is a system that uses intentionally fragile tags to
provide useful information by identifying when such tags are
destroyed.
The system then responds to this basic change of state by
providing a useful service. Such intentionally fragile tags can be
composed of materials that can be not only be ingested but also
digested with the understanding that breakdown is a desirable quality
and one that enables the tag materials to be eliminated in the
standard manner. Such a fragile tag that is also digestible lends
itself to applications such as being included in objects meant to be
ingested, such as pills, lozenges, and glycol strips.
~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~
For example, imagine an RFID reader-equipped drug dispenser installed
in the home bathroom of a patient.
The patient is prescribed to take a pill every day, which is issued by the dispenser.
Once the pill is issued, the dispenser's RFID reader activates and begins polling for
the signal of a Kodak tag, which is physically attached to the dispensed pill. In this uningested state, the tag functions properly, responding to the RFID reader's interrogation, which in turn informs the dispenser that the day's dosage has not yet been taken.
Once the patient ingests the pill/tag, the organic tag antenna is subjected to
chemicals within the patient's stomach.
The tag antenna was designed to rapidly dissolve in the presence of normal stomach chemicals, so after only a few minutes it does so, and the tag ceases to respond to
the RFID reader signal, which the dispenser interprets as the patient having taken her daily medication.
~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~ ~
The concept could be applied to changes in mechanical states as
well. "In another application, " reads the patent, "the fragile tag is
engineered to breakdown under mechanical stresses rather than by
chemical reaction. Such a tag may be affixed to an artificial, or
natural body part. It is then implanted and can be remotely queried.
When wear on the body part, for example, an artificial hip, has
proceeded to a predetermined level, the tag is rendered useless thus
alerting the remote query that the body part has achieved an
unsatisfactory level of wear."
The patent notes that in addition to passive, active RFID technology
could be used instead, depending on the application. It also notes the
possibility of using multiple tags in parallel to gather more nuanced
data about an environment based on an assessment of which tags are
destroyed and which survive: "Another embodiment uses multiple tags
whose packaging yields useful information from some combination of the
tags being destroyed or surviving conditions, such as when compounds
in the stomach destroy some tags but leave others."
What makes the Kodak invention notable is not just the novel
applications; it is the ability to turn pure RFID into a sort of
sensor. It has been long predicted that RFID and sensors would be
combined, whereby a sensor gathers environmental information that is
stored on an accompanying RFID tag. Indeed, this technology
architecture is already seeing adoption in numerous areas, like the
cold chain.
The Kodak concept is different in that it incorporates environmental
sensing as an intrinsic part of the RFID tag itself, so that the tag
becomes a sort of threshold-meter, causing an alert when the tracked
environmental characteristic passes a certain point. It is a clever,
elegant concept that might open the door to many applications where a
tag-sensor hybrid device is undesirable because of size, cost, or
complexity.
Read the patent application from Kodak
http://www.rfidupdate.com/articles/index.php?id=1298
truthsupplier
22-02-2007, 10:59 PM
U.S. authorities to start massive DNA gathering from population
http://www.newstarget.com/021612.html
U.S. authorities to start massive DNA gathering from population
Thursday, February 15, 2007 by: David Gutierrez
Printable version Key concepts: DNA, illegal immigration and Police State.
(NewsTarget) The federal government is finalizing rules that would encourage the collection of DNA samples from everyone arrested by federal authorities, as well as any illegal immigrant detained by federal agents for any reason.
A little-noticed amendment to last month's renewal of the Violence Against Women Act authorized this new, sweeping DNA collection policy. The amendment, introduced by Arizona Senator Jon Kyl and Texas Senator John Cornyn, was passed on a voice vote, meaning that no legislators had to go on the record as supporting or opposing it.
Currently, the federal government takes DNA samples only from convicted felons. Seven states collect DNA samples from all arrestees, but only two of these allow the sharing of this data with the federal government.
"What this does is move the DNA collection to the arrest stage," said Erik Ablin of the Justice Department. "The general approach is to bring the collection of DNA samples into alignment with current federal fingerprint collection practices."
But lawyer Paul Neufeld, co-director of the Innocence Project, which uses DNA evidence to clear those wrongly convicted, disputes the fingerprint analogy.
"Whereas fingerprints merely identify the person who left them, DNA profiles have the potential to reveal our physical diseases and mental disorders," he said. "It becomes intrusive when the government begins to mine our most intimate matters."
Other critics of the new rules have expressed concern that the DNA collection will further stigmatize illegal immigrants, the vast majority of whom have committed no crimes.
Illegal entry into the United States is a civil, not a criminal, offense.
Lisalyn Jacobs, vice president for government relations for the women's rights organization Legal Momentum, pointed out that Hispanics will inevitably be over-represented in a such a migrant-focused database.
"The pervasive system of profiling in the United States will only be exacerbated by such a system," she said.
Health, Hope, Joy & Healing :
Jennifer Ruby
Email advice is not a substitute for medical treatment.
http://www.rubysemporium.com
truthsupplier
23-02-2007, 09:38 PM
Group sues feds over medical marijuana claim
Government accused of denying ‘sick and dying’ from obtaining medicine
OAKLAND, Calif. - Armed with a new study showing the drug can ease pain in some HIV patients, medical-marijuana advocates sued the federal government Wednesday over its claim that pot has no accepted medical uses.
The lawsuit, filed in federal court by Americans for Safe Access, accuses the government of arbitrarily preventing “sick and dying persons from seeking to obtain medicine that could provide them needed and often lifesaving relief.”
The Food and Drug Administration’s position on medical marijuana “is incorrect, dishonest and a flagrant violation of laws requiring the government to base policy on sound science,” Joe Elford, said chief counsel for Americans for Safe Access.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17263716
truthsupplier
23-02-2007, 09:51 PM
This documentary concerns Harry M. Hoxsey, the former coal miner whose family's herbal recipe has brought about claims of a cancer cure.
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=5528328984547372206&q=hoxsey
truthsupplier
15-04-2007, 03:38 PM
"What appears to be the future for many, is already the past for some, who are now unfolding it into the present"
http://www.historianofthefuture.com/
http://www.globalfuturist.com/
http://www.globalcleantech.com/
http://www.coasttocoastam.com/gen/page1973.html?theme=light