Articles from NaturalNews In-House Writers:

FDA approves experimental use of antiviral drug for Ebola, but still won't allow testing with colloidal silver or Echinacea

By L.J. Devon, Staff Writer, October 14 2014
(NaturalNews) Right now, speculators are bubbling with anticipation, as drug company stocks are set to make impressive gains. Ever since Thomas Eric Duncan was quarantined at a Dallas hospital, it was only a matter of time before he would be subjected to new experimental drugs. Not long thereafter, the US FDA approved Chimerix's new experimental drug brincidofovir, to be exclusively used on Duncan. Isn't it amazing how fast these new pharmacological brews are whipped up each time there is a hyped...

Fight food waste by reusing these commonly discarded food parts

By Raw Michelle, October 14 2014
(NaturalNews) According to the United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organization, 842 million people worldwide are malnourished, and every day, 25,000 die from starvation. Thinking that it's not an issue in developed countries like the United States is an inaccurate assumption, as one in seven families experiences food insecurity in the U.S. (1) Still, it's not uncommon to see dumpsters sitting near grocery stores and food establishments that are overflowing with food scraps, many of which are...

Protesters clashed with police to try to save 'Ebola dog' from forced euthanasia

By David Gutierrez, October 14 2014
(NaturalNews) Spanish protesters clashed with police on October 6, in an ultimately unsuccessful attempt to prevent authorities from euthanizing the dog of the first person to acquire Ebola within the country. The 12-year-old rescue dog, named Excalibur, belonged to Spanish nurse Maria Teresa Romero Ramos, who became the first person to contract Ebola in Europe during the course of caring for a Spanish missionary who had contracted the disease in Africa. Ramos is currently undergoing treatment...

Legacy radium continues to contaminate U.S. cities, costing millions in clean-up and healthcare costs

By Julie Wilson staff writer, October 14 2014
(NaturalNews) A radioactive metal once admired in the early 1900s is now the source of deadly health and environmental impacts that are financially burdening individual states and the federal government. Humans seem to have always been impressed by shiny objects, making the discovery of radium particular exciting with its glow-in-the-dark properties. Soon after French physicist Marie Curie discovered the radioactive, silver-white metal in 1898, manufacturers wasted no time in putting it to use...

Deodorants and antiperspirants may actually increase offensive odor in addition to wreaking havoc on health

By Antonia, October 14 2014
(NaturalNews) It's no secret that common deodorants, while they smell fragrant and have pleasant-sounding names that make people feel as though they are rugged warriors or living in the tropics, are filled with body-damaging chemicals. Namely, aluminum compounds, parabens and phthalates are ingredients in many kinds of antiperspirants and deodorants designed to act as preservatives while also fending off offensive odors. (1) These chemicals, however, are linked to having unsettling health consequences...

CDC makes no effort to isolate or help Dallas man who was exposed to Ebola patient

By David Gutierrez, October 14 2014
(NaturalNews) A Dallas man potentially exposed to Ebola has revealed that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) have not clarified whether he is allowed to go outdoors. "The CDC came on Tuesday, the day it was confirmed Thomas had Ebola," 43-year-old Aaron Yah, a friend of Ebola patient Thomas Duncan, said to Daily Mail Online. "They told me that the children should not go to school until 17 October. But it was not really confirmed to me that I should stay indoors. I don't know...

Debt collectors track subprime loan borrowers, disable vehicles to punish poor for late payments

By J. D. Heyes, October 14 2014
(NaturalNews) Technology in the Digital Age continues to be used as a sledgehammer against the public, even as it is ostensibly being developed to "serve mankind." The latest? Lenders disabling your car remotely if you miss too many payments, regardless of your reasons for doing so (even if they happen to be pretty good -- like if you haven't worked in months). The New York Times detailed one of the more distressing cases involving this new technology: The thermometer showed a 103.5-degree...

Hands-on initiative aims to enhance health curriculum, allows young students to report about health topics

By Antonia, October 14 2014
(NaturalNews) Marian Uhlman, a former health reporter with The Philadelphia Inquirer who played a role in getting obesity to the forefront of minds, has started Healthy NewsWorks, an effort designed to increase awareness about health among young students. (1) The idea is that health journalism is integrated in school curricula where students take on the role of a journalist, allowing them to write stories based on their interviews with public figures ranging from civil leaders to chefs. They focus...

Mathematics of the Ebola outbreak reveal near-impossibility of global containment: it's already too late

By Mike Adams, October 13 2014
(NaturalNews) In a piece entitled "The ominous math of the Ebola epidemic," the Washington Post has published an article that everyone should study. The article explores the undeniable mathematical reality of an Ebola outbreak which is doubling its reach every 3-4 weeks. Current analysis shows that Ebola infects 1.5 - 2.0 new people for every new infection, and the cycle time on this is less than 30 days. This means that the number of people infected with Ebola is growing by roughly 150% - 200%...

Consumer Wellness Center announces Holly Moran Nutrition Education Grant Program; applications now open for 2014

By Mike Adams, October 13 2014
(NaturalNews) As the executive director of the non-profit Consumer Wellness Center, I'm thrilled to bring you this announcement today: The Consumer Wellness Center (CWC), a non-profit organization dedicated to promoting nutrition as a way to prevent disease and enhance human health and longevity, announces its seventh annual Nutrition Education Grant Program. This year it is named the Holly Moran Grant in honor of one of its cherished original members, Holly Moran, whose life was dedicated to...

ABC News echoes Ebola transmission warnings issued by Natural News weeks ago

By Mike Adams, October 13 2014
(NaturalNews) ABC News chief health and medical editor Dr. Richard Besser is now asking the very same questions I've been raising here on Natural News as the Health Ranger. In an article published on the ABC affiliate WFAA website [1], it's now reported that "Besser said he does not agree with the Centers for Disease Control, which says any U.S. hospital can safely care for an Ebola patient." Dr. Besser goes on to call for Ebola patients to be treated in level-4 biohazard facilities where staff...

Have 'FEMA coffins' been stockpiled to meet CDC requirements for disposing of bodies during a pandemic?

By J. D. Heyes, October 13 2014
(NaturalNews) On Thursday, Oct. 9, just a day after the first U.S. Ebola patient, Thomas Duncan, died in a Dallas hospital, Silvia Burwell, head of the Department of Health and Human Resources, dropped a metaphoric bomb on the country. Speaking to reporters at a media breakfast in Washington, D.C., Burwell admitted what Natural News editor Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, has been saying all along: The reality is, there could be more cases of the deadly disease around the country. "We had one case...

Ebola pandemic spreading across Europe is 'unavoidable,' WHO warns

By Ethan A. Huff, October 13 2014
(NaturalNews) Most of the attention surrounding Ebola has thus far centered on its spread in West Africa, and now in the U.S. But at least four individuals in Europe, Spain to be specific, are being closely monitored after one of them, a nurse, tested positive for the viral disease. The 40-year-old healthcare worker is the first, but probably not the last, person in Europe to contract the disease during this current outbreak, reports Boston.com. And the World Health Organization's (WHO) European...

Ontario government recognizes neonicotinoids as 'the biggest threat' to the environment

By Julie Wilson staff writer, October 13 2014
(NaturalNews) Environmental advocates in Ontario are warning of an ecosystem collapse if a certain class of insecticides continues to be used throughout the province. Gord Miller, the environmental commissioner for Ontario, released his 2013/2014 annual report detailing concerns over several practices that are negatively impacting the environment. Among those concerns was the use of neonicotinoids, a neuro-active insecticide that's chemically similar to nicotine. Neonicotinoids, or neonics, are...

The best way to help your body protect itself against Ebola (or any virus or bacteria)

By Derek Henry, October 1 2014
(NaturalNews) With the threat of the Ebola virus spreading, there is a need to understand what natural options are readily available to you in case you don't want to be subjected to conventional medical treatments and infected patients in hospitals. The only proven system to help eradicate the Ebola virus is your body's immune system, and it is of primary importance to start strengthening its response now to give yourself the best chance of successfully fighting off an infection. Work with your...

Ebola 'patient zero' fled Liberia with intention to enter USA as a survival strategy

By L.J. Devon, Staff Writer, October 13 2014
(NaturalNews) When Thomas Eric Duncan abruptly left Liberia and came down with Ebola shortly after entering the US, many questions were raised. Did Duncan already know that he had Ebola? Did he travel swiftly to the US as a survival strategy? How did Ebola "patient zero" manage to bypass customs and board multiple flights without being questioned by Liberian officials and US customs in the midst of a viral pandemic? Now the details are emerging in one of Liberia's largest newspapers, the Liberian...

Grocers turn to brighter, kid-friendly marketing techniques to encourage consumption of healthier foods among children

By Raw Michelle, October 13 2014
(NaturalNews) In an effort to bolster fruit and vegetable consumption among children, several grocery stores are taking part in an initiative spearheaded by Bolthouse Farms that makes the supermarket produce section more appealing to that age group. (1) Rather than the concept of fun eating being relegated to cereal and candy aisles, there will now be more healthy choices popping up in stores that are kid-focused, designed in a colorful, fun manner reminiscent of packaging typically found on snacks...

Official: Fleas in Arizona testing positive for plague

By Jonathan Benson, October 13 2014
(NaturalNews) Something has been killing off prairie dogs living in and around Doney Park in Flagstaff, Arizona, and health officials have now confirmed it to be the plague. According to reports, fleas collected from burrows around Doney are testing positive for the disease, which ravaged Europe for some 150 years during the 14th century, earning the name "the Black Death," before eventually fizzling out. ABC 15 News in Phoenix reports that residents throughout the area have already been notified...

How to survive PMS - A field guide for men

By Kali Sinclair, October 13 2014
(NaturalNews) If you live with a woman who suffers from PMS, you know firsthand that your loving wife or significant other can change from a loving, sweet-tempered woman into someone you barely recognize with little to no warning. And you know how easy it is the say the wrong thing at the wrong time. Or maybe it seems that everything you say is going to be wrong for a few days each month. There are a lot of things you can do to make it worse, but there are also many things you can do to make it better...

Ebola protective gear inadequate? Medical staff in USA and Spain infected while wearing isolation gear

By Mike Adams, October 12 2014
(NaturalNews) Ebola is now spreading in a hospital in Dallas as a health care worker there was confirmed to have contracted Ebola from "patient zero" Thomas Duncan. The alarming part of this development is that the health worker was wearing CDC-recommended protective gear and was working in precisely the kind of advanced, first-world hospital where we have all been assured Ebola could never spread. Now, people everywhere are questioning the adequacy of the protective medical gear being worn...

Ebola spreads in Dallas hospital as health worker contracts deadly virus; CDC blames victim

By Mike Adams, October 12 2014
(NaturalNews) A health worker who cared for Ebola "patient zero" Thomas Duncan at the Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital is now confirmed to have been infected with Ebola. The worker, whose name has not yet been released, "had been wearing protective gear during treatment of the patient" reports Reuters. [1] As Natural News has been reporting since day one, CDC protective gear recommendations are wholly inadequate to protect workers from Ebola, a level-4 biohazard virus with no known treatment...

HHS admits there may already be more cases of Ebola in America

By Jonathan Benson, October 9 2014
(NaturalNews) After vehemently denying that Ebola would ever come to the U.S., the federal government is now saying that the deadly hemorrhagic disease is here and we all need to get used to it. Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Sylvia Mathews Burwell recently told the corporate media that there are probably more cases of Ebola that we don't even know about yet, and that the country needs to start preparing now. In response to accusations that she has basically been kicking back and doing...

Tucson considers banning neonicotinoid pesticides to save bees and environment

By Julie Wilson staff writer, October 12 2014
(NaturalNews) Yet another city is contemplating whether or not to ban an insecticide that is likely causing adverse environmental effects by negatively impacting ecosystems. City leaders in Tucson, Arizona, are preparing to be asked to ban nicotine-based insecticides, a chemical which many scientists allege is contributing to the decline in honeybee populations, according to a report by Tucson News Now. If instated, Tucson would be the third city to ban, or restrict, the use of pesticides chemically...

Scientist who discovered Ebola calls rising viral pandemic an 'unimaginable catastrophe'

By J. D. Heyes, October 12 2014
(NaturalNews) The scientist who discovered the Ebola virus in 1976 after a pilot brought him a blood sample from a Belgian nun who had mysteriously fallen ill in Zaire says the disease has pandemic potential and he now fears that the world is on the edge of an "unimaginable catastrophe." In an interview with Britain's The Guardian newspaper, the scientist, Peter Piot, who was a researcher in a lab in Antwerp when he made his discovery, discussed a number of things related to his discovery, recalling...

Top herbs to help cleanse lungs, make breathing easier

By Antonia, October 12 2014
(NaturalNews) Whether it's inhaling dust and harmful particles that are a part of the work environment, using harsh cleaning products around the house or simply being subjected to the many toxins and molds that people encounter throughout daily life, one thing is certain: It can take a toll on the respiratory system. Add to this the many people who are already suffering from respiratory complications like asthma or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and it can add insult to injury. The...

U.S. General says Ebola can't be contained, spreading to Central America would spark mass migration

By J. D. Heyes, October 12 2014
(NaturalNews) The top officer for U.S. Southern Command (SOUTHCOM) has said there is little chance that the world can prevent the Ebola virus from spreading outside West Africa, meaning more people from more parts of the world will become infected and die in the coming months. Marine Corps Gen. John F. Kelly told an audience at the National Defense University in Washington, D.C., in recent days that the spread of the virus to Central and South America -- part of SOOUTHCOM's region of responsibility...

Beyond obesity: Western diet shown to make people stupid

By Ethan A. Huff, October 12 2014
(NaturalNews) Eating junk food doesn't just make you fat -- it also makes you stupid. Researchers from Australia came to this conclusion after evaluating the dietary habits of young teenagers as part of a large study, determining that those who consume a high amount of soft drinks, fried foods and other processed garbage perform worse mentally. The University of Western Australia study looked at more than 600 kids who participated in the larger Western Australian Pregnancy Cohort (Raine) Study...

Health benefits of zucchini, a very versatile food

By Raw Michelle, October 12 2014
(NaturalNews) Zucchini is a very versatile food. It can be eaten raw or cooked, can be consumed virtually in its entirety and has several health benefits. Of course, be sure to choose organic zucchini. It even has some interesting tidbits that many people aren't aware of. For example, their blossoms, or flowers, which appear under its leaves as it grows, are edible. (1) They're typically sold at farmers' markets, and not only can they be cooked with a little olive oil, but the delicate flowers...

Profiteering neurologist Harrison Mu charged man $117,000 for unnecessary surgical assistance

By PF Louis, October 12 2014
(NaturalNews) It's not unusual for other health practitioners to be called into a case for assistance. The standard ethical practice is to advise the patient of that situation. But a rather unethical but increasingly common practice nicknamed "drive-by doctoring" has come into play. Out-of-insurance/health-provider-network surgeons are called in and the patients don't know about it until they receive their bill. Beware, sticker shock can interfere with surgical recovery. One such sticker shock...

Move over white noise: pink noise may help people sleep more soundly

By Antonia, October 12 2014
(NaturalNews) In an effort to fall asleep faster and more soundly, many people turn to devices that create white noise, or soothing sounds across a range of frequencies. However, pink may be the new white. According to studies, pink noise, which includes sounds at lower, more consistent frequencies than white noise, seems to help people sleep better. (1) Additionally, it's associated with memory improvement, which is beneficial especially for those suffering from Alzheimer's disease or other conditions...

Ultraviolet light robot kills Ebola in two minutes; why doesn't every hospital have one of these?

By Mike Adams, October 11 2014
(NaturalNews) While vaccine makers and drug companies are rushing to bring medical interventions to the market that might address the Ebola pandemic, there's already a technology available right now that can kill Ebola in just two minutes in hospitals, quarantine centers, commercial offices and even public schools. It's called the Xenex Germ-Zapping Robot, and it was invented by a team of Texas doctors whose company is based on San Antonio. (And no, I didn't get paid to write this. I'm covering...

U.S. Marines run massive drill to prepare for Ebola pandemic spreading across America

By J. D. Heyes, October 11 2014
(NaturalNews) A Marine Corps base held a full-scale pandemic outbreak drill within the past week, in which local health officials and U.S. Marine and Navy personnel responded to a mock "smallpox outbreak" that occurred at the installation. JDNews.com, based in Jacksonville, North Carolina, quoted Lt. Joseph Kotora, public health emergency officer for Naval Hospital Camp Lejeune as saying that the drill, called "Exercise Vigilant Response," was the first of its kind at the legendary Marine Corps...

Ebola infects five people every hour, statistics show

By Ethan A. Huff, October 2 2014
(NaturalNews) Every 12 minutes, one additional person contracts Ebola in Sierra Leone, reveals newly published data. Five new people every hour are now coming down with the deadly viral disease, according to figures released by the UK charity group Save the Children, a shocking rate of infection that experts predict will double by the end of the month. During the last week of September, there were 765 new cases of Ebola reported in Sierra Leone. At the beginning of September, Ebola was spreading...

Fearing Ebola, Liberia cancels democratic elections as President seeks to control, speech, religion and private property

By J. D. Heyes, October 11 2014
(NaturalNews) The African nation of Liberia was founded, in part, by freed American slaves, but now, nearly 200 years later, the country is in danger of becoming overrun by Ebola, and its president is seeking dictatorial powers. According to Voice of America (VOA), President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf has petitioned the national legislature to extend to her additional emergency powers in the name of preventing the further spread of the deadly virus. Currently, the country is already under a state...

Homemade vitamin C

By Kali Sinclair, October 11 2014
(NaturalNews) Vitamin C is best known for strengthening the immune system. This potent antioxidant also has many other important roles that control significant aspects of our health. Vitamin C helps detoxify our bodies, protects and promotes healing of all of our cells, and helps us deal with both mental and physical stress. It also supports healthy bacteria in our gut, neutralizes free radicals, is anti viral and anti bacterial, prevents and kills cancer cells, and so much more. Most people, especially...

HPV-vaccine-induced mystery illness plaguing young girls in Colombia; media calls it 'mass hysteria'

By Jonathan Benson, October 11 2014
(NaturalNews) The vaccine death cult is busy spreading its genocide in the South American country of Colombia, where young girls everywhere are reportedly falling ill with a "mystery illness" that their parents say is being triggered by the HPV vaccine Gardasil. An Agence France-Presse report explains that many of the girls are developing cold hands and feet, becoming pale, convulsing and even collapsing unconscious following the shot, symptoms that are frequently observed post-Gardasil. In the...

What you can do to prepare for a pandemic in America

By J. D. Heyes, October 11 2014
(NaturalNews) Natural News editor Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, has been busy again lately, recording several episodes' worth of a course that contains very useful information regarding how best to protect yourself and your family in today's chaotic, bio-infected world. His latest discussion, titled, "Preparing for an Ebola outbreak in America," is now available at BioDefense.com, and as is the case with all previous discussions, it is available free of charge to the public. In this course...

How to increase your IQ and improve your brain health

By Michael Edwards, October 11 2014
(NaturalNews) If you're looking for a quick boost to finish a term paper, there are lots of herbs and other things you can do right away to help focus or boost other cognitive skills. If you're looking to increase your cognitive abilities over a long period of time, and enjoy life with a clear head and all the focus you need, the first step for most people is to kill the candida and balance the gut. Your brain and your bacteria Your brain is very connected to your gut. We have a symbiotic relationship...

Less than 60 days remaining before dozens of California communities run out of water

By J. D. Heyes, September 29 2014
(NaturalNews) Chronic drought conditions throughout the West continue to wreak havoc on the general public, as well as farming operations, but in California, things are about to get much worse. Some regions of the state are now within two months of completely running out of water, according to CBS San Francisco, which reported that communities in central and northern California could see their water supplies completely vanquished in less than 60 days. "The areas in jeopardy include Colusa and...

The healing benefits of pumpkin

By Derek Henry, October 11 2014
(NaturalNews) The pumpkin harvest begins in earnest, as these bright orange masterpieces grace gardens with the anticipation of roasted pumpkin seeds, pumpkin pies, and jack-o-lanterns. Aside from the deliciousness and fun around pumpkins, there are also a number of healing properties related to this member of the Cucurbitaceae family. So get your dehydrator, blender, or oven ready, because it is time to reap the benefits. Pumpkin's nutritional profile As the bright orange color may suggest...

The real Ebola risk to the USA is from uncontrolled outbreaks in Central and South America, not direct flights from Africa

By Mike Adams, October 10 2014
(NaturalNews) Marine Corps Gen. John F. Kelly, the commander of the U.S. Southern Command, has just issued a public warning about the real Ebola threat to America. [1] That threat doesn't come via direct flights from Africa, Gen. Kelly insists, but rather from Ebola spreading in Central and South American nations, causing populations to flee northward, toward the U.S. southern border. Gen. Kelly is absolutely correct. The real risk from Ebola must be understood with the recognition that there...

Airline cleaning crews go on strike over exposure to blood, vomit and other Ebola risks

By Jonathan Benson, October 10 2014
(NaturalNews) More than 200 cabin cleaners working at New York's LaGuardia Airport walked off the job on Wednesday in protest of what they say are poor working conditions. Citing the escalating Ebola scare as the straw that broke the camel's back, the employees of Air Serv, which contracts with major airlines to clean their planes between flights, say they refuse to clean blood, vomit and other possibly contaminated bodily fluids without adequate protection. Reports indicate that these and...

US government agencies, healthcare system totally unprepared to deal with Ebola pandemic

By Ethan A. Huff, October 10 2014
(NaturalNews) The first official case of Ebola has entered the U.S. via the Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport in Texas, and neither the U.S. government nor the healthcare system at large is prepared for the possible pandemic that could eventually unfold. The latest reports indicate that a man by the name of Thomas Eric Duncan, a Liberian national who is now being referred to as "patient zero" by the media, flew into Dallas on United Airlines from Washington Dulles International Airport in...

Neil deGrasse Tyson found to have fabricated numerous quotes to attack people with religious beliefs

By Jonathan Benson, October 10 2014
(NaturalNews) Reddit rock star and Paul Bunyan-esque icon of the modern-day skeptics movement, Neil deGrasse Tyson is the subject of new controversy involving Wikipedia, which is actively complicit in scrubbing embarrassing details about Tyson's compulsive habit of lying and making up stories from the digital record. An extensive investigation by The Federalist's Sean Davis reveals that Tyson has been engaging in serious intellectual fraud for years. And many so-called defenders of "science" remain...

Connecticut grants state health commissioner power to quarantine anyone suspected of Ebola

By J. D. Heyes, October 10 2014
(NaturalNews) While Natural News has sounded the alarm over the potential spread of Ebola in the U.S. beyond its current boundaries in Dallas, Texas, so far that hasn't happened. Americans are being reassured by federal and state public health officials that the deadly virus will be contained in Texas, and that there is little reason to be concerned it won't be. We'll see how that turns out. But in the meantime, the authoritarians in governments all across the country have begun to use fear about...

Flu shot facts for those considering the vaccinations

By Michael Edwards, October 10 2014
(NaturalNews) There is a consistent misconception among the mainstream consensus that vaccines are healthy. If flu shots are effective, one could argue that the end result is healthy, but there is nothing healthy about the vaccine itself. In 2014, the ingredients include thimerosal (mercury), aluminum salts, sugars, gelatin, egg protein, formaldehyde, and neomycin. Nobody in their right mind can argue that allowing these toxins into the body is actually "healthy." The idea is that the damage the...

Fed up with Washington, almost 1 in 4 Americans support seceding from the union

By J. D. Heyes, September 19 2014
(NaturalNews) Disgust and frustration with Washington is at an all-time high, with a new survey showing that the level of anger is rising steadily with each passing year. The Reuters/Ipsos survey comes right after the narrow rejection of secession from the United Kingdom by Scotland, but that effort has nonetheless fueled similar sentiments among millions of Americans, where "almost a quarter of people are open to their states leaving the union," Reuters reported. In all, nearly 24 percent...

Medical robot kills Ebola with UV light

By David Gutierrez, October 10 2014
(NaturalNews) A San Antonio-based medical device manufacturing company called Xenex has developed a robot that can kill Ebola or other viruses using just two minutes of ultraviolet light pulses. The robot, named "Little Moe," takes just five minutes to eradicate viruses from a single room, the company said. The company made the announcement as the ongoing Ebola epidemic continues to grab headlines around the world. To date, more than 7,470 people have become infected, nearly all of whom in West...

Detox vs. fasting - which one should you choose?

By Kali Sinclair, October 10 2014
(NaturalNews) There is a huge difference between detoxification and fasting, and yet the words tend to be used interchangeably. To detox is to facilitate the removal of toxins from the body whereas fasting is a severe restriction of calories. A fast may be a water fast where no nutrients are consumed, but the typical fast is to eliminate all solid foods while drinking a lot of fluids, including juices, to flush out the body. The Master Cleanse lemonade diet is a well-known example. The Master Cleanse...

Obama declares war on superbugs with another dictatorial executive order that funnels money to Big Pharma

By Jonathan Benson, October 10 2014
(NaturalNews) Dictator Obama has signed yet another executive order that altogether bypasses Congress, this time to address the growing threat of "superbugs" that no longer respond to common antibiotics. CNBC reports that the order will award a $20 million prize to whoever can come up with a viable testing regimen for identifying and tracking the spread of resistant bacterial infections. The order calls on the appropriate government agencies to submit a plan by February outlining how the superbug...



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