Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts | The number of Americans killed each year by FDA-approved pharmaceuticals is -- I kid you not -- equivalent to dropping a nuclear weapon on a major U.S. city. Think Hiroshima in World War II, but that it keeps happening every year, right here in the United States.
Ignorance is a very powerful weapon for drug companies and politicians. It is no surprise that both would vigorously oppose any law that might seek to end widespread ignorance and shed light on the atrocious safety record of pharmaceuticals.
Click here to read the Consumers Union press release on this topic. | James Trefil, Joseph F. Kett, and E. D. Hirsch See book keywords and concepts | Warheads are mounted on the forward part of a projectile such as a ballistic missile or an artillery round. nuclear weapon Any weapon that employs a nuclear reaction for its explosive power. Nuclear weapons include ballistic missiles, bombs (see atomic bomb and hydrogen bomb), artillery rounds, and mines. nuclear-free zone An area in which nuclear weapons, by choice of the residents, may not be moved or stored. A number of areas around the world, such as New Zealand, have declared themselves nuclear-free zones, or have attempted to.
OAS See Organization of American States. | Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts | Allowing the FDA to continue operating as it does today kills as many Americans as detonating a nuclear weapon over a major U.S. city each year.
And yet most lawmakers and government officials pretend the big threat to the safety of Americans is found somewhere else, in a foreign land, rather than right here at home. If anyone in the Bush Administration really cared about protecting the lives of Americans, they would summon the military to surround the FDA and start arresting the criminal-minded officials who run the agency. | E. D. Hirsch See book keywords and concepts | Warheads are mounted on the forward part of a projectile such as a ballistic missile or an artillery round. nuclear weapon Any weapon that employs a nuclear reaction for its explosive power. Nuclear weapons include ballistic missiles, bombs (see atomic bomb and hydrogen bomb), artillery rounds, and mines. nuclear-free zone An area in which nuclear weapons, by choice of the residents, may not be moved or stored. A number of areas around the world, such as New Zealand, have declared themselves nuclear-free zones, or have attempted to.
OAS See Organization of American States. | Carl Jensen See book keywords and concepts | Given the hypocrisy of enhancing nuclear weapons power while calling for nuclear weapon disarmament, some groups, including the Physicians for Social Responsibility, have challenged the need to produce any tritium.
Please also see update of "U.S. Against the World," #4, 1992.
6. Radical Plan From Newt Gingrich's Think Tank to Gut FDA
1995 SYNOPSIS: The Food and Drug Administration (FDA), sometimes criticized in the past for being too cozy with corporations, is now under attack for exactly the opposite reason. | James Trefil, Joseph F. Kett, and E. D. Hirsch See book keywords and concepts | MIRV) A warhead on a ballistic missile that contains more than one nuclear weapon, each ca-pab'e of being aimed at a different target.
MX missile A highly accurate nuclear weapon, housed in a silo. A type of intercontinental ballistic missile, the MX was designed by the United States to attack similar silo-based missiles in the Soviet Union. national liberation movements Movements that arise in developing nations to expel colonialist powers (see colonialism), often by means of guerrilla warfare. | E. D. Hirsch See book keywords and concepts | MX missile A highly accurate nuclear weapon, housed in a silo. A type of intercontinental ballistic missile, the MX was designed by the United States to attack similar silo-based missiles in the Soviet Union. narrow construction A theory of interpretation of the Constitution that holds that the courts, particularly the Supreme Court, should be bound by the exact words of the Constitution, or by the original intent of the framers of the Constitution, or a combination of both. Sometimes called judicial restraint.
NASA See National Aeronautics and Space Administration. | Doug Dollemore, Mark Giuliucci and the Editors of Men's Health Magazine See book keywords and concepts | No. A nuclear weapon? Uh-uh. Only the most abundant compound on earth. A vital nutrient. And a powerful age-erasing ally.
Congratulations, Professor. You have yourself some water. H20. A substance so simple, so common, so ordinary that it's easy to overlook how important it is.
For starters, water is present in every cell and tissue of your body and plays a vital role in almost every biological process from digestion to respiration to circulation. It transports nutrients throughout the body and carries harmful toxins and waste products out of the body. It regulates our body temperature. | E. D. Hirsch See book keywords and concepts | A-bomb) A nuclear weapon whose enormous explosive power results from the sudden release of energy from a fission reaction. (See also Hiroshima, hydrogen bomb, Nagasaki, and Strategic Arms Limitation Talks [SALT].) attache (at-uh-SHAY, uh-ta-SHAY) A diplomatic officer attached to an embassy or consulate. Most attaches have specialties. There are military attaches, cultural attaches, economic attaches, and so forth. **• Some nations disguise spies as attaches. autocracy (aw-TOK-ruh-see) A system of government in which supreme political power is held by one person. | | A nuclear weapon with enormous explosive power, fueled by nuclear fusion, in which atoms of hydrogen combine to form atoms of helium.
ICBM See intercontinental ballistic missile. ideology A system of beliefs or theories, usually political, held by an individual or a group. Capitalism, communism, and socialism are usually called ideologies. immigration Entry and settlement in a country by people born elsewhere. imperialism Acquisition by a government of other governments or territories, or of economic or cultural power over other nations or territories, often by force. | Robert Sampson, M.D. & Patricia Hughes, B.S.N. See book keywords and concepts | The next day newspapers reported that China had detonated an underground nuclear weapon in the 20-to-80-kiloton range at Lop Nor in northwestern Xinjiang province.
In December 1995 we had begun focusing our energies on completing this book. We worked intensely at all hours of the day or night and had no time for cooking. As a result, we ate nothing but restaurant and take-out food—pizza, Chinese, Indian, Thai—whatever we found that was easy and sounded good. We wrote whenever we could and frequently were up until three o'clock, drinking coffee and eating chocolate at midnight. | E. D. Hirsch See book keywords and concepts | MIRV) A warhead on a ballistic missile that contains more than one nuclear weapon, each capable of being aimed at a different target. national liberation movements Movements that arise in developing nations to expel colonialist powers (see colonialism), often by means of guerrilla warfare. national self-determination Creation of national governmental institutions by a group of people who view themselves as a distinct nation (for example, because they have a common language). National self-determination is opposed to colonialism and imperialism. (See Fourteen Points. | James Trefil, Joseph F. Kett, and E. D. Hirsch See book keywords and concepts | MX missile A highly accurate nuclear weapon, housed in a silo. A type of intercontinental ballistic missile, the MX was designed by the United States to attack similar silo-based missiles in the Soviet Union. national liberation movements Movements that arise in developing nations to expel colonialist powers (see colonialism), often by means of guerrilla warfare. national self-determination Creation of national governmental institutions by a group of people who view themselves as a distinct nation (for example, because they have a common language). | | A nuclear weapon with enormous explosive power, fueled by nuclear fusion, in which atoms of hydrogen combine to form atoms of helium.
ICBM See intercontinental ballistic missile. ideology (eye-dee-ol-uh-jee, id-ee-ol-uh-jee) A system of beliefs or theories, usually political, held by an individual or a group. Capitalism, communism, and socialism are usually called ideologies. imperialism Acquisition by a government of other governments or territories, or of economic or cultural power over other nations or territories, often by force. Colonialism is a form of imperialism. | | A-bomb) A nuclear weapon whose enormous explosive power results from the sudden release of energy from a fission reaction. (See also Hiroshima, hydrogen bomb, Nagasaki, and Strategic Arms Limitation Talks [SALT].) attache (a-ta-shay, at-uh-shay) A diplomatic officer attached to an embassy or consulate. Most attaches have specialties. There are military attaches, cultural attaches, economic attaches, and so forth. it- Some nations disguise spies as attaches. autocracy (aw-tok-ruh-see) A system of government in which supreme political power is held by one person. | Leonard G. Horowitz, D.M.D., M.A., M.P.H. See book keywords and concepts | As one pursues the possibilities of such covert uses, one discovers that the scenarios resemble that in which the components of a nuclear weapon are smuggled into New York City and assembled in the basement of the Empire State Building. In other words, once the possibility is recognized to exist, about all that one can do is worry about it.13
General military philosophy according to Bennett: says that our national security demands that we "keep all options open" no matter how limited the need for or the utility of a given option may be. | Alexander Hellemans and Brian Bunch See book keywords and concepts | In turn, these developments affected to various degrees chemistry, astronomy, geology, biology, medicine, technology, and ultimately the fate of Earth, since they culminated with the first nuclear weapon, the atomic bomb, in 1945.
The growth of twentieth-century science
Science during the nineteenth century was still the occupation of only a few persons. During the twentieth century, however, the number of scientists became so large that it has almost become a cliche that more scientists have lived in the twentieth century than in all previous eras together. |
FAIR USE NOTICE: The research quoted here is provided under the protection of Fair Use provisions and published by the 501(c)3 non-profit Consumer Wellness Center for the purposes of public comment and education. Authors / publishers may submit books for consideration of inclusion here.
TERMS OF USE: Read full terms of use. Citations of text from NaturalPedia must include: 1) Full credit to the original author and book title. 2) Secondary credit to the Natural News Naturalpedia as a research resource and a link to www.NaturalNews.com/np/index.html
This unique compilation of research is copyright (c) 2008 by the non-profit Consumer Wellness Center.
ABOUT THE CREATOR OF NATURALPEDIA: Mike Adams, the creator of this NaturalNews Naturalpedia, is the editor of NaturalNews.com, the internet's top natural health news site, creator of the Honest Food Guide (www.HonestFoodGuide.org), a free downloadable consumer food guide based on natural health principles, author of Grocery Warning, The 7 Laws of Nutrition, Natural Health Solutions, and many other books available at www.TruthPublishing.com, creator of the earth-friendly EcoLEDs company (www.EcoLEDs.com) that manufactures energy-efficient LED lighting products, founder of Arial Software (www.ArialSoftware.com), a permission e-mail technology company, creator of the CounterThink Cartoon series (www.NaturalNews.com/index-cartoons.html) and author of over 1,500 articles, interviews, special reports and reference guides available at www.NaturalNews.com. Adams' personal philosophy and health statistics are available at www.HealthRanger.org.
|
 |
Refine your search
with Nuclear weapon...
|
Related Concepts:
China Patricia Choking Biological Chemical Christine Earth Biological weapons Eating Energies Components Bennett Worry Strong Range Night Newspapers Focusing Time New york city Cooking Military Philosophy Coughing December Building Land Home Chinese Coffee Plants Plant Test Agents Effects Animal Animals National security National Indian Maintaining Wrote Death Disease Drinking Eat Chocolate Driving Nature Warfare People What to eat Organisms Defining Yoga Serious Meditation Basic Earth's Energy Potential Connection Session Significance Technology Healing General Macrobiotic Science
|