Guest guest Posted January 13, 2010 Report Share Posted January 13, 2010 This is largely repetition to what we in the no-forced-vaccination group already know, BUT it is VERY reassuring, to me at least, to see there ARE those in the Medical Community who ARE TRUTHFUL and abiding by their oaths...phil/qd36 13 Jan 2010 How mercury is destroying our youth If you want to get some real answers behind the nation's autism epidemic, don't turn to the bureaucrats in charge our health. Every time I turn around, the CDC's numbers are different. Right now, the pencil pushers claim that 1 in 110 U.S. kids is autistic. Just a few months ago, they said it was 1 in 100. Two years earlier, it was 1 in 150. Meanwhile, another study says it's 1 in 91. Regardless of the exact numbers, too many children suffer from this disease – and it's high time people started to focus more on the cause than the cure. Otherwise, with a disease that steadily on the rise, we'll always be playing catch-up – and playing right into Big Pharma's hands. After all, there's a lot of money to be made on such a fast- rising disease. The key here is to limit kids' exposure to mercury – and it starts when they're in the womb. Then, think twice before giving them any unnecessary vaccines, which often contain the compound thimerosal (which is half mercury). I don't believe thimerosal is solely to blame for the rise in autism, but it has certainly played its part. But there are plenty of other sources of mercury. It's in our dental fillings (make sure to get the resin kind instead of the silver fillings), seafood (don't overdo the tuna), and plenty of consumer products – including the environmentally friendly new light bulbs that are all the rage right now. It's also been found in high-fructose corn syrup, which is in just about all of the most common processed foods and drinks – and something you should be avoiding anyway. If you suspect your child or grandchild may have autism, get some tests done ASAP. Early diagnosis and intensive therapy can have incredible benefits Don't cry over this spilled milk Would you raise your hand for extra sugar and empty calories? No? Then don't raise your hand for chocolate milk. There's a new campaign out there called "Raise your hands for chocolate milk," a response to school districts that have been removing this sugary swill from their lunchrooms. But it's not some wholesome grassroots movement... it's a million-dollar campaign funded by two Big Dairy lobbying groups. They even use their favorite gimmick: TV stars. That's a trick you pull when you don't have science behind you... and the dairy industry falls back on that one quite a bit. So as these celebrity moms and dads distract you by raising their highly paid hands for chocolate milk, a couple of dietitians and even some doctors (I assume they're real and not just actors) lecture us on the supposed health benefits of chocolate milk. Listen, any doctor who approves of sugar and empty calories in any form probably spent more time in the lunchroom than the classroom back in medical school. Ounce for ounce, some chocolate milk drinks contain MORE sugar and calories than soda. Your kid can pork up on the 30 grams of sugar and 200 calories in eight ounces of Nesquik reduced-fat chocolate milk... while a 12-ounce can of Coke – pretty much the worst drink I can think of – has 140 calories and 27 grams of sugar. That's right – chocolate milk can actually make Coke look good! And don't forget that plenty of kids drink both. So don't listen to all that blah-blah-blah about the nine essential nutrients in chocolate milk. It's just noise – because you can find all those nutrients elsewhere, from far healthier sources (especially fresh raw milk). One dietitian – one with her head screwed on right for a change – estimates that simply choosing chocolate milk over plain milk every day could lead to 2.5 to 3 extra pounds per year. Add that up over the course of a grade-school education, and you'll need two seats at graduation – one for each sugar-swelled cheek. Think about that next time Big Dairy asks you to raise your hand for chocolate milk. Raising my voice instead, s II, M.D. -- Phil Frederick ;-) ID: quickdraw3650 Paltalk ID: Quickdraw36 ------------------------------------------------------------------------- "...a law repugnant to the constitution is void..." _Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S. 137 (1803) "If we are to guard against ignorance and remain free, it is the responsibility of EVERY American to be INFORMED."__ Jefferson "Righteousness exalteth a nation: but sin is a reproach to any people."__KJV Proverbs 14:34 •http://storm.prohosting.com/~quickdra/ -info site, email forum signup + •HELP spread the TRUTH: http://www./group/GunRightsConstitution •Judicial Accountability (TO the PEOPLE): http://www.jail4judges.org •REAL, legal, Silver- & Gold-Backed $MONEY$: http://www.libertydollar.org/default.asp?REFERER=NRC27938 ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 13, 2010 Report Share Posted January 13, 2010 This is largely repetition to what we in the no-forced-vaccination group already know, BUT it is VERY reassuring, to me at least, to see there ARE those in the Medical Community who ARE TRUTHFUL and abiding by their oaths...phil/qd36 13 Jan 2010 How mercury is destroying our youth If you want to get some real answers behind the nation's autism epidemic, don't turn to the bureaucrats in charge our health. Every time I turn around, the CDC's numbers are different. Right now, the pencil pushers claim that 1 in 110 U.S. kids is autistic. Just a few months ago, they said it was 1 in 100. Two years earlier, it was 1 in 150. Meanwhile, another study says it's 1 in 91. Regardless of the exact numbers, too many children suffer from this disease – and it's high time people started to focus more on the cause than the cure. Otherwise, with a disease that steadily on the rise, we'll always be playing catch-up – and playing right into Big Pharma's hands. After all, there's a lot of money to be made on such a fast- rising disease. The key here is to limit kids' exposure to mercury – and it starts when they're in the womb. Then, think twice before giving them any unnecessary vaccines, which often contain the compound thimerosal (which is half mercury). I don't believe thimerosal is solely to blame for the rise in autism, but it has certainly played its part. But there are plenty of other sources of mercury. It's in our dental fillings (make sure to get the resin kind instead of the silver fillings), seafood (don't overdo the tuna), and plenty of consumer products – including the environmentally friendly new light bulbs that are all the rage right now. It's also been found in high-fructose corn syrup, which is in just about all of the most common processed foods and drinks – and something you should be avoiding anyway. If you suspect your child or grandchild may have autism, get some tests done ASAP. Early diagnosis and intensive therapy can have incredible benefits Don't cry over this spilled milk Would you raise your hand for extra sugar and empty calories? No? Then don't raise your hand for chocolate milk. There's a new campaign out there called "Raise your hands for chocolate milk," a response to school districts that have been removing this sugary swill from their lunchrooms. But it's not some wholesome grassroots movement... it's a million-dollar campaign funded by two Big Dairy lobbying groups. They even use their favorite gimmick: TV stars. That's a trick you pull when you don't have science behind you... and the dairy industry falls back on that one quite a bit. So as these celebrity moms and dads distract you by raising their highly paid hands for chocolate milk, a couple of dietitians and even some doctors (I assume they're real and not just actors) lecture us on the supposed health benefits of chocolate milk. Listen, any doctor who approves of sugar and empty calories in any form probably spent more time in the lunchroom than the classroom back in medical school. Ounce for ounce, some chocolate milk drinks contain MORE sugar and calories than soda. Your kid can pork up on the 30 grams of sugar and 200 calories in eight ounces of Nesquik reduced-fat chocolate milk... while a 12-ounce can of Coke – pretty much the worst drink I can think of – has 140 calories and 27 grams of sugar. That's right – chocolate milk can actually make Coke look good! And don't forget that plenty of kids drink both. So don't listen to all that blah-blah-blah about the nine essential nutrients in chocolate milk. It's just noise – because you can find all those nutrients elsewhere, from far healthier sources (especially fresh raw milk). One dietitian – one with her head screwed on right for a change – estimates that simply choosing chocolate milk over plain milk every day could lead to 2.5 to 3 extra pounds per year. Add that up over the course of a grade-school education, and you'll need two seats at graduation – one for each sugar-swelled cheek. Think about that next time Big Dairy asks you to raise your hand for chocolate milk. Raising my voice instead, s II, M.D. -- Phil Frederick ;-) ID: quickdraw3650 Paltalk ID: Quickdraw36 ------------------------------------------------------------------------- "...a law repugnant to the constitution is void..." _Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S. 137 (1803) "If we are to guard against ignorance and remain free, it is the responsibility of EVERY American to be INFORMED."__ Jefferson "Righteousness exalteth a nation: but sin is a reproach to any people."__KJV Proverbs 14:34 •http://storm.prohosting.com/~quickdra/ -info site, email forum signup + •HELP spread the TRUTH: http://www./group/GunRightsConstitution •Judicial Accountability (TO the PEOPLE): http://www.jail4judges.org •REAL, legal, Silver- & Gold-Backed $MONEY$: http://www.libertydollar.org/default.asp?REFERER=NRC27938 ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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