While your diagnosis of America's healthcare paradox is astute - highest pharmaceutical profits yet poor health outcomes - your proposed solution of nutraceuticals merely substitutes one reductionist approach for another.
The fundamental flaw lies in our obsession with dissecting wholes into their smallest components. When you cite Hippocrates' famous "Let food be thy medicine" quote, you miss its original context. Hippocrates, unburdened by microscopes and modern technology, spoke of food holistically - its natural form, taste, and essence. He wasn't suggesting we reduce foods to isolated compounds and nutrients.
The body doesn't recognize our mental constructs of "fiber," "vitamin C," or "protein B." These are human categorizations, based on the blind identification with the mind as the sole arbiter of life, - useful for study perhaps, but far removed from how the body actually functions. This disconnect exemplifies our current predicament: highly intelligent people who've lost touch with the fundamental nature of being.
Here lies a subtle but critical trap: the very mindset of "eating healthy to prevent disease" creates an unconscious relationship with what we fear. When we orient our choices around preventing illness, we inadvertently maintain a constant relationship with the very thing we're trying to avoid.
If we're consuming specific foods to prevent high cholesterol or taking supplements to ward off potential ailments, we're actually engaged in an unconscious struggle with these conditions. This paired opposition can create a self-fulfilling prophecy - as our fears increase, our health may actually spiral downward.
What's more troubling is how our technological advancement has created an illusion of control. We mistake information accumulation for understanding, drowning in data points that overwhelm rather than illuminate. These endless metrics and measurements serve primarily as placebos, calming our anxious minds with a false sense of mastery over the unknowable.
True health isn't maintained through checklists, calorie counting, or supplement regimens. While these tools might have value, they're secondary to the body's innate intelligence and individual blueprint. It's about resonance with one's natural frequency, not adherence to universal protocols.
This brings us to a crucial point: there is no one-size-fits-all solution. Current policy approaches fail to recognize that what benefits one person may harm another. We've developed collective science seeking universal formulas while neglecting individual science - the understanding of differentiated needs based on blood type, body type, personality, and countless other factors. Yet this individualized approach remains largely undeveloped, with personalized testing often prohibitively expensive.
Which leads to the elephant in the room: how can we speak of a "wellness revolution" in a country without universal healthcare? It's paradoxical to discuss optimization through nutraceuticals when basic medical access remains a luxury for many. When an ambulance ride of 150 yards costs $1,500, we're not discussing freedom but systemic imprisonment. Even developing nations surpass America in providing basic healthcare access.
True revolution in wellness must begin with fundamental systemic change, not just exchanging one set of supplements for another. Until we address these core issues - our reductionist mindset, the need for individualized approaches, and basic healthcare access - any talk of a wellness revolution remains premature.
I was with you until you advocated “universal healthcare” which is not actually “universal.” It actually means rationing of healthcare. The elderly are not considered the worth of the expense because of a shorter life expectancy and because they may contribute less financially to society. It reminds me of “equity” which, to me, means lowering all to the lowest common denominator so that no one has the opportunity to receive the maximum benefit. Healthier lifestyles could decrease healthcare costs by reducing chronic illness. Eliminating toxins from our environment to allow clean, nutritious food to grow would be nice. Avoiding excess sugar in our diet would be healthful. Physical exercise doesn’t have to cost anything. Soothing meditation doesn’t have to cost anything. Prayer and striving for a closer relationship with our Creator and Savior, Jesus Christ, has many rewards. The mind body connection is very important when it comes to health. Stress reduction and improving coping skills are important to healing and disease prevention. I agree that reducing foods to vitamins can cause an imbalance in other nutrients, some yet unknown, and consuming a proper balance of Whole Foods would be preferable to taking a handful of vitamin pills everyday.
While I was raised on natural remedies and have only visited a hospital once in my childhood due to a head injury, I maintain no illusions about controlling fate. This brings me to a peculiar American sensitivity: the reflexive resistance to universal healthcare, often dismissing it as socialism or claiming it breeds societal dependency and decay.
Yet the irony is striking - America lacks universal healthcare, yet its citizens rank among the unhealthiest in developed nations, while public institutions the most corrupt, clearly demonstrating that universal healthcare isn't the catalyst for societal deterioration or income disparity. This reaction misses the point entirely.
Universal healthcare isn't about ideology - it's about societal sanity. Reading between the lines of my earlier response, one can discern my view that while the allopathic system is fundamentally inferior, it excels precisely where we can't predict or control outcomes: traumatic injuries and accidents. Dismissing its role entirely through broad generalizations doesn't serve anyone.
Perhaps most importantly, true stress reduction includes the peace of mind that comes from knowing a medical emergency won't lead to financial ruin. When fate intervenes - as it inevitably will - healthcare access shouldn't depend on the size of one's bank account.
Your comment misses the mark entirely and reflects the imprecision plaguing contemporary communication.
What you're actually describing is the reality of our current non-universal healthcare system, controlled by corporate incentives and agendas, where we can indeed be subjected to potentially harmful treatments like Remdesivir, vaccines, and AZT.
But let's address the practical reality: what happens when you break your ankle, get stabbed in the street by a drunk vagrant, or get hit by a vehicle? What then?
Consider this contrast: In India, Sathya Sai Baba - a controversial figure viewed by some as a divine incarnation and by others as a con man - accomplished something remarkable: within just one year, he established a complete, fully operational hospital. The speed and scale of this development alone could be considered miraculous.
But what's even more extraordinary is that every single treatment in this facility is provided completely free of charge to anyone regardless of ethnicity or nationality. The hospital continues to attract physicians from around the globe who volunteer their services, regardless of their personal views about Sai Baba himself.
This example throws into sharp relief the greatest delusion affecting American society: the conditioned belief in their supremacy and freedom, while unwittingly accepting a different form of slavery.
The absence of universal healthcare in a nation that claims global leadership and "greatness" status reveals a deeper truth: beneath its veneer of progress lies a society bearing the hallmarks of both enslavement and third-world infrastructure.
You have "incapsulated" the essence of the well lived biom -digesting life here like a great Readers Digest version often does. Easy to read and best food for thought essay.
Total descriptive health package to examine and live by. A+
I am glad the author is awakening to the value of nutraceuticals in medicine, but neither the term nor the approach to medicine is new. I converted to holistic medicine in my general practice 44 years ago and always used nutritional approaches in preference to pharmaceuticals. As the Cycling Nut implied above, benefiting from this change will still require an attitude of personal responsibility for health.
Thank you for this message, Dr Diaz. It’s going to mean that doctors are going to have to learn about nutraceuticals. My cardiologist’s nurse practitioner didn’t even know of the importance of COQ10 for those taking a statin. Of course, the Doctor never heard of nattokinase. It’s a huge learning curve. Hopefully, they will also learn about fundamental medicine as well. My fear is that big pharma will capture the nutraceutical and supplement market and price them out of reach. Or the insurance companies will bring them under their umbrella and soak us with premiums. RFK has much to deal with. I pray for his success.
I have a book kicking around here that lists many of the phytochemicals that each food contains. There are 10000 to 25000 phyto chemicals in the common foods we eat. The body finds many of them during digestion to keep us healthy. When I look back on my family's genealogy over the past 200 years if someone made it to 20 years old then there was a 95%+ chance they made it to 80+. In the 5% were those like my aunt who smoked and died of cancer and my grandfather who worked himself to an early death during the war effort. My ancestors grew up on the family farm and in spite of the absence of pharmaceuticals and pasturized milk they survived into their 80s.
Absolutely fascinating article! I have lived these types of diets for most of my life without ever thinking about it. Wild fish, wild meat and home grown fruit and vegetables have made up the majority of my diet without it ever have been a conscious endeavour. It was simply because it was the life style I chose. Now in my seventies I am still quite robust and have no illnesses that I am aware of. I still hike the back country hunting fishing and foraging simply because it is what I enjoy. Since Covid I began researching diets and active lifestyle and to anyone interested I would say check it out. Nature is the best doctor available. Listen to her.
My wife and I are right there with you. 74 now, wife 68. No meds, ideal BMIs, fit and no health problems. Trouble is, energy and motivation has tapered off the last few years. Today I really should go hunting, but with the chores on my plate, backed up work (still working, self-employed), and needing to go to the gym, I'm not gonna make it to the woods. The thought of butchering another deer is a bit daunting right now anyway. Even 5 years ago all of it would have been no prob. I'm NOT skipping the gym, exercise is something you can't catch up on later. I wish I had Trump's energy, I don't know how he does it.
I hear you. I almost went nuts this year after I herniated myself in the spring moving a woodstove into my workshop. While I bought a truss I was still quite limited in what I could do. I finally got my surgery at the end of November and I am now starting to get physically active again although I am being exaggeratedly cautious as I am only four weeks post surgery. I was shocked at how much of my physical conditioning went downhill in the last four weeks. The only thing to do is put your head down and force yourself to get back at it. As for hunting while it is harder to get an animal out of the bush I just develop different techniques. I cheated this time around and used a guad to pack my moose out and will probably continue to do so in the future. I guess we just have to learn to work smarter not harder at this stage of the game. At any rate I expect to be back at everything full bunnies in the last week of January. I knew a gent who was still deer hunting at 92 so the sky is still the limit. Straight shooting and Happy New Year to you and yours.
Sorry to hear about the hernia, must be rough. It's depressing to get deconditioned when you're older, takes longer to get back where you want to be. Can't imagine hauling a moose out! You're set for years I'd think. I'm less likely to hike back as far as I used to just thinking about getting a whitetail back to the truck. The two-wheel carts work great but still an exhausting workout. Happy New Year to you guys too, hope it's a good one.
The Dumbing of America became easy and effortless once the food sources went to gas stations and drive up windows. Food addictions are the fulfilments of self gratifications.
Cheap garbage in pretty wrappers is never more than a few blocks away in big cities.
Chaos always favors the establishment. We have been BOMB barded by marketing genius.
“I would like to provide a couple of examples of bioactive compounds that have medicinal benefits. Turmeric and Curcumin, for example, have anti-inflammatory, and antioxidant benefits and may also contribute to remediating the effects of heart disease, Alzheimer's disease, and depression.”
Being that the vast majority of the population in this country has been injected with a poorly tested experimental genetic product, even those who have not already suffered an adverse effect are at risk of developing one. Many are, no doubt, walking around with undiagnosed myocarditis, making them ticking time-bombs. Instead of sending billions of dollars to Ukraine, how about we provide cardiac MRIs to those in the highest risk category for injury to their hearts - young boys, teenage boys, & young adult men. All the nutraceuticals in the world will not compensate for this underlying condition. How many "died suddenly" cases is it going to take before we try to mitigate some of this occult damage?
In addition to let food be thy medicine, Hippocrates noted that people whose front door was on the sunny side of their dwelling were healthier than those whose front door was on the shady side. One of his treatments was sunbathing.
We do need to pay more attention to food than people pre1850 did. The first polio epidemic in the US was in the 1870s and was actually arsenic poisoning from arsenic sprayed on apples as an insecticide.
We also have the problem that wheat is more finely ground than in olden times. Result is bread has a higher glycemic index.
With the use of fertilizers and sprays, fruits and vegetables grow faster and have lower nutritional value.
Meat and dairy cows eat an unnatural diet and as a results also have lower nutritional value and make compounds that damage our health.
Result is our bodies cannot function properly unless were pay close attention to food sources and spend at least half hour a day outdoors. There are other things we have to pay attention to that people in Hippocrates time did not.
The True Food Summit - Children's Health DefenseArizona Chapter
REGISTER HERE: Children’s Health Defense ® - Arizona Chapter is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization. Our mission is to end childhood health epidemics by eliminating toxic exposure. We will restore and protect the health of children by eliminating environmental exposures, holding responsible parties accountable, and establishing safeguards to prevent future harm to children's health. az.childrenshealthdefense.org
Heal & Nourish | The True Food Summit – Sponsorship
Would you like to be a sponsor of the Heal & Nourish | The True Food Summit? If you would like to sponsor us, please fill out the following form. Businesses, families and individuals are encouraged to sponsor this event. Sponsorship opportunities are limited to ensure the visibility of our most valued supporters!
Reclaim Your Food Supply and Let Food Be Your Medicine
- Do you want to eat bugs and lab-grown meat?
- Can we trust our government to regulate the US food chain?
- Is there a war over water? Do we have enough to grow food?
- Does organic food mean what you think?
- What are the risks of GMO food?
- Can you trust food from the supermarket?
Learn How to Grow Your Own!
- Discover permaculture, and sustainable, regenerative gardening in the desert.
- Learn how to grow a garden in your own backyard or patio.
- Be more self-sufficient and build community with others.
Children’s Health Defense ® - Arizona Chapter is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization. Our mission is ending childhood health epidemics by eliminating toxic exposure. We will restore and protect the health of children by eliminating environmental exposures, holding responsible parties accountable, and establishing safeguards to prevent future harm to children's health. az.childrenshealthdefense.org
Interesting you include naturopathy, homeopathy, medical, etc. in the mix of Dr’s yet chiropractors, many who are cutting edge wellness practitioners involved for decades in this wellness revolution, are omitted. I guess my DC degree of 5,000 hours which included nutrition, all the core and clinical courses, primary contact with over 250,000 patient visits doesn’t quality in your world?
So how long before nutraceuticals become toxic, if we aren't there already? Put yourself in the position of the medical/pharma/globalist behemoth. You have no moral qualms whatsoever, you have infinitely more money and influence than supplement companies. You are threatened by those supplement companies. What do you do? Well, you would buy, or surreptitiously infiltrate supplement companies, and adulterate their products to remove efficacy and add toxicity. That's how you'd bury the threat. So, while we do take supplements, I'm leery of their contents and worry the window in which we can trust these products enough to use them is closing. As to letting food be your medicine - great idea until you read horror stories of contamination of even "real" food like produce and unprocessed meat. We're lucky to be able to provide about half of what we eat ourselves by hunting, fishing, gardening, and gathering. I worry more all the time that we're still at major risk since we still get about half from conventional sources. It's a big commitment to provide all your food from the ONLY source you can trust today (yourself). Who doesn't like to go out to eat once in a while? Seems we're in a bad place.
Great read and all so right on the money!
https://www.amazon.com/s?k=let%27s+talk+sh+t+-+the+book&crid=1GG96VF2W3SVL&sprefix=Let%27s+talk+sh%2Caps%2C143&ref=nb_sb_ss_ts-doa-p_1_13
The Sabine book link is denominated in a different currency. This link is for U.S. dollars.
Thanks for the link! Just ordered it on Audible.
While your diagnosis of America's healthcare paradox is astute - highest pharmaceutical profits yet poor health outcomes - your proposed solution of nutraceuticals merely substitutes one reductionist approach for another.
The fundamental flaw lies in our obsession with dissecting wholes into their smallest components. When you cite Hippocrates' famous "Let food be thy medicine" quote, you miss its original context. Hippocrates, unburdened by microscopes and modern technology, spoke of food holistically - its natural form, taste, and essence. He wasn't suggesting we reduce foods to isolated compounds and nutrients.
The body doesn't recognize our mental constructs of "fiber," "vitamin C," or "protein B." These are human categorizations, based on the blind identification with the mind as the sole arbiter of life, - useful for study perhaps, but far removed from how the body actually functions. This disconnect exemplifies our current predicament: highly intelligent people who've lost touch with the fundamental nature of being.
Here lies a subtle but critical trap: the very mindset of "eating healthy to prevent disease" creates an unconscious relationship with what we fear. When we orient our choices around preventing illness, we inadvertently maintain a constant relationship with the very thing we're trying to avoid.
If we're consuming specific foods to prevent high cholesterol or taking supplements to ward off potential ailments, we're actually engaged in an unconscious struggle with these conditions. This paired opposition can create a self-fulfilling prophecy - as our fears increase, our health may actually spiral downward.
What's more troubling is how our technological advancement has created an illusion of control. We mistake information accumulation for understanding, drowning in data points that overwhelm rather than illuminate. These endless metrics and measurements serve primarily as placebos, calming our anxious minds with a false sense of mastery over the unknowable.
True health isn't maintained through checklists, calorie counting, or supplement regimens. While these tools might have value, they're secondary to the body's innate intelligence and individual blueprint. It's about resonance with one's natural frequency, not adherence to universal protocols.
This brings us to a crucial point: there is no one-size-fits-all solution. Current policy approaches fail to recognize that what benefits one person may harm another. We've developed collective science seeking universal formulas while neglecting individual science - the understanding of differentiated needs based on blood type, body type, personality, and countless other factors. Yet this individualized approach remains largely undeveloped, with personalized testing often prohibitively expensive.
Which leads to the elephant in the room: how can we speak of a "wellness revolution" in a country without universal healthcare? It's paradoxical to discuss optimization through nutraceuticals when basic medical access remains a luxury for many. When an ambulance ride of 150 yards costs $1,500, we're not discussing freedom but systemic imprisonment. Even developing nations surpass America in providing basic healthcare access.
True revolution in wellness must begin with fundamental systemic change, not just exchanging one set of supplements for another. Until we address these core issues - our reductionist mindset, the need for individualized approaches, and basic healthcare access - any talk of a wellness revolution remains premature.
I was with you until you advocated “universal healthcare” which is not actually “universal.” It actually means rationing of healthcare. The elderly are not considered the worth of the expense because of a shorter life expectancy and because they may contribute less financially to society. It reminds me of “equity” which, to me, means lowering all to the lowest common denominator so that no one has the opportunity to receive the maximum benefit. Healthier lifestyles could decrease healthcare costs by reducing chronic illness. Eliminating toxins from our environment to allow clean, nutritious food to grow would be nice. Avoiding excess sugar in our diet would be healthful. Physical exercise doesn’t have to cost anything. Soothing meditation doesn’t have to cost anything. Prayer and striving for a closer relationship with our Creator and Savior, Jesus Christ, has many rewards. The mind body connection is very important when it comes to health. Stress reduction and improving coping skills are important to healing and disease prevention. I agree that reducing foods to vitamins can cause an imbalance in other nutrients, some yet unknown, and consuming a proper balance of Whole Foods would be preferable to taking a handful of vitamin pills everyday.
This appears to be a selective interpretation.
While I was raised on natural remedies and have only visited a hospital once in my childhood due to a head injury, I maintain no illusions about controlling fate. This brings me to a peculiar American sensitivity: the reflexive resistance to universal healthcare, often dismissing it as socialism or claiming it breeds societal dependency and decay.
Yet the irony is striking - America lacks universal healthcare, yet its citizens rank among the unhealthiest in developed nations, while public institutions the most corrupt, clearly demonstrating that universal healthcare isn't the catalyst for societal deterioration or income disparity. This reaction misses the point entirely.
Universal healthcare isn't about ideology - it's about societal sanity. Reading between the lines of my earlier response, one can discern my view that while the allopathic system is fundamentally inferior, it excels precisely where we can't predict or control outcomes: traumatic injuries and accidents. Dismissing its role entirely through broad generalizations doesn't serve anyone.
Perhaps most importantly, true stress reduction includes the peace of mind that comes from knowing a medical emergency won't lead to financial ruin. When fate intervenes - as it inevitably will - healthcare access shouldn't depend on the size of one's bank account.
With universal healthcre we can be killed by only deadly care being provided such as remdesavir, vaccines, azt, etc.
Your comment misses the mark entirely and reflects the imprecision plaguing contemporary communication.
What you're actually describing is the reality of our current non-universal healthcare system, controlled by corporate incentives and agendas, where we can indeed be subjected to potentially harmful treatments like Remdesivir, vaccines, and AZT.
But let's address the practical reality: what happens when you break your ankle, get stabbed in the street by a drunk vagrant, or get hit by a vehicle? What then?
Consider this contrast: In India, Sathya Sai Baba - a controversial figure viewed by some as a divine incarnation and by others as a con man - accomplished something remarkable: within just one year, he established a complete, fully operational hospital. The speed and scale of this development alone could be considered miraculous.
But what's even more extraordinary is that every single treatment in this facility is provided completely free of charge to anyone regardless of ethnicity or nationality. The hospital continues to attract physicians from around the globe who volunteer their services, regardless of their personal views about Sai Baba himself.
This example throws into sharp relief the greatest delusion affecting American society: the conditioned belief in their supremacy and freedom, while unwittingly accepting a different form of slavery.
The absence of universal healthcare in a nation that claims global leadership and "greatness" status reveals a deeper truth: beneath its veneer of progress lies a society bearing the hallmarks of both enslavement and third-world infrastructure.
You have "incapsulated" the essence of the well lived biom -digesting life here like a great Readers Digest version often does. Easy to read and best food for thought essay.
Total descriptive health package to examine and live by. A+
I am glad the author is awakening to the value of nutraceuticals in medicine, but neither the term nor the approach to medicine is new. I converted to holistic medicine in my general practice 44 years ago and always used nutritional approaches in preference to pharmaceuticals. As the Cycling Nut implied above, benefiting from this change will still require an attitude of personal responsibility for health.
Thank you for this message, Dr Diaz. It’s going to mean that doctors are going to have to learn about nutraceuticals. My cardiologist’s nurse practitioner didn’t even know of the importance of COQ10 for those taking a statin. Of course, the Doctor never heard of nattokinase. It’s a huge learning curve. Hopefully, they will also learn about fundamental medicine as well. My fear is that big pharma will capture the nutraceutical and supplement market and price them out of reach. Or the insurance companies will bring them under their umbrella and soak us with premiums. RFK has much to deal with. I pray for his success.
I have a book kicking around here that lists many of the phytochemicals that each food contains. There are 10000 to 25000 phyto chemicals in the common foods we eat. The body finds many of them during digestion to keep us healthy. When I look back on my family's genealogy over the past 200 years if someone made it to 20 years old then there was a 95%+ chance they made it to 80+. In the 5% were those like my aunt who smoked and died of cancer and my grandfather who worked himself to an early death during the war effort. My ancestors grew up on the family farm and in spite of the absence of pharmaceuticals and pasturized milk they survived into their 80s.
He mentioned that Curcumin and Tumeric provide both anti-inflammatory and antioxidant benefits.
They are both activators of the Vitamin D Receptor.
The others are Resveratrol, Omega-3, Magnesium, Zinc, Quercetin, Berberine, Butyrate, Sulforaphane and Ginger
All of them provide both of those benefits - perhaps by getting more vitamin D to the cells
https://www.perplexity.ai/search/do-each-of-the-activators-of-t-Rf.0HTtGT0mJlZ1Bn3o4Jw
There are 528 studies of the Vitamin D Receptor at
https://vitamindwiki.com/tiki-index.php?page_id=6760
Absolutely fascinating article! I have lived these types of diets for most of my life without ever thinking about it. Wild fish, wild meat and home grown fruit and vegetables have made up the majority of my diet without it ever have been a conscious endeavour. It was simply because it was the life style I chose. Now in my seventies I am still quite robust and have no illnesses that I am aware of. I still hike the back country hunting fishing and foraging simply because it is what I enjoy. Since Covid I began researching diets and active lifestyle and to anyone interested I would say check it out. Nature is the best doctor available. Listen to her.
My wife and I are right there with you. 74 now, wife 68. No meds, ideal BMIs, fit and no health problems. Trouble is, energy and motivation has tapered off the last few years. Today I really should go hunting, but with the chores on my plate, backed up work (still working, self-employed), and needing to go to the gym, I'm not gonna make it to the woods. The thought of butchering another deer is a bit daunting right now anyway. Even 5 years ago all of it would have been no prob. I'm NOT skipping the gym, exercise is something you can't catch up on later. I wish I had Trump's energy, I don't know how he does it.
I hear you. I almost went nuts this year after I herniated myself in the spring moving a woodstove into my workshop. While I bought a truss I was still quite limited in what I could do. I finally got my surgery at the end of November and I am now starting to get physically active again although I am being exaggeratedly cautious as I am only four weeks post surgery. I was shocked at how much of my physical conditioning went downhill in the last four weeks. The only thing to do is put your head down and force yourself to get back at it. As for hunting while it is harder to get an animal out of the bush I just develop different techniques. I cheated this time around and used a guad to pack my moose out and will probably continue to do so in the future. I guess we just have to learn to work smarter not harder at this stage of the game. At any rate I expect to be back at everything full bunnies in the last week of January. I knew a gent who was still deer hunting at 92 so the sky is still the limit. Straight shooting and Happy New Year to you and yours.
Sorry to hear about the hernia, must be rough. It's depressing to get deconditioned when you're older, takes longer to get back where you want to be. Can't imagine hauling a moose out! You're set for years I'd think. I'm less likely to hike back as far as I used to just thinking about getting a whitetail back to the truck. The two-wheel carts work great but still an exhausting workout. Happy New Year to you guys too, hope it's a good one.
The Dumbing of America became easy and effortless once the food sources went to gas stations and drive up windows. Food addictions are the fulfilments of self gratifications.
Cheap garbage in pretty wrappers is never more than a few blocks away in big cities.
Chaos always favors the establishment. We have been BOMB barded by marketing genius.
I FULLY SUPORT YOUR IDEAS 💡 ESPECIALY THIS ⬇️
“I would like to provide a couple of examples of bioactive compounds that have medicinal benefits. Turmeric and Curcumin, for example, have anti-inflammatory, and antioxidant benefits and may also contribute to remediating the effects of heart disease, Alzheimer's disease, and depression.”
Being that the vast majority of the population in this country has been injected with a poorly tested experimental genetic product, even those who have not already suffered an adverse effect are at risk of developing one. Many are, no doubt, walking around with undiagnosed myocarditis, making them ticking time-bombs. Instead of sending billions of dollars to Ukraine, how about we provide cardiac MRIs to those in the highest risk category for injury to their hearts - young boys, teenage boys, & young adult men. All the nutraceuticals in the world will not compensate for this underlying condition. How many "died suddenly" cases is it going to take before we try to mitigate some of this occult damage?
In addition to let food be thy medicine, Hippocrates noted that people whose front door was on the sunny side of their dwelling were healthier than those whose front door was on the shady side. One of his treatments was sunbathing.
We do need to pay more attention to food than people pre1850 did. The first polio epidemic in the US was in the 1870s and was actually arsenic poisoning from arsenic sprayed on apples as an insecticide.
We also have the problem that wheat is more finely ground than in olden times. Result is bread has a higher glycemic index.
With the use of fertilizers and sprays, fruits and vegetables grow faster and have lower nutritional value.
Meat and dairy cows eat an unnatural diet and as a results also have lower nutritional value and make compounds that damage our health.
Result is our bodies cannot function properly unless were pay close attention to food sources and spend at least half hour a day outdoors. There are other things we have to pay attention to that people in Hippocrates time did not.
💥💝
I heard this over 20 years ago. It went nowhere, unless you could think for your self.
The True Food Summit - Children's Health DefenseArizona Chapter
REGISTER HERE: Children’s Health Defense ® - Arizona Chapter is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization. Our mission is to end childhood health epidemics by eliminating toxic exposure. We will restore and protect the health of children by eliminating environmental exposures, holding responsible parties accountable, and establishing safeguards to prevent future harm to children's health. az.childrenshealthdefense.org
https://az.childrenshealthdefense.org/events/heal-nourish-the-true-food-summit/
Become a SPONSOR!
Heal & Nourish | The True Food Summit – Sponsorship
Would you like to be a sponsor of the Heal & Nourish | The True Food Summit? If you would like to sponsor us, please fill out the following form. Businesses, families and individuals are encouraged to sponsor this event. Sponsorship opportunities are limited to ensure the visibility of our most valued supporters!
https://az.childrenshealthdefense.org/events/true-food-summit-sponsorship/
Reclaim Your Food Supply and Let Food Be Your Medicine
- Do you want to eat bugs and lab-grown meat?
- Can we trust our government to regulate the US food chain?
- Is there a war over water? Do we have enough to grow food?
- Does organic food mean what you think?
- What are the risks of GMO food?
- Can you trust food from the supermarket?
Learn How to Grow Your Own!
- Discover permaculture, and sustainable, regenerative gardening in the desert.
- Learn how to grow a garden in your own backyard or patio.
- Be more self-sufficient and build community with others.
Children’s Health Defense ® - Arizona Chapter is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization. Our mission is ending childhood health epidemics by eliminating toxic exposure. We will restore and protect the health of children by eliminating environmental exposures, holding responsible parties accountable, and establishing safeguards to prevent future harm to children's health. az.childrenshealthdefense.org
Gary Stuart
Email: Gary@Chifield.com
Cell: (310)748-2052
Interesting you include naturopathy, homeopathy, medical, etc. in the mix of Dr’s yet chiropractors, many who are cutting edge wellness practitioners involved for decades in this wellness revolution, are omitted. I guess my DC degree of 5,000 hours which included nutrition, all the core and clinical courses, primary contact with over 250,000 patient visits doesn’t quality in your world?
So how long before nutraceuticals become toxic, if we aren't there already? Put yourself in the position of the medical/pharma/globalist behemoth. You have no moral qualms whatsoever, you have infinitely more money and influence than supplement companies. You are threatened by those supplement companies. What do you do? Well, you would buy, or surreptitiously infiltrate supplement companies, and adulterate their products to remove efficacy and add toxicity. That's how you'd bury the threat. So, while we do take supplements, I'm leery of their contents and worry the window in which we can trust these products enough to use them is closing. As to letting food be your medicine - great idea until you read horror stories of contamination of even "real" food like produce and unprocessed meat. We're lucky to be able to provide about half of what we eat ourselves by hunting, fishing, gardening, and gathering. I worry more all the time that we're still at major risk since we still get about half from conventional sources. It's a big commitment to provide all your food from the ONLY source you can trust today (yourself). Who doesn't like to go out to eat once in a while? Seems we're in a bad place.