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Re: A Little Dirt May Be a Good Thing

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I keep the house very clean because the " new dust " has a much higher percentage

of radioactive particles today than it did last year, enough to give pretty high

geiger counter readings all over North America. Inhaled plutonium specks for

example always cause fatal cancer and a lot of plutonium and other radioactives

were ejected from the three destroyed reactors in Japan. More, geysers of

radiation are continually coming out of the smoking holes and the spent fuel

pools and going into the atmosphere as dust. Worse, the event is ongoing and

could easily double twice more.

Fukushima cesium leaks 'equal 168 Hiroshima bombs,' says the report.

<http://www.nationalmemo.com/article/japan-nuke-plant-radiation-leak-equivalent-\

168-hiroshima-bombs>

http://enenews.com

So, a little dirt today may be partly radioactive dust, and being as dust-free

as possible will almost certainly prolong your life. You're going to get dust

everywhere you go and it's hard to avoid it, but considering the alternative you

should try.

all good,

Duncan

>

> A Little Dirt May Be a Good Thing

>

>

http://health.msn.com/health-topics/cold-and-flu/articlepage.aspx?cp-documentid=\

100280181

>

>

>

> I like this, gives me an excuse to not keep the house sooooo clean!

>

> C

>

>

>

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Ha! I have not cleaned house in this century, other than cleaning up

kitchen spills, washing dishes, and scrubbing down the toilet once in

a while.

Alobar

On Sat, Sep 10, 2011 at 9:22 AM, Cody <lecody2001@...> wrote:

> A Little Dirt May Be a Good Thing

>

>

http://health.msn.com/health-topics/cold-and-flu/articlepage.aspx?cp-documentid=\

100280181

>

>

>

> I like this, gives me an excuse to not keep the house sooooo clean!

>

> C

>

>

>

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Share on other sites

Hi :

I have been a proponent of the " hygiene hypothesis " for many years now.

One of the most dramatic illustrations that I ever heard was some years

ago, a guy in one of my actually infected himself with an

African parasite to rid himself of MMS. He selected a strain that was

easily killed off, went for it, and it worked.

There is nothing like a first-hand report like that to convince me that

this is the way to go.

A less objective example: I grew up spending summers on my Grandpa's

Mellon farm. I went barefoot all summer and probably took a bath once a

week, at most. We all had pin worms. They were an accepted part of our

lives. Maybe as a result, I have have never been allergic to anything

that I am aware of. Who knows what the actual reason is, but this

theory makes sense and I could actually be an example of its application.

Cheers,

Jim

>Proponents of the " hygiene hypothesis " believe that reduced exposure to

bacteria, viruses and parasites have impaired the immune system's

ability to properly respond to environmental challenges.<

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I remember while walking the streets of Juarez, Mexico, seeing an infant playing

on the dirty sidewalk wearing just a diaper (as such he was covered with layers

of filth ) & sticking his whole soiled hand, which had been touching whatever

everyone's shoes had left on the ground, in his mouth.

I looked at the baby & thought, " Now that kid has got an immune system!!! " .

-richard-

________________________________

From: Huuman <huuman60@...>

Coconut Oil

Sent: Saturday, September 10, 2011 8:11 PM

Subject: Re: A Little Dirt May Be a Good Thing

 

Hi :

I have been a proponent of the " hygiene hypothesis " for many years now.

One of the most dramatic illustrations that I ever heard was some years

ago, a guy in one of my actually infected himself with an

African parasite to rid himself of MMS. He selected a strain that was

easily killed off, went for it, and it worked.

There is nothing like a first-hand report like that to convince me that

this is the way to go.

A less objective example: I grew up spending summers on my Grandpa's

Mellon farm. I went barefoot all summer and probably took a bath once a

week, at most. We all had pin worms. They were an accepted part of our

lives. Maybe as a result, I have have never been allergic to anything

that I am aware of. Who knows what the actual reason is, but this

theory makes sense and I could actually be an example of its application.

Cheers,

Jim

>Proponents of the " hygiene hypothesis " believe that reduced exposure to

bacteria, viruses and parasites have impaired the immune system's

ability to properly respond to environmental challenges.<

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Alobar, you may be taking this a little too far ;)

C

________________________________

From: Alobar <Alobar@...>

Coconut Oil

Sent: Sat, September 10, 2011 8:38:30 PM

Subject: Re: A Little Dirt May Be a Good Thing

Ha! I have not cleaned house in this century, other than cleaning up

kitchen spills, washing dishes, and scrubbing down the toilet once in

a while.

Alobar

On Sat, Sep 10, 2011 at 9:22 AM, Cody <lecody2001@...> wrote:

> A Little Dirt May Be a Good Thing

>

>http://health.msn.com/health-topics/cold-and-flu/articlepage.aspx?cp-documentid\

=100280181

>1

>

>

>

> I like this, gives me an excuse to not keep the house sooooo clean!

>

> C

>

>

>

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