Guest guest Posted October 20, 2002 Report Share Posted October 20, 2002 thanks chris, i realy like to hear what she says. ( im waiting to hopefulyl be able to see her in australia at some stage. > Hey folks, > > Just got back from the Beverly Farms, MA, seminar with Sally Fallon. It was > cool, it was seven hours with an hour lunch break. If I were her I would've > collapsed at the end! lol... > > There was a good amount of people, upwards of forty I think (I'm horrible at > estimating crowd sizes), and two third or so of the people that were there > weren't at the 2 hour lecture the night before, which apparently had a > similar amount of people. The bulk of the talk was stuff I already knew, but > it was still really cool anyway, especially since she had a bunch of slides > to show and some info I didn't know and she's pretty funny too. > > Some points of interest: > We've talked recently about " industry standards " where if all the big > industrial producers do something, they get exempt from putting it on the > label. The yogurt industry now has industry standard exemption to put > NUTRISWEET in yogurt... and... the ice cream industry has exemption to, > without labelling put... drumroll... ANTI-FREEZE into the ice cream! > > She talked about a study where there were three or four groups of rats, one > or two fed some sort of normal rat diet, one fed a diet of 100% corn flakes, > and the other eating the _cardboard box_ the corn flakes came in. The ones > eating the corn flakes actually died quicker than the one eating the > cardboard box! The cardboard box group died of malnutrition, whereas the > corn flakes group seemed to go crazy from the neurotoxins in the corn flakes, > and the last one died on the same die the first one died from the cardboard > box group. > > she also made an interesting point that our generation has 25% fertility > problems, and were the third generation on the pasteurized, hydrogenated, > etc, diet, which seems to be working towards pottengers fourth- generation > sterility scenario which is pretty scary. > > Also, she mentioned a letter she got from someone who visited one of the > islands Price visited in the 50s and said it was exactly as he described it, > like paradise, and that the babies never cried and the children never fought > with each other and everyone seemed incredibly happy and optimistic. She > went back in the 70s and couldn't get off the boat first, and they said it > was becuase they had to unload the Sara Lee coffee cakes first. Not a good > sign. They got off the boat and were in tears to see the people had been > modernized and there were babies all over the place crying and the kids were > fighting and everyone looked unhappy :-/ Human progress is wonderful. > > Suze, I forgot to email your friend! I was going to yell out " hey does > anyone here know suze fisher? " at the end but we went into the q & a period > pretty fast so i didn't ;-) lol > > Chris > ____ > > " What can one say of a soul, of a heart, filled with compassion? It is a > heart which burns with love for every creature: for human beings, birds, and > animals, for serpents and for demons. The thought of them and the sight of > them make the tears of the saint flow. And this immense and intense > compassion, which flows from the heart of the saints, makes them unable to > bear the sight of the smallest, most insignificant wound in any creature. > Thus they pray ceaselessly, with tears, even for animals, for enemies of the > truth, and for those who do them wrong. " > > --Saint Isaac the Syrian Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 20, 2002 Report Share Posted October 20, 2002 Hi Thanks for the information. And, yes it is scary. That is your FDA at work protecting you! Kat http://www.katking.com ----- Original Message ----- From: <ChrisMasterjohn@...> < > Sent: Saturday, October 19, 2002 5:54 PM Subject: just got back from sally fallon talk > Hey folks, > > Just got back from the Beverly Farms, MA, seminar with Sally Fallon. It was > cool, it was seven hours with an hour lunch break. If I were her I would've > collapsed at the end! lol... > > There was a good amount of people, upwards of forty I think (I'm horrible at > estimating crowd sizes), and two third or so of the people that were there > weren't at the 2 hour lecture the night before, which apparently had a > similar amount of people. The bulk of the talk was stuff I already knew, but > it was still really cool anyway, especially since she had a bunch of slides > to show and some info I didn't know and she's pretty funny too. > > Some points of interest: > We've talked recently about " industry standards " where if all the big > industrial producers do something, they get exempt from putting it on the > label. The yogurt industry now has industry standard exemption to put > NUTRISWEET in yogurt... and... the ice cream industry has exemption to, > without labelling put... drumroll... ANTI-FREEZE into the ice cream! > > She talked about a study where there were three or four groups of rats, one > or two fed some sort of normal rat diet, one fed a diet of 100% corn flakes, > and the other eating the _cardboard box_ the corn flakes came in. The ones > eating the corn flakes actually died quicker than the one eating the > cardboard box! The cardboard box group died of malnutrition, whereas the > corn flakes group seemed to go crazy from the neurotoxins in the corn flakes, > and the last one died on the same die the first one died from the cardboard > box group. > > she also made an interesting point that our generation has 25% fertility > problems, and were the third generation on the pasteurized, hydrogenated, > etc, diet, which seems to be working towards pottengers fourth-generation > sterility scenario which is pretty scary. > > Also, she mentioned a letter she got from someone who visited one of the > islands Price visited in the 50s and said it was exactly as he described it, > like paradise, and that the babies never cried and the children never fought > with each other and everyone seemed incredibly happy and optimistic. She > went back in the 70s and couldn't get off the boat first, and they said it > was becuase they had to unload the Sara Lee coffee cakes first. Not a good > sign. They got off the boat and were in tears to see the people had been > modernized and there were babies all over the place crying and the kids were > fighting and everyone looked unhappy :-/ Human progress is wonderful. > > Suze, I forgot to email your friend! I was going to yell out " hey does > anyone here know suze fisher? " at the end but we went into the q & a period > pretty fast so i didn't ;-) lol > > Chris > ____ > > " What can one say of a soul, of a heart, filled with compassion? It is a > heart which burns with love for every creature: for human beings, birds, and > animals, for serpents and for demons. The thought of them and the sight of > them make the tears of the saint flow. And this immense and intense > compassion, which flows from the heart of the saints, makes them unable to > bear the sight of the smallest, most insignificant wound in any creature. > Thus they pray ceaselessly, with tears, even for animals, for enemies of the > truth, and for those who do them wrong. " > > --Saint Isaac the Syrian > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 20, 2002 Report Share Posted October 20, 2002 I've heard about this study for years, reminds me of my last pregnancy. A day before my due date I went out and bought a box of organic corn flakes because I was craving them, my husband looked at me and said are you sure you want to eat those? Welll I ate two bowls in the morning, I could not eat a thing for the rest of the day and spent the day throwing up every last bit of it! Never again, will I succumb to corn flake cravings! The stuff was deadly for me! piimaman Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 20, 2002 Report Share Posted October 20, 2002 At 08:54 PM 10/19/02 -0400, you wrote: >She talked about a study where there were three or four groups of rats, one >or two fed some sort of normal rat diet, one fed a diet of 100% corn flakes, >and the other eating the _cardboard box_ the corn flakes came in. The ones >eating the corn flakes actually died quicker than the one eating the >cardboard box! The cardboard box group died of malnutrition, whereas the >corn flakes group seemed to go crazy from the neurotoxins in the corn flakes, >and the last one died on the same die the first one died from the cardboard >box group. >Chris Metabolic Typing Diet puts corn flakes at the top of the glycemic index with alcohol, glucose drinks, rice and rice cereals. Haven't acrylamides been found in a lot of expeller produced cereals recently? Odd lectins are created too when corn is made into corn flakes. MTD lists corn flakes as agglutinating to blood type A & AB. Seems grain alteration makes them into monsters even larger than epidemic grain allergies already present. Wanita Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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