Guest guest Posted August 26, 2012 Report Share Posted August 26, 2012 You might find this of interest too. Although originally written way back in the early 1900s, it is as accurate today as back then - humans haven't changed - only their environment and diet has. He pinpoints that all disease is nutritional in origin and like Weston Price, Frances Pottenger and many others, realised that it's not genes that are driving disease, but inherited nutritional weakness. A mother cannot give her forming baby what she doesn't have. If certain nutritional elements are lacking in her body and diet, the baby cannot form properly. Francis Pottenger found this with his cat experiment (he discovered that whilst cats fed on a raw natural diet remained healthy, those fed on cooked meat and processed/pasteurized milk became sick. Each subsequent generation was sicker than the last until by the 4th generation they were dying very young and could no longer reproduce - http://www.westonaprice.org/nutrition-greats/francis-pottenger), and there was another experiment done by another scientist in the 30s, documented by Weston Price, where vitamin A was withheld from the diet of a group of pigs. All their piglets were born with no eyes. When the blind pigs were given a diet rich in Vitamin A, all their piglets were born with fully-formed eyes. Within all living creatures is the DNA to grow healthy bodies. How healthy they are depends on the nutritional factors at their disposal and how well the DNA can correctly replicate - that is the 'gene' factor. Yes, toxins can be an issue, but healthy bodies will deal with them far better than sick ones. http://soilandhealth.org/02/0201hyglibcat/020123lindlahr/020123toc.html Ali. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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