www.thenhf.com                NEWSLETTER No. 10                  MAY 2006

 

Please read the latest NHF Press Release by Scott Tips, on the most recent Codex Committee for Food Labelling meeting held in Ottawa, Canada (May 1-5, 2006) and you will fully grasp the true meaning of the "Push to Send No One" sign. Scott also attended the Saturday, April 29th, 2006 "Working Group" meeting that was held in the same city just prior to the regular Codex meeting.

 

 

As our members know, for years the National Health Federation has been on top of the Codex issue, vigilantly fighting to have the pro-nutrition and pro-supplement viewpoint heard and manifested, with Scott Tips heading the NHF delegation at all Codex meetings. But, we do face some obstacles.

              

Not only is the U.S. with its most lenient supplement laws outnumbered at Codex by the many countries that have long classified supplements as drugs for their people, but we must also be sadly represented and by law overpowered at Codex by our own U.S. FDA representatives with a totally different agenda than our pro-nutrition and pro-supplement views. No representation at all would be better than what we currently have that is supposed to pass as representation. We must actively force Congressional members to begin investigating the situation and replacing these individuals who are appointed by internal bureaucrats, who do not speak for the majority of U.S. citizens at Codex meetings. For the NHF to have any chance of success at Codex, we should not have to also battle our own U.S. representatives there.  As stated on their website, the FDA wants harmonization of US food-and-drug laws with the largely anti-supplement rest of the world; and, to that end, FDA bureaucrats would dearly love to amend their rules and regulations so as to conform with the standards set by Codex and other related international standards.   In fact,  the FDA's intent  to harmonize   our  laws  with  those  of  Canada   and Mexico,   beginning  with  its  Trilateral  Cooperation  Charter,  in  a prelude to forming a bland and bureaucratized "North American Union" is blatantly displayed on their site: (http://www.fda.gov/oia/charter.html). 

 

Obstacles we face on U.S. soil:

  • An unaware general public

  • Mainstream media, not covering the issue, with their own controlled agenda the priority

  • Censoring of websites, as just recently happened to Mercola.com and some others by major service providers

  • Health freedom sites being deluged with Worm viruses attempting to stop the flow of truth and reality. The NHF site receives an average of 40 of these Worms every two weeks.  Yes, we are always up and running despite their attempts.

     

  • The proposed bill recently mentioned by our lobbyist concerning any group engaging in "grassroots" lobbying having to fully disclose the extent of their advocacy activities to the IRS and Congress.  NHF would have to file reports on the money we spend encouraging our members to contact their Congressional Representatives.

     

  • Health-freedom fighters that are authors are being turned down by radio stations for interviews because the stations feel their issues are too radical.

     

  • And of course, the many domestic and international letters and e-mails that I receive from our members/readers concerning the counterspin replies they receive from various organizations and health businesses telling them that Codex will not affect U.S. laws. 

Here is just one example of the misinformation being spread : 

We can add to the list of misinformers, such organizations as CRN, NNFA, IADSA, Herbalife, and the list goes on of the groups/organizations who haven't done their research or who are intentionally misguiding others by turning a blind eye to the true threat of Codex and other international standards to American sovereignty and its laws.  As stated repeatedly by Scott Tips, the U.S. involvement in the WTO (World Trade Organization) and other "managed-trade" agreements, sets us up to face trade sanctions of billion dollar fines, which have already resulted in U.S. domestic law changes, all due to pressure from the WTO.  Codex provides the WTO with the food standards that will be enforced.  Individual national laws that conflict with WTO trade-dispute rulings do so at great monetary risk.  In another 4 years, when we have a chance again, we must get the U.S. out of the WTO. 

 

We have found that the circumference of our battlefield has broadened from years past, pushing us into issues of harmonization, U.S. sovereignty, global mandates, and trade sanctions, all variables that now concern our health freedom.  We continuously fight all of these issues for you, our valued members, and for the individual freedoms that we all deserve.

 

 

Other topics in the Issue

 

1/5th of Your Genes are U.S. Patented

Are Childhood Infections Beneficial?

Monsanto-Out of bounds Again

A Zip Code Away from Healthy Eating

And More............

 

 

 

 

NHF LEGISLATIVE UPDATES

 

Federal Legislation

 

Activities with Congress and the FDA

by Lee Bechtel, NHF Lobbyist

Recent Update - H.R. 4282 (Health Freedom Protection Act)

 

Along with the NHF's current lobbying efforts to ensure passage of H.R. 4282, we have also joined the Coalition to End FDA & FTC Censorship, along with more than 100 other organizations. Efforts are paying off with 22 members of Congress endorsing the bill as cosponsors.

Energy and Commerce Committee Vice Chair, Michael Bilirakis, of Florida, has become the most recent cosponsor. As a Vice Chair, there is now a key ranking Republican on the committee that will sponsor its passage. Kent Snyder and Sam Brunnelli, of the Coalition, recently met with Bilirakis and they are to be commended for their achievement.

Click the following to view the l
etter of appreciation to Vice Chair Michael Bilirakis (FL) from the Coalition to End FDA & FTC Censorship.

 

 

 

 

 

NHF HEALTH-FREEDOM UPDATES & ARTICLES


 

Does Legal Ownership of Genes, Stem Cells go Beyond the Pale?
by Scott LaFee

Provided with permission by Copley News Service

  

PATENT OFFENDING

In October 1976, an Alaska pipeline engineer named John Moore became seriously, mysteriously ill. Eventually, he found himself at the UCLA Medical Center, where he was diagnosed with a rare, progressive form of blood cancer called hairy cell leukemia.

To slow the disease and perhaps save his life, Moore's physician - Dr. David Golde - recommended removing Moore's spleen. The surgery was successful. Moore recovered and eventually returned to Alaska, with instructions to visit Golde for annual checkups.

Over the next eight years, Moore did so. During each visit, Golde would extract samples of Moore's blood, skin, bone marrow and sperm. When Moore complained about the cost and hassle of the visits, he was told the UCLA visits were necessary and could be performed only under Golde's direction.

That was true, but not in the sense Moore initially presumed. Golde had discovered that Moore's diseased spleen had been overproducing lymphokines - a key chemical constituent of the body's immune system. The doctor and colleagues were using blood and tissue samples taken from Moore to develop a cell culture that produced lymphokines, which could then be marketed to companies working on cancer treatments and drugs.

Moore knew nothing of this research until 1984, when he was finally asked to sign a consent form and waive all rights to any product that might be developed from his cells. Moore refused and hired an attorney to investigate.

Not long after, Golde was granted U.S. Patent No. 4,438,032 for a "Unique T-Lymphocyte Line and Products Derived Therefrom."

In other words, the doctor and the university owned the rights to all biological material and knowledge gleaned from Moore's spleen. The patent was eventually sold to the Swiss pharmaceutical company Sandoz Laboratories for several million dollars in cash and stock.

Not surprisingly, Moore sued, alleging fraud and loss of financial benefit from his own body. He lost.

In 1990, the California Supreme Court ruled that Golde had erred in not getting Moore's research consent, but it also ruled that Moore had no proprietary right to blood and tissue removed from his body. To grant patients such a broad right, the split court said, would be to dampen scientific inquiry and medical progress.

PATENT RUSH

For the first 150 years or so of its existence, the nuts and bolts of the U.S. Patent Office was mostly nuts and bolts. Patent applications tended to be inorganic, describing tangible inventions, mechanical devices, better mousetraps.

A story like John Moore's was not really possible until the science of biotechnology emerged in the late 20th century. As researchers learned how to isolate and manipulate DNA and other genetic material, it became feasible to ask whether life or its products could be invented and patented.

In 1980, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in a 5-4 decision that a bioengineered, oil-eating bacterium met the four basic requirements of a patent: It was novel, useful, non-obvious and "enabling," with fully disclosed details that allowed others to use it.

The case overturned "fairly long-standing law," said Richard Gold, director of the Centre for Intellectual Property Policy at McGill University in Quebec, and spurred a patent rush that today continues bigger than ever.

Thanks to continued scientific advancement, there are hundreds of patents on genetically modified organisms, from microbes to plants to mice. Almost one-fifth of the 23,688 genes in every human being is covered by a U.S. patent; 63 percent held by private companies, 28 percent assigned to universities.

The basic process for creating human embryonic stem cells - widely touted as the potential means for new medical treatments and cures - is patented. To use these human stem cells in research, one must first receive a license from the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation (WARF) and agree to meet designated royalties and other contractual obligations.

The question, of course, is whether any of this is a good thing. Do such patents, which promise intellectual property protection and potential reward, spur scientific innovation and medical progress? Or do they, in fact, hinder it?

"There's the economic argument that says somebody will be more likely to work harder on something if there's an opportunity to make a profit," said Michael Kalichman, a University of California San Diego professor of pathology and co-founder of the San Diego Center for Ethics in Science and Technology. "That motivation suggests new therapies and products appear sooner because there's a financial incentive to be first to market with something no one else has or can have without your permission.

"On the other hand, instead of science being conducted in an open fashion, with knowledge disseminated quickly and widely, people with patents can become more protective and proprietary. They want to protect their investment until they can cash in."

Unfortunately, there is little empirical proof to support either position, says Robert Cook-Deegan, director of the Center for Genome, Ethics, Law and Policy at Duke University.

"Nation by nation, laboratory by laboratory, regulation by regulation, we are still trying to figure out who 'owns' the genome, what the owners actually own, and how best to balance the pursuit of knowledge and the allocation of rewards," Cook-Deegan wrote in a recent essay with colleague Misha Angrist.

"The system works, but no one knows how well, because no one can address the crucial question: compared to what?"

John Wetherell, a San Diego-based intellectual property attorney with degrees in chemistry and molecular biology, says gene patents and the like have provided critical fuel to grow biotechnology. "Absent court decisions, industry would not be nearly as robust. We wouldn't be where we are today."

Others disagree.

"You hear that kind of talk all of the time from people in the industry and patent lawyers," said Gold, who also is the author of "Body Parts: Property Rights and the Ownership of Human Biological Materials."

"But the biotech industry is intelligent. Even without these patents and court decisions, researchers would have found a way to move ahead."

Gold and others contend that such biopatents have actually caused harm. In a 2002 paper in the journal Nature, Lori B. Andrews, director of the Institute for Science, Law and Technology at the Chicago-Kent College of Law, cited several cases where patent interests of biotech and pharmaceutical companies impinged upon scientific progress and medical treatment.

For example, the pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline filed for a patent on a genetic test to determine the effectiveness of one of its drugs. But Andrews says the company has no interest in developing the test - or letting anyone else develop it - because such a test might clarify exactly who benefits from the targeted drug. The company could lose customers.

Along similar lines, San Francisco-based Athena Neurosciences holds the patent on a gene associated with Alzheimer's disease. Athena will not allow any laboratory except its own to screen for mutations in that gene.

"Doctors and laboratories across the country face a lawsuit if they try to determine whether one of their patients carries this genetic predisposition to Alzheimer's disease, even though testing can easily be done by anyone who knows the sequence of the gene, without using any product or device made by the patent holder," wrote Andrews.

Such restrictions, she argues, inhibit research and degrade medical treatment because researchers and doctors cannot afford to purchase the necessary patent rights or pay the cost of either a lawsuit or a legal challenge.

Effects on research

There are other, subtler effects, according to Andrews and others. Most human gene patents cover sequences whose precise function and utility have yet to be determined. These isolated or purified gene products may lead to new drugs, treatments or medical breakthroughs, but perhaps not for decades.

"These patents are about control, about establishing boundaries for a product that doesn't yet exist, if it ever does exist," said Dr. Neil Thiese, a pathologist at Beth Israel Medical Center in New York and one of the nation's leading stem cell researchers.

In the meantime, critics suggest at least some patents impede research. One example is the search for the gene or genes related to autism. Two decades ago, scientists gathered DNA samples from affected children and families, but would not share them, fearing someone else might beat them to the patent.

Finally, in 1995, families of autistic patients founded their own group, Cure Autism Now, which independently raised millions of dollars to establish a DNA bank available to all interested scientists.

Patents can also scare away potential research interests, said Kalichman. Up-and-coming scientists tend to pursue areas of research where they can actually do research. If studying a particular topic means grappling with numerous, expensive patents and possible infringement lawsuits, they often choose to look elsewhere.

Wetherell, the attorney, said patent violations and related legal problems are not significant at the academic level, where much basic research is conducted. "Most companies with patents aren't going to go after the average professor doing research. There's just no profit in it. Where problems arise is between companies with competing commercial interests."

But Steven Briggs, a professor of biology at UCSD and former head of corporate research for Diversa, a San Diego-based biotech firm, said universities have become very savvy and aggressive about seeking patents for work done by their scientists. "I'd say the material transfer agreements we have are just as onerous as commercial versions. That's not being negative. UCSD is just as assertive about its patent rights."

THE FIX

Virtually everyone agrees that the U.S. patent system needs fixing. Virtually no one agrees on the scope of those fixes. There is legislation in Congress that would streamline the process and remodel it to be more in accord with patent systems elsewhere in the world. The U.S. Supreme Court has heard arguments on a potentially significant case involving two biotech companies that may or may not substantially reduce the scope of what's deemed patentable.

A couple of things, though, seem certain.

In Europe, patent policy includes consideration of "public ordre" or public morality. As a result, controversial scientific endeavors like human stem cell research, which are broadly opposed by Europeans, have been deemed unpatentable.

There is no similar clause in U.S. patent law, which has already ruled that human stem cells capable of differentiating into various kinds of cells (but not whole humans) may be subject to patent.

Also, whatever happens next, either in new court decisions or legislation, will not be radical. There will be no reversal of fortune.

"We're locked into this patent system," said Gold. "The question of whether genes should be patented was an issue 26 years ago. It's not practical to turn back the clock now because the whole system would have to be reinvented. The cost and disruption of doing so would be unacceptable."

Any change, Gold predicted, will be slow, tinkering and evolutionary.

A lot like life itself.

 

 

 

 

THE BENEFICIAL NATURE OF CHILDHOOD INFECTION

by Ian Sinclair
www.vaccinationdebate.com

From his home on the east coast of Australia, Ian Sinclair has studied the topic of vaccination and Natural Health philosophy for 20 years. Use the following link for one of Ian's articles in his self-proclaimed writing style of "brevity", to simplify the topic of the benefits of infection in a child.

 

http://www.thenhf.com/articles_307.htm

 

 

 

 

Maintain Your Health While Helping Others Along the Way

 

Sustainable agriculture is a way of raising food that is healthy for consumers and animals, does not harm the environment, is humane for workers and animals, provides a fair wage to the farmer, and supports and enhances rural communities.

If you are wondering where to obtain wholesome food from healthy animals, while also helping the independent farmer, the environment, and supporting humane conditions for food animals, try this handy guide at www.eatwellguide.org. Just enter your zip code for the nearest farms, restaurants, and markets for a healthier you.

More reasons to buy sustainable - http://www.sustainabletable.org/intro/why/.
 

 

 

 

Tell Monsanto to Stop Patenting Life
www.Greenpeace.org

 

MONSANTO

I felt compelled to include this article from Greenpeace sent via Chris Gupta of www.newmediaexplorer.org/chris as my last newsletter touched on the  danger of the "Control the food, control the people" issue as far as legislation of U. S. Federal control over State control of our food supply laws.  Here we are again from another angle, manipulator giant Monsanto with the same goal in mind.  Please read Chris's introduction and the Greenpeace article, then let your voice be heard on this issue. 

The Earth is Flat, Pigs were Invented by Monsanto, and Genetically Modified Organisms are Safe.  Right?

Through more patent perversions such as the earlier "Terminator Corporations' Suicide Seeds" Mansanto is blatantly continuing their scheme of rounding up the food chain from A to Z!

"One way or another, Monsanto wants to make sure no food is grown that they don't own -- and the record shows they don't care if it's safe for the environment or not. Monsanto has aggressively set out to bulldoze environmental concerns about its genetically engineered (GE) seeds at every regulatory level. So why stop in the field? Not content to own the pesticide and the herbicide and the crop, they've made a move on the barnyard by filing two patents which would make the corporate giant the sole owner of that famous Monsanto invention: the pig. "

"The big picture is chilling to anyone who mistrusts Monsanto's record disinterest for environmental safety. And if you're not worried, you should be: central control of food supply has been a standard ingredient for social and political control throughout history. By creating a monopoly position, Monsanto can force dangerous experiments like the release of GMOs into the environment on an unwilling public.They can ensure that GMOs will be sold and consumed wherever they say they will."

Such blatant abuse can only continue if it is not challenged. Unfortunately, the typical lack of response from the masses and the idle government oversight is precisely why these perversions occur and continue. Sadly the only way to counter these shenanigans is to collectively and openly flaunt these patents ...

Chris Gupta
http://tinyurl.com/gyflh


Monsanto Files Patent for New Invention: The Pig

It's official. Monsanto Corporation is out to own the world's food supply, the dangers of genetic engineering and reduced biodiversity notwithstanding, as they pig-headedly set about hog-tying farmers with their monopoly plans. We've discovered chilling new evidence of this in recent patents that seek to establish ownership rights over pigs and their offspring. In the crop department, Monsanto is well on their way to dictating what consumers will eat, what farmers will grow, and how much Monsanto will get paid for seeds. In some cases those seeds are designed not to reproduce sowable offspring. In others, a flock of lawyers stand ready to swoop down on farmers who illegally, or even unknowingly, end up with Monsanto's private property growing in their fields.

One way or another, Monsanto wants to make sure no food is grown that they don't own -- and the record shows they don't care if it's safe for the environment or not. Monsanto has aggressively set out to bulldoze environmental concerns about its genetically engineered (GE) seeds at every regulatory level. So why stop in the field? Not content to own the pesticide and the herbicide and the crop, they've made a move on the barnyard by filing two patents which would make the corporate giant the sole owner of that famous Monsanto invention: the pig.

The Monsanto Pig (Patent pending) . . . The patent applications were published in February 2005 at the World Intellectual Property Organisation (WIPO) in Geneva. A Greenpeace researcher who monitors patent applications, Christoph Then, uncovered the fact that Monsanto is seeking patents not only on methods of breeding, but on actual breeding herds of pigs as well as the offspring that result. "If these patents are granted, Monsanto can legally prevent breeders and farmers from breeding pigs whose characteristics are described in the patent claims, or force them to pay royalties," says Then. "It's a first step toward the same kind of corporate control of an animal line that Monsanto is aggressively pursuing with various grain and vegetable lines."

There are more than 160 countries and territories mentioned where the patent is sought including Europe, the Russian Federation, Asia (India, China, Philippines), America (USA, Brazil, Mexico), Australia and New Zealand. WIPO itself can only receive applications, not grant patents. The applications are forwarded to regional patent offices.

The patents are based on simple procedures, but are incredibly broad in their claims. In one application (WO 2005/015989 to be precise) Monsanto is describing very general methods of crossbreeding and selection, using artificial insemination and other breeding methods which are already in use. The main "invention" is nothing more than a particular combination of these elements designed to speed up the breeding cycle for selected traits, in order to make the animals more commercially profitable. (Monsanto gleefully chirps about lower fat content and higher nutritional value. But we've looked, and we couldn't find any "Philanthropic altruism" line item in their annual reports, despite the fact that it's an omnipresent factor in their advertising.) According to Then, "I couldn't believe this. I've been reviewing patents for 10 years, and I had to read this three times. Monsanto isn't just seeking a patent for the method, they are seeking a patent on the actual pigs which are bred from this method. It's an astoundingly broad and dangerous claim."

Good breeding always shows . . . Take patent application WO 2005/017204. This refers to pigs in which a certain gene sequence related to faster growth is detected. This is a variation on a natural occurring sequence -- Monsanto didn't invent it. It was first identified in mice and humans. Monsanto wants to use the detection of this gene sequence to screen pig populations, in order to find which animals are likely to produce more pork per pound of feed. (And that will be Monsanto Brand genetically-engineered feed grown from Monsanto Brand genetically-engineered seed raised in fields sprayed with Monsanto Brand Roundup Ready herbicide and doused with Monsanto Brand pesticides, of course).

But again, Monsanto wants to own not just the selection and breeding method, not just the information about the genetic indicators, but, if you pardon the expression, the whole hog.

Claim 16 asks for a patent on: "A pig offspring produced by a method ..."
Claim 17 asks for a patent on: "A pig herd having an increased frequency of a specific ...gene..."
Claim 23 asks for a patent on: "A pig population produced by the method..."
Claim 30 asks for a patent on: "A swine herd produced by a method..."

This means the pigs, their offspring, and the use of the genetic information for breeding will be entirely owned by Monsanto, Inc., and any replication or infringement of their patent by man or beast will mean royalties or jail for the offending swine.

Not pig fodder . . . When it comes to profits, pigs are big. Monsanto notes that "The economic impact of the industry in rural America is immense. Annual farm sales typically exceed US$ 11 billion, while the retail value of pork sold to consumers reaches US$ 38 billion each year."

At almost every level of food production, Monsanto is seeking a monopoly position. The company once earned its money almost exclusively through agrochemicals. But in the last ten years they've spent about US$ 10 billion buying up seed producers and companies in other sectors of the agricultural business. Their last big acquisition was Seminis, the biggest producer of vegetable seeds in the world.

Monsanto holds extremely broad patents on seeds . . . most, but not all of them, related to Genetically-Modified Organisms (GMOs). Monsanto has also claimed patent rights on such non-Monsanto inventions as traditionally-bred wheat from India and soy plants from China. Many of these patents apply not only to the use of seeds but all uses of the plants and harvest that result.

Orwellian: "The Earth is flat, pigs were invented by Monsanto, and GMOs are safe." The big picture is chilling to anyone who mistrusts Monsanto's record disinterest for environmental safety. And if you're not worried, you should be: central control of food supply has been a standard ingredient for social and political control throughout history. By creating a monopoly position, Monsanto can force dangerous experiments like the release of GMOs into the environment on an unwilling public.They can ensure that GMOs will be sold and consumed wherever they say they will.

By claiming global monopoly patent rights throughout the entire food chain, Monsanto seeks to make farmers and food producers, and ultimately consumers, entirely dependent and reliant on one single corporate entity for a basic human need. It's the same dependence that Russian peasants had on the Soviet Government following the Russian revolution. The same dependence that French peasants had on Feudal kings during the middle ages. But control of a significant proportion of the global food supply by a single corporation would be unprecedented in human history.

It's time to ensure that doesn't happen. It's time for a global ban of patents on seeds and farm animals. It's time to tell Monsanto we've had enough of this hogwash. -Brian Thomas Fitzgerald

Tell Monsanto to stop patenting life.

Help us stop patents on life.

www.Greenpeace.org

 

 

 

 

Striving for Health-Freedom around the Globe
 

New Zealand Health Trust  (www.nzhealthtrust.co.nz) recently placed this urgent notice for their countrymen to act: 

 

Labour is trying to decimate the NZ Health Products Industry
The Labour Government is trying to change the way in which all Natural Health Products (NHPs) & medical devices are regulated. They plan to treat them as medicines and give the power to control them to the controversial Australian Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA)


We know from the Australian experience that this would mean;


• Fewer products available - consumer choice reduced
• Unnecessary bureaucracy and cost
• Increased cost to consumers
• Natural health products & medical devices all controlled like drugs
• Many NZ businesses forced to close - jobs lost
• There will be little NZ can do to protect itself – Australia would make decisions for NZ

The Australian TGA (which would take over NZ’s health products industry) is known to use an extremely heavy-handed approach. Remember the Pan debacle? The TGA recalled 1200 natural products off the market on the strength of one manufacturer’s lax handling of quality control standards. “The truth is that of more than 1200 products recalled, NOT ONE of the natural health products was found to be at fault. It was only one pharmaceutical drug which was a problem”.

Despite strong opposition from industry and a Parliamentary Select Committee report against the proposal, Annette King signed the Treaty with Australia on 10 December last year. But the battle is far from over. The Government still needs to have the treaty passed into law and for that it needs the support of the opposition parties. We can stop the Government’s TGA proposal especially if we are strong and united. The opposition party MP’s need to know the strength of public opposition.

 

 

 

 

Cancer Cure Alternatives
 

 

 

The NHF website was recently added to the "World's Best Cancer Care Sites" website, www.alternative-cancer-care.com.  Here you will find various avenues with alternative options to treat cancer.

 

 

 

 


 

 

Another Case of Forced Chemo/Radiation Therapy by Social Services
If you can assist Mrs. Cherrix, please contact her today

My son, who will be 16 in 3 weeks, has Hodgkins.
He had chemo last fall and in December was told there were no more active cancer cells. The doctors wanted to do radiation. We refused. His cancer returned and in March he chose not to have the high dose chemo and radiation that the oncologists said he should. We chose to go to the Bio Medical Center in Tijuana, Mexico. He started on the Hoxsey medicine, takes supplements, uses an infrared sauna, and changed his diet to an alkaline, all organic, grains, nuts, fruits, vegetable, juicing, no salt, no sugar diet. We asked the oncologists to monitor him while we were doing alternative methods and they refused because they did not agree to what we were doing and then they turned us in to Social Services for medical neglect. A court hearing was held without us, we were not notified, and were supposed to be. A protective child order was put in place and the Dept. of Social Services has the right to come into our house at any time and take him to have treatments at the hospital and if he doesn't agree to go they will forcefully take him and do it. They scheduled another court date for Tuesday.

 

We need help. We don't have money. We need an attorney. We need someone, somewhere, somehow to help us. Can you please reply to me today?

 

Rose Cherrix
cptkyak@intercom.net
757-336-6811
Chincoteague Island, VA

 

 

 

 

SUGGESTED READING

 

  • The AM-PM Fat Loss Discovery by Shane Ellison, M.Sc.

Overview and order information:  Click here.


 

 

  • HOW TO LIVE 100 YEARS WITHOUT GROWING OLD by Bill Sardi
    Hyaluronic Acid: Natures Healing Agent

This book started with a documentary television report. ABC News reporter Connie Chung visited the Japanese village of Yuzurihara to find out why the people there were living so long yet looking so young. The TV report, aired in November of 2000, showed men and women in their 80s and 90s with smooth wrinkle-less skin, flexible joints, full heads of hair, and activity levels that defied their age. Most villagers were still actively farming in family gardens that every villager tends. What to make of this? I flew to Japan to find out.

The Yuzurihara phenomenon is about a little-known molecule called hyaluronic acid.

 

Overview and order information:  Click here.

 

 

 

  • THE NEW TRUTH ABOUT VITAMINS AND MINERALS by Bill Sardi

The fine print on multivitamin labels is often beyond consumer understanding. Vitamin pill buyers often pay for nutrients that are inferior, like inorganic selenium, synthetically made Vitamin E, and poorly-absorbed forms of magnesium and Vitamin B12.

The list of requirements for a well-designed multivitamin began to develop. I came up with about 25 important markers to evaluate multivitamins. A rating form was developed so consumers could evaluate their own multivitamins. It’s at the back of the book.

If you are the type of consumer who wants to know you are doing the right thing when you take vitamin pills. If you want to check the references and studies before you buy a multi. If you want a multivitamin that delivers on its promise to promote health and longevity, then this book is worth the read.

Overview and order information: Click here.


 


 

  • Fowl!: Bird Flu; It's Not What You Think by Dr. Sherri Tenpenny
     

Overview and order information:  Click here.

 

 

 

  • Genetic Roulette:  The Documented Health Risks of Genetically Engineered Foods by Jeffrey M. Smith

The biotech industry’s claim that genetically modified (GM) foods are safe is shattered in this groundbreaking book. Nearly forty health risks of the foods that Americans eat every day are presented in easy-to-read two-page spreads.
 

Overview and order information:  Click here.


 

 


 

 

JOIN US NOW

 

If you believe in freedom, particularly health-freedom,

align yourself with dedicated individuals, joined in force,

working to ensure that you have and keep these basic rights.
 

http://www.thenhf.com/join_the_nhf.html

 

 

NATIONAL HEALTH FEDERATION

 

P.O. Box 688


Monrovia, California 91017 USA

 

 

Main phone:  1-(626) 357-2181

 

Fax:  1-(626) 303-0642

 

e-mail:  contact-us@thenhf.com

 

website:  www.thenhf.com

 


 

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