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Thursday, February 14, 2013

The Amazing Health Benfits of Tumeric
 
Aside from the holistic health community, Western medical practitioners have only recently come on board in recognizing the benefits of turmeric.

By Amy Evans

Fri, Jan 27 2012  


Turmeric powder and root
Photo: Elzbieta Sekowska/Shutterstock

Turmeric, an orange-colored spice imported from India, is part the ginger family and has been a staple in Middle Eastern and Southeast Asian cooking for thousands of years.
In addition, ayurvedic and Chinese medicines utilize turmeric to clear infections and inflammations on the inside and outside of the body. But beyond the holistic health community, Western medical practitioners have only recently come on board in recognizing the benefits of turmeric.
Blocking cancer
Doctors at UCLA recently found that curcumin, the main component in turmeric, appeared to block an enzyme that promotes the growth of head and neck cancer.
In that study, 21 subjects with head and neck cancers chewed two tablets containing 1,000 milligrams of curcumin. An independent lab in Maryland evaluated the results and found that the cancer-promoting enzymes in the patients’ mouths were inhibited by the curcumin and thus prevented from advancing the spread of the malignant cells.
Powerful antioxidant
The University of Maryland’s Medical Center also states that turmeric’s powerful antioxidant properties fight cancer-causing free radicals, reducing or preventing some of the damage they can cause.
While more research is necessary, early studies have indicated that curcumin may help prevent or treat several types of cancer including prostate, skin and colon.
Potent anti-inflammatory
Dr. Randy J. Horwitz, the medical director of the Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine and an assistant professor of clinical medicine at the University of Arizona College of Medicine in Tucson, wrote a paper for the American Academy of Pain Management in which he discussed the health benefits of turmeric.
“Turmeric is one of the most potent natural anti-inflammatories available,” Horwitz states in the paper.
He went on to cite a 2006 University of Arizona study that examined the effect of turmeric on rats with injected rheumatoid arthritis. According to Horwitz, pretreatment with turmeric completely inhibited the onset of rheumatoid arthritis in the rats. In addition, the study found that using turmeric for pre-existing rheumatoid arthritis resulted in a significant reduction of symptoms.
“Raw is best”
Natalie Kling, a Los Angeles-based nutritionist, says she first learned about the benefits of turmeric while getting her degree from the Natural Healing Institute of Neuropathy. “As an anti-inflammatory, antioxidant and antiseptic, it’s a very powerful plant,” she says.
Kling recommends it to clients for joint pain and says that when taken as a supplement, it helps quickly. She advises adding turmeric to food whenever possible and offers these easy tips. “Raw is best,” she said. “Sprinkling it on vegetables or mixing it into dressings is quick and effective.”
If you do cook it, make sure to use a small amount of healthy fat like healthy coconut oil to maximize flavor. Kling also recommends rubbing turmeric on meat and putting it into curries and soups.
“It’s inexpensive, mild in taste, and benefits every system in the body,” Kling says. "Adding this powerful plant to your diet is one of the best things you can do for long term health.”
Know of other turmeric benefits? Leave us a note in the comments below.

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

http://www.appalachiantrail.org/hiking/find-a-hike/interactive-map



Goats yelling like humans...

Getting excited for Keller and the Keels this Friday 2/15 at the City Winery.

I hope they play this one: Local Outdoor Organic

 


Heres a free soundboard quality download:

Keller Williams Live at The Barns at Kelly's Ford on 2006-05-05 (May 5, 2006):
Just Click Here:
     
63.2 MB
 

http://archive.org/details/kw2006-05-05.matrix.flac16

Collection: KellerWilliams
Band/Artist: Keller Williams
Date: May 5, 2006 (check for other copies)
Venue: The Barns at Kelly's Ford
Location: Remington, VA

Source: B&K(DPA)4022 xy > Lou's Protools rig for phantom power and delay mixed with sbd feed > 722 @ 24/96 (via 1/4" trs)
Lineage: unknown
Taped by: John Paradiso
Transferred by: John Paradiso
Keywords: keller williams keels private party
 
Description
Set I Disc I

01) Tuning
02) Star Trek Theme ->
03) New Horizons
04) I Want a New Drug ->
05) Play This ->
06) I Want a New Drug
07) Local
08) Take The Money and Run ->
09) Thirsty In The Rain
10) Holler in the Moonlight
11) Bird Song
12) Happy Birthday Marc
13) Goof Balls
14) Mary Jane's Last Breakdown

Set II Disc II

01) Intro
02) Good Evening Ladies and Gentleman ->
03) Houses of The Holy
04) Changed The Locks
05) Crater in The Backyard
06) Vanilla Ice Cream ->
07) Maggie's Farm ->
08) Calling all artists Jam ->
09) Soul Shakedown Party ->
10) Low Rider ->
11) Another Brick in The Wall ->
12) Galloping Horse ->
13) Whirly Pig ->
14) Culpeper Woodchuck ->
15) Breathe ->
16) Longview ->
17) Another Brick in The Wall ->
18) Breathe
19) Love Bizarre
20) Connie Chung

Individual Files

Whole ItemFormatSize
kw2006-05-05.matrix.flac16_64kb.m3u 64kbps M3U Stream
kw2006-05-05.matrix.flac16_64kb_mp3.zip ZIP 63.2 MB
kw2006-05-05.matrix.flac16_vbr.m3u VBR M3U Stream
Audio FilesFlacOgg Vorbis64Kbps MP3VBR MP3
Tuning 28.6 MB 4.9 MB 3.0 MB 9.6 MB
Star Trek Theme -> 15.8 MB 2.4 MB 1.3 MB 4.2 MB
New Horizons 30.8 MB 4.1 MB 2.3 MB 6.8 MB
I Want a New Drug -> 16.1 MB 2.2 MB 1.3 MB 3.8 MB
Play This -> 23.8 MB 3.1 MB 1.8 MB 5.2 MB
I Want a New Drug 12.9 MB 1.9 MB 1.1 MB 3.4 MB
Local 25.6 MB 3.6 MB 2.1 MB 6.3 MB
Take The Money and Run -> 16.6 MB 2.1 MB 1.2 MB 3.6 MB
Thirsty In The Rain 27.1 MB 3.8 MB 2.1 MB 6.7 MB
Holler in the Moonlight 34.4 MB 4.9 MB 2.8 MB 8.9 MB
Bird Song 47.5 MB 7.0 MB 3.9 MB 12.5 MB
Happy Birthday Marc 8.4 MB 1.3 MB 777.4 KB 2.4 MB
Goof Balls 32.9 MB 4.3 MB 2.5 MB 7.6 MB
Mary Jane's Last Breakdown 28.3 MB 4.1 MB 2.4 MB 7.6 MB
Intro 577.3 KB 122.7 KB 74.5 KB 203.6 KB
Good Evening Ladies and Gentleman -> 16.3 MB 2.4 MB 1.3 MB 4.2 MB
Houses of The Holy 25.6 MB 3.5 MB 1.9 MB 5.9 MB
Changed The Locks 20.6 MB 2.9 MB 1.6 MB 5.1 MB
Crater in The Backyard 31.7 MB 4.3 MB 2.4 MB 7.4 MB
Vanilla Ice Cream -> 24.9 MB 3.7 MB 2.2 MB 6.7 MB
Maggie's Farm -> 18.1 MB 2.5 MB 1.3 MB 4.2 MB
Calling all artists Jam -> 14.6 MB 2.0 MB 1.1 MB 3.5 MB
Soul Shakedown Party -> 20.4 MB 2.7 MB 1.5 MB 4.8 MB
Low Rider -> 21.7 MB 3.1 MB 1.7 MB 5.5 MB
Another Brick in The Wall -> 28.2 MB 4.2 MB 2.4 MB 7.7 MB
Galloping Horse -> 20.2 MB 2.9 MB 1.7 MB 5.4 MB
Whirly Pig -> 26.5 MB 3.7 MB 2.1 MB 6.9 MB
Culpeper Woodchuck -> 27.4 MB 3.9 MB 2.1 MB 7.0 MB
Breathe -> 15.0 MB 2.4 MB 1.4 MB 4.5 MB
Longview -> 18.0 MB 2.8 MB 1.6 MB 5.2 MB
Another Brick in The Wall -> 7.2 MB 1.1 MB 636.2 KB 1.9 MB
Breathe 12.4 MB 2.0 MB 1.3 MB 3.6 MB
Love Bizarre 23.9 MB 3.5 MB 2.0 MB 6.3 MB
Connie Chung 53.8 MB 7.7 MB 4.3 MB 13.7 MB
InformationFormatSize
kw2006-05-05.matrix.flac16.ffp Flac FingerPrint 3.2 KB
kw2006-05-05.matrix.flac16_files.xml Metadata [file]
kw2006-05-05.matrix.flac16_meta.xml Metadata 4.3 KB
kw2006-05-05.matrix.flac16_reviews.xml Metadata 4.2 KB
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kw2006-05-05.matrix.flac16_archive.torrent 48.3 KB
kw2006-05-05.txt
1.5 KB
Yeah Washington! Leading the change...

Washington state launches groundbreaking 'Label It Wa' grassroots GMO labeling campaign

 
Wednesday, February 13, 2013 by: Ethan A. Huff, staff writer

(NaturalNews) The state of Washington appears to be leading the charge these days in the fight for honest food labeling, as two new pieces of legislation are now being considered that would require the labeling of genetically-modified organisms (GMOs) in food. I-522, also known as The People's Right to Know Genetically Engineered Food Act, and House Bill 1407 both tackle the GMO labeling issue head on, the former at the state level and the latter at the local level, and Washington voters will soon have the opportunity to let their voices be heard on these two proposed laws.

As we reported just after the turn of the new year, proponents of GMO labeling in Washington have already successfully gathered more than 350,000 petition signatures, exceeding the minimum number required by more than 100,000, to get I-522 on the 2013 ballot. This means Washington voters will have the opportunity this coming fall to vote in favor of the initiative which, if passed, will require that all foods produced using GMOs and sold within the state be properly labeled. (
http://www.naturalnews.com)

And in the event that this initiative ends up getting railroaded like Proposition 37 did in California last fall, HB 1407 will allow local communities to decide for themselves how to handle both the labeling and cultivation of GMOs in their areas. Introduced by Representative Cary Condotta, a Republican from Washington's 12th District, HB 1407 specifically provisions that local governments will be free to regulate GMOs however they see fit, independently from whatever the state decides to do.

"When we saw San Juan do this, we thought it was great, so we see this on a different path than I-522 but we made sure to put a provision in HB 1407 that none of it would override I-522," explained Rep. Condotta about the proposed legislation, comparing it to the recent passage of Measure No. 2012-4, which banned the cultivation of GMOs in Washington's San Juan County. "So if the
labeling bill passes, all food will still be labeled statewide. This just give the local level even more control."

HB 1407 would recognize right of local communities to label, ban GMOs

This two-pronged approach to GMO labeling is groundbreaking, as it addresses some of the failures of other GMO labeling proposals in other states. And particularly with HB 1407, the decentralization of power in matters relating to GMOs will help prevent corporate interests from hijacking efforts to increase food labeling transparency at the local level.

"It is within the jurisdiction of the local legislative authority to determine the parameters of regulation, which may include the production, use, advertising, sale, distribution, storage, transportation, formulation, packaging, labeling, certification, registration, propagation, cultivation, raising, or growing of genetically modified organisms," explains HB 1407.

Both bills are uniquely important because, together, they will procure the legal framework needed to ensure that the people of Washington, and not the biotechnology industry, are the ones calling the shots when it comes to GMO policy.

To learn more about I-522, visit:
http://www.labelitwa.org/

To learn more about HB 1407, visit: http://apps.leg.wa.gov

Sources for this article include:http://www.labelitwa.org/

Learn more: http://www.naturalnews.com/039078_Washington_state_GMO_labeling_campaign.html#ixzz2KpG8FrcE

Imported seafood is full of chemicals, drugs and feces - yet the FDA inspects hardly any of it

farmWednesday, February 13, 2013 by: PF Louis

(NaturalNews) Most imported seafood, including shrimp, is from large fish farms in Asia, including China, Thailand, Indonesia and Vietnam. There are also seafood or fish farms in Canada, Mexico, and South America that export to the U.S. and others countries.

Fish farming is just that. Breeding, cultivating, and harvesting fish from ponds, drainage ditches, or cages in lakes and even the open sea. There are also green houses with large containers of water. Unusual tropical fish, catfish, and salmon are farmed and sometimes deceptively sold as wild caught.

Farmed fish and shrimp pro and con

Proponents of fish farming point out that it's more ecological since wild fish areas are invaded less as fish farms proliferate. Of course, there is the added incentive of not having to resort to seafaring vessels or fleets to come in with catches. Fish farming is more reliable and less expensive.

Since recent innovations of stacking indoor pools for breading shrimp was innovated, there is an incredible amount of farmed jumbo shrimp that is retailed and used in restaurants. These stacked pools permit up to 25 kilograms of shrimp to be bred in one cubic meter of water.

The stacked pool idea was spawned in Texas. So less farmed shrimp is imported now than a few years ago. But that doesn't preclude antibiotics, bacterial, and chemical contamination from getting into those stacked pools.

Just like massive factory farms for sending hoofed meat to slaughter houses, there are problems with overcrowding and feeding in
fish farms. Antibiotics are used in crowed aquatic conditions. And what they are fed can include even salmonella laced pig feces, as discovered in several Chinese fish farms.

FDA oversight grossly lacking

While the FDA orchestrates raids on raw milk providers, alternative cancer clinics, supplement companies, and issues threatening letters to nut and fruit growers for promoting actual scientific health findings on their products, they barely sniff imported seafood or locally farmed fish and shrimp from a distance.

According to the CDC, 44 percent of the 39 food borne illness outbreaks caused by imports from 2005 to 2010 involved seafood. In 2011, 91 percent of the 4.7 billion pounds of seafood consumed in the U.S. was imported. The FDA tested samples from only two percent of this at best. It seems 2012 was a better year.

They inspected 330 samples of Vietnamese farmed
shrimp exported to Little Rock, Arkansas, and found 67 samples containing the bacteria Klebsiella, which is resistant to most antibiotics and causes urinary infections and pneumonia.

In addition to bacterial contamination, certain antibiotics used in fish farming are problematic. Residues of nitrofuran antibiotics have been discovered in imported
farm fish. Nitrofurans are carcinogenic.

A U.S. wild shrimp trade association, the Southern Shrimp Alliance, complained to the FDA recently that three Vietnamese shrimp farms were ordered to test all their exports with Canadian authorities after extremely dangerous fluoroquinolone antibiotics were detected. But the FDA did nothing for U.S. imports from those companies.

The Global Aquaculture Alliance (GAA) claims to pick up the slack from FDA's inadequate screening. Their Best Aquaculture Practices (BAP) label supposedly assures your seafood is totally safe. But the GAA is a fox guarding hen house industry group of seafood provider executives. (
http://www.gaalliance.org/bap/wheretobuy.php)

The University of Victoria's Seafood Ecology Research Group placed the BAP seal at 16th out of 20 total certifications for seafood safety standards.

Inadequate food safety screening for imported seafood leaves us with equally ignored, locally farmed fish and shrimp as well as wild fish and shrimp from our BP Corexit contaminated gulf. It's time to be very picky about seafood.

Sources for this article include:
http://en.wikipedia.org

http://www.popsci.com

http://www.motherjones.com

http://www.nationofchange.org

Learn more: http://www.naturalnews.com/039077_seafood_chemicals_FDA_inspections.html#ixzz2KpFaaiN0