Mike's main point is that we need to be rational here. The media is all in an uproar because they were suckered to believe that EPA limits set for drinking water can be shifted to point a finger at wine, which most people consume in far lower amounts.
Most of us are aware of the Health Ranger, who, among other benefits, keeps us aware of the dangers of contaminated foodstuffs. Interestingly, in today's column he addresses "bogus" claims by a troll who is looking to make money with a lawsuit claiming that California wines are "dangerously high" in arsenic.
Mike's main point is that we need to be rational here. The media is all in an uproar because they were suckered to believe that EPA limits set for drinking water can be shifted to point a finger at wine, which most people consume in far lower amounts.
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Dr. Alexander Beddoe: "It also appears that what is referred to as dementia would be a part of the effects of low potassium.
Here is the deal. Doc Reams spoke of "hominy" as helping in cases of low potassium. However, there is a very strong probability he was referring only to hominy made in his day by the old-fashioned method of using the lye (potassium hydroxide) derived from soaking wood ashes in water. It is the same lye you make soap with. What does the lye treatment do? It softens the husk and facilitates husk removal from corn soaked in it. This white hull-less corn is then either canned or dried and sold as hominy. So what do I know about "urea"? Actually, very little so it may be best for me to start by copying over some of the urea quotes I have collected over the years.
`UREA QUOTES BEDDOE: The last part of the equation [urea] is made up of two numbers: the nitrate nitrogen number on top the ammonia nitrogen number below. They represent nitrogen oxide and nitrogen sulfate, as found in the urine. NOTE: At one point in his textbook Dr. Beddoe speaks of agricultural urea which is correctly composed of ammonia & carbon dioxide. CHALLEN: People with high ureas will complain about insomnia. CHALLEN: The stronger the ammonia odor is in the urine, then the higher the urea numbers are. After years and years of immersion in Reams-think it is hard for me to see the world through medico eyes. Below is a story about a kidney failure. God alone knows exactly how much money will be spent on this one case. I'll bet a donut and a cup of coffee that Reams simply would have made the man drink his water---no drama whatsoever. Does that "protein build up" sound like huge numbers of delta and omega cells stacked up and waiting to get out? Are we talking extreme congestion? Should we add some lemon at the right time and some goldenseal to be sure everything gets out? Of course we have to run the risk of the medical-lobby screaming that we are "practicing medicine without *our* license" as they try to throw us in jail. Pointing to a happy guy with both kidneys intact means little to them.
Below is a horrifying story from Mike Adams as reported on his Natural News site. It is a report about the hugely profitable organ transplant business and how it corrupts doctors along with hospitals.
The story concludes with a call to protect our organs so as to keep us off operating room tables as either donor or recipient. So why is such a story appropriate for a RBTI blog? I think it serves well as a background to once again emphasize that Carey Reams taught us how to rebuild our damaged or sickly organs. This is a concept that surgeons should understand, but they have no financial incentive to do so. Actually, when you stop and think about how a few dollars of minerals can casually take the place of a quarter million dollars of high tech "modern" medicine you can understand the reluctance to fix things the natural way. And besides---where is the glamour? I can only imagine the thunderclap in the lecture room the first time Reams informed his audience that a heart attack victim could easily rebuild the damaged organ with something as simple as asparagus. The RBTI is like that: it leaves the listener gasping. Or how about Reams explaining how the diseased liver can be made whole with supplemental calcium, water, iron, and iodine. What "paid by the organ" surgeon can sign up for such teaching? A few have signed up. No, there will be no news articles about their heroic deeds. Those few doctors who quietly climb aboard the USS RBTI will save many organs and very few outsiders will ever know. That is the biological way. Read the below article and then decide whether you prefer to keep it simple or lay on that brightly lighted table. Carey Reams had his own ideas about cancer. Reaching back to the days when apples were stored in barrels for the winter, he likened cancer cells, dead cells, to rotten apples. Just as a rotten apple could start rot in adjacent apples, he visualized dead cells not promptly removed from the body as causing "rot" in adjacent cells pressed hard against them.
Apparently the cancer answer, in Reams' view, is to be sure the body has abundant minerals it needs to build fresh cells even as old dead cells are being flushed away with distilled water, augmented with the scouring power of lemon juice. How simple...and how different from the drug-company mentality taking root in government offices. There is a push---driven by profit---to prescribe cancer drugs to you and I even though we are cancer-free. Some years ago I was sitting with Challen Waychoff, who is a RBTI consultant practicing out of Wheeling, WV.
Challen was telling me how often he comes across a client who has been steeped in various healing "fads" and who wishes to "blend" their preferred therapy with RBTI. "I tell them it won't work," he said, "but it usually takes them a good while to understand." While he has detractors, those who know him credit Challen with being a stickler for staying very close to the original notes he took during his Reams' classes. Challen has no use for fads. So the real question I see in the forum posts is whether genetic mutations are a form of disease anyone has seen "melt away". "Genetic" is a term used by people who can't come up with a reason for whatever or whichever disorder. As best I understand it, Reams didn't think there was any such thing (*). Yes, he saw many doctor-described "genetic" diseases, but he noticed they were in families who ate at the same table. And, yes, he saw those same "genetic" diseases melt away when each family member ate/supplemented so as to get their numbers in line with the perfect equation. On the other hand, I think Joe...
My doctor finally came up with the ideal to test me for MTHFR a few months ago, and sure enough had a positive result. I'm still not sure if this "MTHFR" is a joke because it looks like texting shorthand for a word not appropriate in this forum. :)
The basic rules are that if you are working with a regular medical doctor and they have diagnosed you with something or the other, you can't come here and ask for a plan of treatment. Almost all US state laws are written such that any direct advice here could be considered "unlicensed practice of medicine." Carey Reams was gifted the knowledge that ALL disease is a mineral deficiency and that is all we really discuss here. Yes, we are forced to often use the medical terms so that one person knows what another is talking about, but there is no diagnosis and no treatment for symptoms as such allowed on this forum. We heal nothing and we cure nothing. What we do is analyze the urine and saliva for 7 important factors. We then work with basic calciums (which happens to be the most abundant mineral in the body by weight and by volume). By doing so, the other needed minerals usually ride in along with it. Sometimes there are special minerals such as easily assimilable iron added. But mostly it is calcium---primarily in food, but frequently with supplementation. We are not responsible for all the ills that magically melt away when the urine/saliva values are kept within the perfect health parameters. It is not our fault. It is simply something you have to get used to. OK, so the doc said you had lumbago (or whatever) and it went away once you held your numbers right for a while. Yes, we understand you didn't actually tell him about this number stuff because you knew he would think you were talking gibberish. Please don't blame us or credit us. "Bye, bye, lumbago" is just your body doing what it automatically does when you are drinking the right amount of water and the minerals are present to allow for the replacement of ageing cells. I'm sure your licensed doctor has suggestions for treating this "MTHFR" (or any of the other diseases listed in the PDR). We don't, we won't, and we can't treat things that way because we are not licensed to do so. We have no magic pills and we wouldn't tell you if we did. We can only offer the urine/saliva analysis and help you gently nudge your numbers to be more in line with the perfect health numbers. You (and your body) are on your own after that. If your licensed doctor says your disease (by whatever name he calls it) has "regressed," that is between you and him/her. Sure, you can later tell us about it, but please don't say that we "did it." We do nothing, we heal nothing, we cure nothing because we can't legally do so. In 1936, Rex Beach who lived in Sebring Florida at the time, wrote a short article about the work of Dr. Charles Northen. Northen (not Northern) had stopped his doctoring work and shifted to agriculture because he felt he could help many, many more if their diets were improved.
Beach's article, Modern Miracle Men, was published in |
Rex HarrillLong time RBTI fan. Mainly I seem to be a librarian these days. Categories
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