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Everything posted by froggie
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If he is, it sure beats being "normal" by orders of magnitude. (so far for speculation on intelligence and mindsets and politics and whatever) But no, i don't think negative labels are helpful in these sort of "cases" (totally bad pun) Just my opinion. Also i don't agree with your simple "peace", as if to say: i'm going to say something really stupid now and somewhere deep down i should know it, but i apologize for it in advance kind of thing, but that aside: no peace can not happen untill some things are fought for and won. (and i'm not talking about Hitler kind of wars, because that is fighting evil with evil, i am talking about everyone standing up for themselves AND others. niiiiice.
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URGENT information regarding Swine Flu Vaccine
froggie replied to Maharasa's topic in General Discussion
Are there any (experienced?) colloidal silver users testimonies available ? -
This is probably going to sound unordinary, but it is also possible to interact with other realms without sleeping and in full (yet heightened) conciousness. (some would say ''normal'', "daily", etc. conciousness, but that -really- doesn't exist.) -However-, it is not something that is achieved within a day or two, it just ''happens'' after a long time when you keep an open mind and interest in shamanism, etc. P.S. To the new age antagonists (or rather the new age antagonist wannabes) : This is not new agey, although it -can- be interpreted that way if you -really- have a desire to do so. (seriously) P.S.S. What i would consider new age mumbothingo is trying to commercialize some quasi things which are more shallow than substantial, although it is -made- more or less interesting. Which i don't really agree with, but it's not totally bad either (at least it makes people think is what i mean), unless it is, and unless someone gets duped by it in any way (financial, moral, or anything.)
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Does anyone know if the Lakhovsky oscillator works passively or if it needs a sort of power source? I believe that originally it was powered, but you see ''unpowered" ones also on some websites, hence the confusion. Maybe it could be cleared up? http://www.google.nl/search?hl=nl&q=La...mp;aq=f&oq=
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The reptilian brain is good for something, isn't it? (brain stem, and i don't remember the name of the other part. etc.) Just like the frontal lobes are good for something else. I guess it's about balance and equal developement of all of the aspects. Harmony, evolution, balance, practise, etc.
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There was someone who found out the frequencies of healthy organs (all kinds, from skin to bones and a lot more) and there are tuning forks sold with those frequencies.
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http://www.donlawrence.co.uk/comics/en/storm.php uG3C1E36qYU all of storm's comics would make great movies by the way
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who's Avid Dyke? but seriously, it's better than state/dictator approved television? ok sure some countries are a lot better than other countries but there's always something that can be done better *some*where? let me just say i understand both sides of it by the way his advance theories are not bad at all imo, for example the many dimensions theory and calendar etc theories by the way, anyone know the Storm (Don Lawrence drawn) and Erich von Danicken comics? They're good. http://images.google.nl/images?hl=nl&q...le&resnum=4 http://tatjana.ingold.ch/index.php?id=comic5
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Anyone know this herb? http://www.nutrasanus.com/coleus-forskohlii.html
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Is it real? Is it as bad as it sounds? (nothing very 'alimentarius' about it, but more something like a fascist mind****?)
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Anyone know anything about the codex alimentarius?
froggie replied to froggie's topic in General Discussion
you know ..... that's a really good question. it could be one, or the other, or either of those, or even nothing. at least something of that biodynamic organisation or company would have to have long standing credentials of itself, but i don't know that organisation for myself. on the other hand, if it really does help, it seems like a really good thing. in a way at least. what would be the alternatives? beside this? probably plenty. like boycotting some things all by yourself, in a small group, in bigger groups. like growing your own things whenever possible and making it work. like anonymous statements? and so? -
Anyone know anything about the codex alimentarius?
froggie replied to froggie's topic in General Discussion
i have come across some petition sites, if anyone would be interested, feel free to contribute with your voice. and maybe also forward it. it doesn't seem like a hoax but the 'real thing'. Europe: http://www.eliant.eu/new/lang/en/?p=4 USA and other countries: http://www.thepetitionsite.com/1/codex-alimentarius -
*link* a vaccine without the injection? (and without the other bad stuff?)
froggie posted a topic in General Discussion
http://www.biogenicstimulants.com/bulbio/r...efcc96a0b07d9f7 -
Does anyone know anything about merkaba breathing? (Like what Drunvalo Melchizedek talks about) More specifically: Does it do positive things?
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Anyone know anything about the codex alimentarius?
froggie replied to froggie's topic in General Discussion
Some things that truely bother me is for example the banning of raw milk and raw milk cheeses, they are healthyer, tastyer and more easily digested. The reason why raw milk could be dangerous (and it happens very little anyway) is not because of the milk but by the way the cows are held (too many and too many antibiotics, etc) The solution for more and healthyer raw milk would be simply to test the milk on site or at the factory. simple and it works. all done. but no? let's ban raw milk altogether? what kind of sense is that? commercialization and industrialisation going over the edge and insane? sell more shit instead of sell more quality? i think so. Also i want to be able to buy plants and supplements and grow my own food and things like that. Any regulation that should be done is to insure a good product. That's all. The rest should be more or less free. No? How else are people going to get smart instead of being made dumb? -
link not working anymore, but i really very much do like all inventions that do improvements of any kind. if there were more inventors and less tricksters i think most people probably wouldn't mind that.
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don't think so. ignorant people do not deserve to be punished by things like that. cool. (and you probably mean block and not blog?)
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I would much rather go the Red Marine Algae route and Astragalus and extra vitamin C and maybe also homeopathic anti flu's. Injected pharmaceutical anti flu shots seem like the most desperate/last and perhaps most ignorant option, and also the things that's in them doesn't make a lot of great sense. (pharmaceutical corruption at its finest? (that seems to also be: humanely, naturally, acceptably at its worst (or nearing it.))
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I've now read much about it and it's actually opening the central channel and letting chi go through it, developing and storing in the lowest dan tien from the chi that goes through the central channel, and inner smile kind of practise/feeling/warmth/radiating-good-stuff/feeling-good, plus the extra geometrics stuff and chi shield after the prior steps have been taken and with success.
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http://sciencenow.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/2009/708/1 Fountain of Youth on Easter Island? By Gisela Telis ScienceNOW Daily News 8 July 2009 Move over, Moai. Easter Island may now boast another odd claim to fame: a midlife longevity drug. In a new study, researchers report that an antibiotic called rapamycin--after the island's Polynesian name, Rapa Nui--enabled middle-aged mice to live up to 16% longer than their rapa-free counterparts. The discovery marks the first time a drug has been shown to lengthen life span in mammals, even when administered late in life. Scientists first stumbled on rapamycin in soil samples taken from Easter Island in 1965. A bacterium found in the soil, Streptomyces hygroscopicus, secreted the stuff to fend off its bacterial and fungal rivals. Rapamycin has since been used to prevent organ rejection in transplant patients and, most recently, as an antitumor drug. The compound works by inhibiting mTOR, a protein that regulates cell growth and survival. When researchers realized that calorie restriction, which is known to lengthen life spans in mice, also suppresses mTOR activity, they began to wonder if rapamycin might boost longevity as well. Encouraged by earlier studies showing that insects and worms live longer on rapamycin, a trio of labs--the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio; the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor; and the Jackson Laboratory in Bar Harbor, Maine--decided to test the compound on mice. The labs had access to hundreds of mice genetically diverse enough to model human diversity, thanks to the U.S. National Institute on Aging's Interventions Testing Program, which investigates treatments with life-extending potential. Pharmacologist Randy Strong and molecular biologist Z. David Sharp, who headed the study's Texas arm, planned to feed young mice rapamycin and observe the drug's effects as they aged. But by the time the researchers formulated a feed that made the rapamycin stable and easily digestible, the mice had grown old--20 months old, or about 60 human years. Because calorie restriction and other life-lengthening measures work best when started young, Strong and his colleagues didn't expect the experiment to work in midlife. Yet the mice lived 28% to 38% longer than the controls from that point on, the researchers report in Nature, the equivalent of 6 to 9 extra years in humans. Their overall life expectancy rose 5% to 16%. "We were really excited because this appears to be the first drug that slows aging even if it's started later in life," says Strong. Although he and his colleagues aren't yet sure how rapamycin lengthens life, it's thought that suppressing mTOR, whatever the method, prompts the body to hunker down and wait for better times, slowing its growth processes and strengthening its defenses against cell-damaging stressors. The study comes as "a pleasant surprise," says University of Washington, Seattle, molecular biologist Matthew Kaeberlein, who was among the first to propose the mTOR-longevity link. "This tells us the [mTOR] pathway affects aging in mammals ... and probably affects people as well." Don't expect antiaging drugs to hit the market anytime soon, though. Rapamycin is known to raise cholesterol levels and, as a potent immune system suppressant, the compound could make its consumers more susceptible to infections. Kaeberlein hopes future studies will measure the health of rapa-enhanced mice and the effects of varying rapamycin doses, in hopes of divorcing the drug's benefits from its dangers.
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Can you imagine this? A "normal person" supposedly having to pay a corporation 1.9M sure, it's sensation, sure, it's meant to cause the effect of fear but how can anyone justify a normal person having to pay such an amount, and that to a company that makes (made) excessive amounts of money anyway, from things that can actually not be measured in monetary value (music. and mostly even silly and bad music nonetheless to top the whole thing off. (just an opinion) ------ (CNN) -- A federal jury Thursday found a 32-year-old Minnesota woman guilty of illegally downloading music from the Internet and fined her $80,000 each -- a total of $1.9 million -- for 24 songs. Jammie Thomas-Rasset's case was the first such copyright infringement case to go to trial in the United States, her attorney said. Attorney Joe Sibley said that his client was shocked at fine, noting that the price tag on the songs she downloaded was 99 cents. She plans to appeal, he said. Cara Duckworth, a spokeswoman for the Recording Industry Association of America, said the RIIA was "pleased that the jury agreed with the evidence and found the defendant liable." "We appreciate the jury's service and that they take this as seriously as we do," she said. Thomas-Rasset downloaded work by artists such as No Doubt, Linkin Park, Gloria Estefan and Sheryl Crow. This was the second trial for Thomas-Rasset. The judge ordered a retrial in 2007 after there was an error in the wording of jury instructions. The fines jumped considerably from the first trial, which granted just $220,000to the recording companies.
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Any known herbs that help in gradually removing any/all meridian blockages?
froggie posted a topic in General Discussion
Are there any herbs that help clear all the energy meridians themselves? In conjunction with things like tai chi perhaps. Herbs that clear energy blockages in particular. It's an unusual question i guess -
that's what i call (a better kind of) news. it should be repeated untill something is changed for the better, just like in iran. the video has almost 1000 votes and apparently all of them 5 stars. that must say something.
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Russians order Flight Changes, after Massive Magnetic Shift downs Airliners...
froggie posted a topic in General Discussion