Paleo Lies | Dr. John Mcdougall – YouTube
The award-winning Eating documentary covers a lot of ground very comprehensively – and all within 88 short minutes. Among the many highlights are interviews with Dr. Caldwell Esselstyn, Dr. Neil Pinckney, Dr. Ruth Heidrich and Dr. Joseph Crowe.
Dr. Crowe and Dr. Esselstyn are from the world-famous Cleveland Clinic Foundation and know something about heart disease. In fact, Dr. Esselstyn directed the longest and most successful heart disease reversal program ever. These interviews will convince you that cardiovascular heart disease, the #1 killer in America today, can be reversed by switching to The Rave Diet. What you will get is a virtual one-on-one consultation with some of the world’s leading authorities on heart disease reversal. Dr. Pinckney and Dr. Crowe both reversed severe heart disease by adopting The Rave Diet.
If you know someone with heart disease – who doesn’t? – this will probably be the most valuable film they will ever watch – and from authorities with impeccable credentials. And if you eat to prevent heart disease, you will also prevent the other major chronic diseases that are plaguing Western nations. You will also hear from Dr. Heidrich who, after surgery, treated her breast cancer without chemotherapy, radiation or any other conventional treatments by following The Rave Diet.
The Eating documentary is used in wellness clinics throughout the world to motivate people to change their diets and restore their health.
Note: My original link to the 2nd edition disappeared. The YouTube link is to the 3rd edition, but it will probably be removed due to copyright violation. 7-24-18: Trying one more time. The 3rd edition may be purchased or rented through Amazon.com: https://www.amazon.com/Eating-3rd-Mike-Anderson/dp/B001CRQ8K6
What follows is a partial listing of books, articles and web references used in researching the facts presented in Eating, The Rave Diet & Lifestyle and Healing Cancer. Additional references are also cited in the DVDs and book.
Published on Dec 23, 2012
To become one of the world’s industrial titans you need a work force that’s ready for anything, but grim statistics in the heart of Europe show millions of adults are being left behind because they have trouble reading and writing.
Published on Dec 15, 2012
Freedomain Radio Listener Emails, 5 December 2012
– Do Boys Learn Differently from Girls?
– How to Best Make the Case for Freedom?
– What about Right to Work Legislation?
– Is It Initiating Force to Get Your Children to Do Chores?
Right to Work Bill Passes!
Do you think boys learn differently than girls?
Freedomain Radio is the largest and most popular philosophy show on the web – http://www.freedomainradio.com
Everyday Anarchy
by Stefan Molyneux from Freedomain Radio, at freedomainradio.com
INTRODUCTION
It’s hard to know whether a word can ever be rehabilitated — or whether the attempt should even be made.
Words are weapons, and can be used like any tools, for good or ill. We are all aware of the clichéd uses of such terms as “terrorists” versus “freedom fighter” etc. An atheist can be called an “unbeliever”; a theist can be called “superstitious.” A man of conviction can be called an “extremist”; a man of moderation “cowardly.” A free spirit can be called a libertine or a hedonist; a cautious introvert can be labeled a stodgy prude.
Words are also weapons of judgment — primarily moral judgment. We can say that a man can be “freed” of sin if he accepts Jesus; we can also say that he can be “freed” of irrationality if he does not. A patriot will say that a soldier “serves” his country; others may take him to task for his blind obedience. Acts considered “murderous” in peacetime are hailed as “noble” in war, and so on.
Some words can never be rehabilitated — and neither should they be. Nazi, evil, incest, abuse, rape, murder — these are all words which describe the blackest impulses of the human soul, and can never be turned to a good end. Edmund may say in King Lear, “Evil, be thou my good!” but we know that he is not speaking paradoxically; he is merely saying “that which others call evil — my self-interest — is good for me.”
The word “anarchy” may be almost beyond redemption — any attempt to find goodness in it could well be utterly futile — or worse; the philosophical equivalent of the clichéd scene in hospital dramas where the surgeon blindly refuses to give up on a clearly dead patient.
Perhaps I’m engaged in just such a fool’s quest in this little book. Perhaps the word “anarchy” has been so abused throughout its long history, so thrown into the pit of incontestable human iniquity that it can never be untangled from the evils that supposedly surround it.
What images spring to mind when you hear the word “anarchy”? Surely it evokes mad riots of violence and lawlessness — a post-apocalyptic Darwinian free-for-all where the strong and evil dominate the meek and reasonable. Or perhaps you view it as a mad political agenda, a thin ideological cover for murderous desires and cravings for assassinations, where wild-eyed, mustachioed men with thick hair and thicker accents roll cartoon bombs under the ornate carriages of slowly-waving monarchs. Or perhaps you view “anarchy” as more of a philosophical specter; the haunted and angry mutterings of over-caffeinated and seemingly-eternal grad students; a nihilistic surrender to all that is seductive and evil in human nature, a hurling off the cliff of self-restraint, and a savage plunge into the mad magic of the moment, without rules, without plans, without a future…
If your teenage son were to come home to you one sunny afternoon and tell you that he had become an anarchist, you would likely feel a strong urge to check his bag for black hair dye, fresh nose rings, clumpy mascara and dirty needles. His announcement would very likely cause a certain trapdoor to open under your heart, where you may fear that it might fall forever. The heavy syllables of words like “intervention,” “medication,” “boot camp,” and “intensive therapy” would probably accompany the thudding of your quickened pulse.
All this may well be true, of course — I may be thumping the chest of a broken patient long since destined for the morgue, but certain… insights, you could say, or perhaps correlations, continue to trouble me immensely, and I cannot shake the fear that it is not anarchy that lies on the table, clinging to life — but rather, the truth.
I will take a paragraph or two to try and communicate what troubles me so much about the possible injustice of throwing the word “anarchy” into the pit of evil — if I have not convinced you by the end of the next page that something very unjust may be afoot, then I will have to continue my task of resurrection with others, because I do not for a moment imagine that I would ever convince you to call something good that is in fact evil.
And neither would I want to…
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