Long Life POSSIBLE!

 
The evidence was overwhelming once you knew where to look.  Eight cultures scattered across mountain ranges from Tibet to Ecuador routinely produced people who lived to 120, 140, even allegedly 256 years old.  The Hunza in Pakistan, the Georgians in the Caucasus Mountains, the Vilcabamba in Ecuador—they all shared something extraordinary.  It wasn’t genetics, wasn’t exercise, wasn’t some mystical practice.  They drank and irrigated their crops with “glacial milk,” water so thick with minerals it appeared white or gray.  When you boiled away a quart of their water, two inches of mineral deposits remained in the pot.  Boil away a quart of Evian or Perrier, and you’d get enough minerals to cover the head of a pin.  These cultures had accidentally stumbled upon what Wallach’s comparative pathology had proven: every animal and every human that dies of natural causes dies of a nutritional deficiency disease.  Not sometimes.  Not usually.  Always. The minerals ground from the mountains by millions of tons of glacial ice had given these people what modern agriculture had stolen from the rest of us—the 60 essential minerals that serve as cofactors for every biological process in the body.
The American people have been fed a lie so deadly it’s killed more of us than all foreign enemies combined: “You can get everything you need from the four food groups.” The 1936 U.S. Senate Document 264 proved our soils were catastrophically depleted of minerals. The 1992 Rio Earth Summit confirmed it had gotten worse—North American soils are now 85% mineral depleted.  Plants can’t manufacture minerals; they can only absorb what’s in the soil, and what’s in the soil is almost nothing.  The medical establishment knows this.  They have the veterinary evidence, the geological evidence, the comparative pathology evidence.  But acknowledging that diabetes is just chromium deficiency, that arthritis is calcium and mineral deficiency, that heart disease is selenium deficiency—that would collapse a trillion-dollar industry overnight.  So they keep prescribing drugs that manage symptoms while the underlying deficiencies ravage the body, all while telling their patients to avoid the very supplements that could save them.  The truth is so simple it’s almost insulting: for the price of livestock minerals—pennies a day—humans could live past 100 with the vitality of the Hunza elders who still farm at 140.  
This book is the story of how that truth was discovered, why it’s been suppressed, and what you can do about it starting today.

No comments:

Post a Comment

you got something to say... please say it



just a reminder

  good reminders!  


oh yeah...

oh yeah...

Trace's book