Do We Have To Work To Get Paid? Some Think Not

I posted this about 5 years ago because I thought it was an interesting concept…the kind of concept that Bernie Sanders would go for…I’m not sure how it could sustain itself.

The thought of sustaining itself makes me think of technology that is already available but is being slowly given to us…that is 3D printer technology. This is the technology that will end poverty, world hunger and the need for money. It’s already being used to build houses, make tools and other things, soon they’ll be known as replicators and will be able to create everything we need, like clothes, food and everything else wee “need”, thus ending the need for money, ending world hunger…it could possibly have many medical uses as well…I’ll save this topic for another post.

We Don’t Have To Work To Get Paid

December 2nd, 2015

I just read the article below that was written by David R. Wheeler for The Atlantic, the name of the article is “What If Everybody Didn’t Have to Work to Get Paid?” and that is what pulled me in. It’s a very good idea and has had success on its test run in Germany with other countries like Finland ready to follow suit.

In the US it will definitely run up against the Buzz Saw of Greed, much like any Free Energy devices have (different topic, same buzz saw). The first tooth in the buzz saw would be those who start shouting things like “entitlement”, “get a job”, “I work hard for my money”. The funny thing is, these are the same people who would gladly take that money even though they may not need it, so it never really hits home with them. Then their excuses for taking the money would be things like: “If those people can have it, why can’t I”, “I work hard for my money”, “I have a job”…those last two didn’t make much sense nor do most of their arguments.

It’s times like this when the thought of religion pops into my head…as in “What religion are these people, I wonder?” Lets say it’s one of those that “follows the Bible”…Aren’t they supposed to Love everyone, turn the other cheek and help the less fortunate and all that? They missed that day in Sunday school I guess…because they were at greed school learning to use religion as a convenience, not an actual moral code to live by.

All their nay saying is for not anyway because the funders of this project are volunteers and eventually, hopefully it will be the government. It won’t happen with the government in the US until the corporate cabal is taken down and completely destroyed. When the cabal is taken down, the country will be anew…so many good things will happen and so many bad will cease to exist.

Read on…

David R. Wheeler May 18, 2015

Scott Santens has been thinking a lot about fish lately. Specifically, he’s been reflecting on the aphorism, “If you give a man a fish, he eats for a day. If you teach a man to fish, he eats for life.” What Santens wants to know is this: “If you build a robot to fish, do all men starve, or do all men eat?”

Santens is 37 years old, and he’s a leader in the basic income movement—a worldwide network of thousands of advocates (26,000 on Reddit alone) who believe that governments should provide every citizen with a monthly stipend big enough to cover life’s basic necessities. The idea of a basic income has been around for decades, and it once drew support from leaders as different as Martin Luther King Jr. and Richard Nixon. But rather than waiting for governments to act, Santens has started crowdfunding his own basic income of $1,000 per month. He’s nearly halfway to his his goal.

Santens, for his part, believes that job growth is no longer keeping pace with automation, and he sees a government-provided income as a viable remedy. “It’s not just a matter of needing basic income in the future; we need it now,” says Santens, who lives in New Orleans. “People don’t see it, but we are already seeing the effects all around us, in the jobs and pay we take, the hours we accept, the extremes inequality is reaching, and in the loss of consumer spending power.”

Many experts believe that, unlike in the 20th century, people in this century will not be able to stay one step ahead of automation through education and the occasional skills upgrade. A recent study from Oxford University warns that 47 percent of all existing jobs are susceptible to automation within the next two decades. Worries about robots replacing human labor are showing up more frequently in the mainstream media, including the front page of The Wall Street Journal. Recent books, such as The Second Machine Age and Who Owns the Future, predict that when it comes to robots and labor, this time is different.

People in other countries, especially in safety-net-friendly Europe, seem more open to the idea of a basic income than people in the U.S. The Swiss are considering a basic income proposal. Most of the candidates in Finland’s upcoming parliamentary elections support the idea. But in the U.S., the issue is still a political non-starter for mainstream politicians, due to lingering suspicions about the fairness and practicality of a basic income, as well as a rejection of the premise that automation is actually erasing white-collar jobs. Hence Santens’ do-it-yourself approach.

“My solution was to turn to crowdfunding, so as to immediately empower myself and others to advocate for the basic incomes of everyone else,” Santens says.

Unlike most crowdfunders, Santens is not asking for seed money for a specific project, like a tech startup, a nonprofit organization, or a feature film. Nor is he asking for money for a specific problem like unpaid medical bills. He’s asking for free money to live his life. Any additional money that he crowdfunds, above $1,000 per month, will be donated to other basic-income activists who are doing the same thing. However, he will keep other money that he earns from working as a freelance writer. He says the same thing would happen with a government-funded basic income: People would keep the additional money they earn from their jobs.

The crowdfunding approach to basic income has shown some promise: A group of more than 19,000 basic-income advocates in Germany have funded 11 people so far with living stipends of 1,000 euros per month, no strings attached. The first few winners, chosen by a lottery, started receiving their basic incomes in September 2014. The eleventh winner was announced May 7.

Jason Burke Murphy, a basic-income activist and philosophy professor at Elms College in Massachusetts, has been following the German project with delight. “This project worked better than I thought it would,” he says. “The numbers of visits and the media response was really impressive.” Indeed, the stories told by the winners are inspiring. For example, one recipient is using his newfound freedom to write his dissertation. Another winner quit his job at a call center to study and become a teacher. Perhaps one anonymous commentator summed it up best: “I did not realize how unfree we all are.”

Santens’ crowdfunding foray has been embraced not only by liberals or progressives who are warm to government benefits but by some libertarians as well, such as Matt Zwolinski, a philosophy professor at the University of San Diego. In his view, a basic income would shrink the bureaucratic nightmare of the current $1 trillion social safety net. He applauds Santens’ effort because it provides proof that basic income can work without government involvement.
“The sad reality is that a lot of the people who will most need a basic income are not likely to generate a lot of sympathy among volunteer donors.”

“A lot of people assume that if social insurance, or mail delivery, or a basic income is a good idea, then it automatically follows that we ought to have the state administer it,” says Zwolinski. “But it doesn’t automatically follow at all. Sometimes—I think a lot of times—important social goals are better realized through voluntary decentralized action than through the kind of coercive centralized control characteristic of the modern state.”

However, other basic-income advocates are skeptical of crowdfunded projects. “If this helps a few activists to get visibility for the concept and spend their time drumming up support, then I think it could be a positive, but likely very marginal, development,” says Martin Ford, a basic-income advocate and the author of The Rise of the Robots—which predicts a rapidly expanding takeover of jobs by automated systems. “The sad reality is that a lot of the people who will most need a basic income are not likely to generate a lot of sympathy among volunteer donors,” Ford says. “You see this already with charitable giving—people will give for families, children, and pets—but not so much for single homeless men.” Ford cautions against what he calls the “libertarian/techno-optimistic fantasy” of a private market solution. “Government, for all its deficiencies, is going to be the only real tool in the toolbox here.”

Those skeptical of basic income might ask: If you give people enough to live on, won’t they stop working? Won’t they get lazy? Evidence from pilot studies by Guy Standing, a professor of development studies at the University of London and a co-founder of the Basic Income Earth Network, points the other way.“When people stop working out of fear, they become more productive,” Standing says.

Karl Widerquist, a leader of the worldwide basic income movement, applauds Santens’ project, but says the goal of the movement is not to create privately financed basic income. “We need a publicly financed basic income for everyone; private charities can’t—and shouldn’t have to—do that,” says Widerquist, a philosophy professor at SFS-Qatar, Georgetown University, and the author of several books and papers about basic income. Widerquist also organized the most recent North American Basic Income Guarantee Congress in New York in March. “The point of a private basic income is to show how well it works, draw attention to the issue, and further the movement for a truly universal basic income,” Widerquist says.

Meanwhile, back in New Orleans, Santens is asking basic-income advocates on Twitter to daydream a little bit and imagine what they would do with their time if they had a basic income. “I would be free to write (now with added dignity),” tweeted one respondent. Another wrote, “Twenties in musicians’ tip jars. Local artists’ work on my walls. Wads of cash to pedi-cab drivers. I would love sharing #mybasicincome.”

As for Santens himself, he will continue to be a freelance writer, but with a new peace of mind. “The only difference between now and then, really, will be my quality of life in being able to afford my most basic needs without worry,” he says. “That’s a big deal … knowing that money for rent and food will always be there at the beginning of each and every month, and that I may just be able to finally climb out of debt and even start saving some day.”

“But as far as pursuing my passions with a basic income,” he adds, “I’m already very fortunate to say that’s exactly what I’m already doing.”

Cleaning Cat Hair

My Cat Likes Being Vacuumed

April 9th, 2011

I was vacuuming cat hair from the floor with a mini-vac and my cat, Underfoot was laying close by and I thought…why not go right to the source. I went up to him and started vacuuming him…much to my surprise, he liked it…he is pretty mellow though and doesn’t get scared that easily.

I think he likes it because everything is about him (in his mind), so when I started “petting” him with the vacuum, he didn’t mind a little noise.

Update 4-28-2020 – Pobrecito Underfoot! My little boy died two months later, he was 15. 🙁

Essiac – Natural Cancer Remedy

Saturday, September 11th, 2010

I found this article about Essaic online in my travels and as a firm believer in natural cures for every disease known to man, whether it be a man made disease or not, I believe the Earth provides everything we need and pharmaceutical companies don’t want people to start realizing this!

This article was very interesting and I think if you’re suffering from cancer, “God” forbid, that this might be worth looking into. The article is about a combination of herbs that make a formula known as Essiac:

Discovered! A cancer-killing miracle from the frozen north…almost lost forever
by: Michele Cagan
It was 1977 and Iona Hale was in the fight of her life

Ted Hale was a strapping truck driver, but what his wife, Iona, was going through had him laid as low as you can imagine. He could not stop thinking about the six words the nurse at the hospital had told Iona.

“You’re not going to live long.”

They echoed in his mind, no matter how he tried to banish them. But Ted refused to accept his wife’s fate. Not when there was an alternative.

And Ted was a man of action.

So, his mind made up, he carefully took out his pistol and tucked it under his belt. He wasn’t taking any chances not when the stakes were this high.

He looked over at Iona the stomach cancer had reduced her to just 75 pounds and Ted Hale walked out the door.

He had been to see Rene Caisse twice before. The first time, she had reluctantly agreed to give him a small bottle of her miracle tonic, Essiac.

Whispered about reverently by cancer survivors, shunned by mainstream doctors

the miracle elixir could only be found if you knew someone who knew someone who knew Rene Caisse.

The effect was incredible. Almost immediately after taking the tonic, Iona had felt better. When her pain pills ran out, she told her husband not to bother picking up more. She wanted more Essiac.

But Rene Caisse was afraid. She had already been brought before government officials for her unconventional approach to treating cancer. She became less and less willing to give out the tonic. The next “patient” could be an agent of the government, ready to send her to jail.

Ted Hale wasn’t in a position to take no for an answer. He’d watched his wife, given only weeks to live, begin to thrive after treatments with Essiac. The cancer seemed to be literally draining from her body.

He had brought the gun in case he had to force the elixir from the aging Rene Caisse.

Thankfully, extreme measures weren’t necessary. Rene relented and supplied him with more. And did it continue to work?

Well, a few years ago, Iona Hale was interviewed for the Canadian newspaper The Globe and Mail. She was 85 years old. Vibrant and energetic, she called her recovery “a miracle.”

It was this remarkable tale of a man’s love for his wife that first introduced me to Essiac. But it turns out that Ted and Iona Hales’ story is just one of the amazing stories surrounding this proven cancer cure.

The Native American cancer cure that was almost lost forever

The story of Essiac begins across a campfire, in the gold rush wilderness of northern Canada. In the early 1890s, Mrs. A (as Rene Caisse later came to call her) had come from England to join her prospector husband. You could walk for miles without meeting another human being. The stillness was, at times, unnerving.

Mrs. A had been in her new home, far from the conveniences of the changing world, for ten years when she began to feel soreness in her right breast. Over time, it became painful enough that she and her husband talked of leaving camp for the hospital in Toronto.

As they prepared for the journey, an old Ojibway Indian, a familiar face around the camp, appeared quietly. Without ceremony, he told Mrs. A he knew her condition was cancer. And then he said he could cure her.

For a moment, at least, she believed him. But then doubt crept in and they left for the busy streets of Toronto, where his words were soon forgotten.

There, doctors told Mrs. A the breast would have to be removed immediately. She thought of her friend who had died from breast surgery. Of others who had gone under the knife only to have the cancer return.

And then the woman did something that would change the course of alternative cancer therapy forever.

She refused the surgery and returned to the camp, ready to put her life in the hands of the Ojibway man.

He told her of four herbs, growing wild in the area, that would cure her. He carefully measured out portions, telling her how much to brew and for how long, teaching her so that she could repeat it without thinking about it. She was to drink the brew daily. He said it would put her body back into balance with the Great Spirit.

Twenty years later, she told her tale to Rene Caisse, then head nurse at the Sisters of Providence Hospital in Ontario. Another 55 years would pass before Ted Hale would appear at Rene Caisse’s door, demanding that same formula for his dying wife.

However, the story almost ended much earlier For a year, the notes on the concoction that had saved Mrs. A’s life sat untouched in Rene’s desk at the hospital. Life went on as usual until she went to visit an old friend, a well-respected doctor.

As they walked through his garden, the doctor stopped at a particular plant, lifting a leaf with his cane. If people would only take that herb, he told Rene, “there would be little cancer in the world.” With a shock, Caisse recognized it as one of the herbs in the formula relayed to her by Mrs. A. And at that moment, she decided that, if she were ever diagnosed with cancer, she would use her body as testing ground for the formula.

Her chance to test the brew came even sooner than expected. A beloved aunt was diagnosed with stomach cancer and given six months to live. Conventional medicine was helpless to relieve her suffering.

With nothing to lose, the doctor agreed to allow Rene to try the herbal medicine. I’m sure you can guess the end of that story: Rene Caisse’s aunt lived 21 more years.

More patients came to Nurse Caisse. The story was always the same

Miraculous and swift recoveries, cancer expelled from the body like waste

Lives that were only supposed to go on for weeks or even just days stretched into extra years. Rene soon became known as Canada’s Cancer Nurse, the person to go to when all hope was lost. She did not charge for treatment, accepting small donations only when offered.

Patients who had to be carried into her clinic for their first treatment were able to walk in on their own by the fifth or sixth visit. Her own mother, stricken with liver cancer, lived another 18 years after Essiac wiped the cancer from her body.

As patients of Rene Caisse started talking about the miracle of Essiac (Caisse gave the brew her name, only spelled backwards), she knew she must protect the ancient Indian formula. She would keep it a secret, safeguarding it from those who would use it for financial gain.

Word continued to spread. Doctors who doubted her work were welcomed into the clinic to observe, and left convinced.

However, the tales of Essiac attracted a different kind of attention, too. Despite a petition signed by 8 well-respected physicians, the Department of Health and Welfare in Ottawa sent two doctors to arrest her, with the charge of practicing medicine without a license.

The movement to silence her work had only just begun. Before Caisse’s death in 1978, she would be threatened with heavy fines and imprisonment, harassed, and brought before a specially created Cancer Commission. And what was her crimeproviding hope where there once was none?

Rallying to support their beloved Nurse Caisse, 387 of her patients showed up at the hearing by the Commission to testify on her behalf. Only 49 were called to testify, and the Commission dismissed them allyes, all 49 peopleon grounds that their testimonies were somehow invalid.

The pressure got to be too much. Fearing imprisonment, Caisse was deeply fatigued. She closed the clinic in 1942, and people like Ted Hale were forced to seek her out, desperate for the cure that had extended so many lives.

Four common herbs combine to form a super cancer killer

Throughout her life, Rene Caisse maintained that Essiac should be tested in clinical trials. She wanted to prove to the world that her faith in the formula was well founded.

Rene herself conducted two separate trials on mice given terminal cancer, keeping the first set alive for fifty-two days, longer than anyone else had been able to. The second set? 72 days. But she knew more was needed.

Every time a doctor showed interest, however, it was to be at the expense of her clinic. “Close your clinic, and come to the lab,” she heard time and again. But she refused to turn her back on the people who needed her most. How could she?

Her extreme fear of what would be done with her formula were it to fall into the wrong hands kept Rene Caisse from sharing it. She wanted it to belong to mankind as a whole. Of course, because Rene kept it a closely guarded secret, it could reach only those who knew about her and could make the journey to her home.

Her belief that the cancer industry is big business, not a charity, drove her to zealously protect the formula for most of her life. She maintained that she would be willing to turn over the formula if she were assured that it would be used to help ease the suffering of humanity, and that it would not be shelved to keep the way open for conventional treatment methods.

In October of 1977, she found a company that would fulfill the promise she demanded. The Resperin Corporation of Toronto bought the Essiac formula for just one dollar. The witness to the signing of the contract was none other than JFK’s personal physician, Dr. Charles Brusch, who had been a longtime supporter of Nurse Caisse’s work with Essiac.

For the first time, the miracle formula was revealed. Essiac is made of four herbs: Burdock Root, Sheep Sorrel, Slippery Elm, and Indian Rhubarb. All plants that could be found, as Caisse was fond of saying, at a roadside in spring.

In 1966, Hungarian researchers discovered anti-tumor activity in Burdock Root.1 It contains the oil inulin, which attaches to white blood cells and enhances their function. It also contains benzaldehyde, which has significant anti-cancer effects in humans. Rounding out the power of Burdock Root are vitamin A and selenium.

A staple of folk medicine, Sheep Sorrel was used in cancer treatment as early as the 1740?s. It is rich in vitamins and minerals, and contains chlorophyll, which helps to carry oxygen to the cells of the body. As a folk remedy, it has been used to relieve bruises and burns.

The third component of Essiac, Slippery Elm, has also shown anti-tumor activity and is an anti-inflammatory for the digestive system. It also lubricates bones and joints, and contains fatty acids. Fatty acids similar to those in Slippery Elm have been shown to boost the immune system in studies on mice.2

Finally, Indian Rhubarb Root, rich in iron, helps to purge the liver and the rest of the body of wastes. It, like Sheep Sorrel, contains aloe emodin, which have been shown to inhibit tumors in animal tests.3-4

However, few trials have been carried out on Essiac as a whole. Dr. Brusch conducted a few experiments at his medical center near Boston. One study on mice injected with human cancer cells showed that Essiac killed tumors at a higher rate than seen in control mice.5

Dr. Brusch even successfully used Essiac in his own battle with bowel cancer. He also wrote in a notarized letter that Essiac “reduces pain and causes a recession in [tumor] growth. Patients gained weight and showed a great improvement in their general healthIn some cases, if the tumor didn’t disappear, it could be surgically removed after Essiac with less risk of metastasis.”

In 1982, Resperin’s tests of the formula were shut down by the Canadian government, with claims that the testing procedures were flawed. One man involved in the trials, Ed Zalesky, aged 63, had been diagnosed with cancer of the small intestine. He was given two years to live if he gave in to dangerous radiation treatments.

He refused, was treated with Essiac, and in 1995 was still running the Canadian Museum of Flight seven days a week. Mr. Zalesky openly wondered why Essiac, which had saved his life, couldn’t be given a fair trial.

A more recently published trial on Essiac was conducted in 2004. This in vitro test of prostate cancer cells showed that at low doses Essiac may be able to inhibit tumor cell growth while enhancing immune response.6

In 2006, two studies, both conducted in Toronto, were presented at a meeting of Naturopathic Physicians. The first showed increased cytotoxicity toward prostate cancer cells as well as significant antioxidant properties.7 The second, in which Essiac was administered to rats, demonstrated Essiac’s positive effects on gastric protection.8

Despite a lack of conclusive evidence, it is hard to ignore the vast body of stories and testimonials claiming Essiac has saved lives.

So powerful it literally flushes cancer out of your body

On my desk is a stack, almost an inch thick, of letters and e-mails, all about how Essiac has changed lives. These stories are testament to the fact that, despite a lack of conclusive clinical evidence about the effects of Essiac, there is indeed something to the formula.

Consider the story told to me by HSI Panelist Dr. Allan Spreen. A father brought his 13-year-old son in to see Dr. Spreen because the boy had developed a firm, ugly mass on his knee.

Dr. Spreen urged the father to have it diagnosed, and when he did, it came back as cancer so bad that it would require experimental chemotherapy. The doctors told him he had no choice, that he had to go through this dangerous treatment, and that he would most likely lose the leg above the knee anyway.

And what do you think the father did?

Refused, of course. And then came the final blow. He found out he would be turned in for child abuse (yes, child abuse) for refusing medical “standard-of-care.” Experimental chemotherapy as standard care? That’s a good one.

So this man did what any other father would do when the life of his child is at stake. He fought for his child’s life by fleeing to Canada in the middle of the night. And that was the last Dr. Spreen thought he’d hear from the family.

Then, about three years later, a lanky teenager walked into his office. It was that same boy, no lump on his knee, both legs working just fine. The father followed behind, saying they couldn’t stay, because there was still an outstanding warrant for his arrest.

But he had wanted Dr. Spreen to see how Essiac had cured his son.

There are countless stories just like this one.

As I’m writing this to you, I’m looking at a letter with a photo attached. In the center of the photo is a Canadian penny. Surrounding the penny are black, squishy-looking masses, some half the size of the penny, some twice its size.

Tumors and pieces of cancerous tissue, passed by then 81-year-old Richard Schmidt.

He had been diagnosed with bladder cancer in 1985. In 1992, after ten surgeries related to the cancer, his wife received a call from the hospital. Richard was on life support in intensive care, in almost hopeless condition. Three weeks later, he was home, hardly able to walk, his doctor hinting he wouldn’t make it through another operation.

That’s when they spoke to a naturopathic doctor, who recommended Essiac. Richard’s wife, expecting the tonic would simply give him more strength, was shocked when those black chunks of tumor started passing with his urine. So great was her astonishment that she actually preserved the tumors in formaldehyde.

Soon, doctors could find no trace of the cancer in Richard’s body

He lived five more happy years, passing away peacefully in his sleep at the age of 86.

In 1994, Alwyn Hodgkinson, the past president of the West Coast Prostate Awareness Society, was told that a cobalt radiation treatment for his Stage D1 (terminal) prostate cancer might give him 10 months to a year of life after the treatment. Already in terrible pain and with a PSA of 13.9, he of course didn’t see this as good news.

His wife’s aunt showed up one day with a bottle of Essiac, and said he needed to “take it, or else.” He complied, and about a month later his PSA had already dropped to 1.4. His doctors said this was normal after radiation treatment, and he would need to schedule follow-up treatments every six months.

Only, he hadn’t yet had the treatment

Al gave in to his doctors and had the radiation treatment, but returned home in severe pain. Eventually, he looked at his counter full of prescription medications, decided that the side effects weren’t worth it, and flushed the lot of them down the toilet, deciding the only thing he would take from that point on would be Essiac.

Eleven years after his initial diagnosis, he wrote a letter to Essiac Canada International, telling them the cancer was completely clear and he was in the best health of his life. At a recent check-up with an oncologist, he was asked if he was on any “herbal schemes.” “Yes,” he said. “Essiac.”

The oncologist replied, “Don’t stop.”

Beware of buying imitation Essiac

Rene Caisse maintained throughout her life that it is not just the individual herbs that make Essiac so powerful; it is the carefully blended combination-each herb in a specific amount-that creates the real power in the potion. She believed the combination of herbs set up resistance in the body, cutting off the substances that feed malignant cells.

In beginning my research on Essiac, I was astounded at how many websites sell many different products–all with different labels, all called Essiac (or sometimes “essiac”). I enlisted the help of Dr. Spreen, who echoed the concerns that were already playing in my mind. He said care is needed in finding out who is the real deal, and which companies are just scamming people for a quick buck.

Many of the companies selling their version of Essiac claim to have “the” formula. They list the herbs that are, in fact, in Caisse’s original-but without the exact proportions she emphasized were so important, who knows if these blends actually fight cancer?

I found out that Resperin, the company that received the formula from Rene Caisse for one dollar, has since gone out of business, but not before transferring the rights to the Essiac formula to Essiac Canada International. They offer both the original powdered combination of herbs, as well as a more convenient liquid version.

Essiac can safely be taken in conjunction with other cancer treatments, and can be taken every day. In addition to being used for cancer treatment, Essiac can be used preventatively to keep your immune system healthy.

While Essiac Canada International does sell direct to consumers, I found the best price for their products to be at the online store VitaminShoppe. Ordering information can be found, as always, in the Member Source Directory below.

An even easier way to include your favorite powerhouse food in your diet

Ever since I received my first jar of Salba in the mail, I’ve been hooked. I add it to at least one meal a day-eggs, oatmeal, soups and stews-the only thing that’s held me back from adding it to everything is that it’s sort of a pain to grind.

Well, NorthStar Nutritionals has introduced a more convenient way to include your favorite super food in your diet. Salba Ground has all the same omega-3s, protein, fiber, and antioxidants of Salba seed. And it cuts out the need for that coffee grinder.

In case you missed it, we covered Salba in the March 2007 issue of the Members Alert. You can find it by logging on to www.hsionline.com and searching “Salba” in the archives.

MSD

Essiac, Essiac Canada International, www.vitaminshoppe.com. One 10.5 oz bottle is US$25.07. The Vitamin Shoppe offers a 30-day return policy. Details are on their website.

Salba Ground. NorthStar Nutritionals. Ph (888)856-1489 or (915)855-5415. A 9.5 ounce bottle (about 33 servings) is $29.95 plus $6.95 shipping and handling. HSI members get an exclusive 90-day extended guarantee. Ask for code MGROUND when ordering. www.northstarnutritionals.com.

References

1 Dombradi, C.A. and Foldeak, S. Screening report on the antitumor activity of purified Arctium lappa extracts. Tumori. 1966;52:173-6.
2 Ottenweller, J, et al. Inhibition of prostate cancer-cell proliferation by Essiac. J Altern Complement Med. 2004 Aug;10(4):687-91.
3 Kupchan, S.M. and Karim, A. Tumor inhibitors: 114. Aloe emodin: antileukemic principle isolated from Rhamnus frangula L. Lloydia 1977;39(4):223-4.
4 Masuda T. and Ueno, Y. Microsomal transformation of emodin into a direct mutagen. Mutat Res. 1984;125:135-44.
5 Russfield, A.B. Pathology report. Project no C-114 [Essiac experiments]. Cambridge (MA): Biotech Research Consultants; 1959.
6 Wong, C.K. et al. Immunomodulatory and anti-tumor polysaccharides from medicinal plants. J Int Med Res. 1994;22:299-312.
7 Kennedy, D.A. et al. In vitro analysis of herbal compound Essiac. Toronto. 2006.
8 Blair, J.N. et al. An in vivo analysis of the herbal compound Essiac. Toronto. 2006.