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Forecasted Mass Growth Curve increasing for Industrial Hemp and Medical … – Stocks.com | GanjaNews.Org

PR Web

Vegas, NV (PRWEB) October 12, 2012

Bruce Perlowin, Boss of Hemp, Corporation. (OTC: HEMP) and industrial hemp veteran, whose company brought the final pre-election growth curve in 2009 having a 480% increase (http://world wide web.hemp.com), gave insight on as he thought the spike this month will begin and why.

Based on Bruce Perlowin, “Two days prior to the election happens when all of the action begins. We’ve medicinal marijuana around the ballot in Arkansas, Missouri, Pennsylvania, Illinois, New You are able to, Massachusetts, and Ohio. You’ve industrial hemp around the ballot in Colorado, Nh, Nj and Boise State Broncos. Then they are attempting to legalize the leisure utilization of marijuana in Colorado, Washington and Or. The activist organizations (Marijuana Policy Project, Police Force Against Prohibition, People in america for Safe Access, NORML, Students for Sensible Drug Policy and lots of other groups) running the campaigning for legalisation possess a particular strategy. Foreseeable and very effective, none-the-less. They hold back until 2 days prior to the election after which begin a massive media campaign… a full-scale blitz to teach people to allow them to election yes. This does not permit the opposition time for you to respond using their negative and false propaganda. The opposition could possibly be the prison guard union that may lose 800,000 criminals annually who’re imprisoned for marijuana. Consequently, the huge media campaigning makes people outdoors our industry conscious of this massive industry that’s growing extremely. Now you must everybody searching for investment possibilities within an industry that’s soaring.”

Wouldso would the legalisation of marijuana help the United states citizens and also the economy? Industry experts believe you will see a development of a brand new and highly lucrative farming industry, elevated trade possibilities, a rise in the gross national product (GNP), enhanced environment conditions, new tax assets, and reduced costs regarding enforcement of current laws and regulations. With all of eyes around the industrial hemp and medicinal marijuana industry, combined with the advantages of legalisation, savvy traders are starting to take a position heavily.

Hemp, Corporation.’s (OTC: HEMP) Boss, Bruce Perlowin, has gathered over twenty-2 million shares of stock in Rapid Fire Marketing, Corporation. 400 1000 in Cannabis Science, Corporation. 2 million in Grow Existence, Corporation. and, twenty-a million shares in Medicinal Marijuana, Corporation. Despite the fact that his favorite is their own (Hemp, Corporation. (OTC: HEMP)) he’s began smartly trading in other marijuana industry stocks. “I understand these stocks are likely to feel the roof,” states Perlowin.

As the average non-investor might not have an idea, market awareness all around the industrial hemp and medicinal marijuana industries is informative and could be very persuasive. When all of the pre-election media starts in serious, entrepreneurs and business owners of all types would like to get in to the industry. Some consider opening shops, growing medicinal marijuana, or getting compensated good wages as clippers. Everybody, from property traders with other hard-hit industries from the economy, begins sleuthing the.

Although some are courageous enough to spread out shops and grow, most often be cautious and purchase marijuana stocks. To put it simply, it’s a mature and aged industry reality within the American marketplace. The huge publicity won’t attract the typical American investor, it will likewise attract newbie traders (out of your auto auto technician employees for your stay-at-home moms) and foreign interests. “Everyone wants in on ‘the next large thing’. Think about it as being another us dot.com explosion with no crash not less than another decade or two, when,Inch states Perlowin.

He adds, “The wise investor will begin accumulating now before that explosion starts.” Perlowin’s investment strategy appears to become already paying off. The 2 million shares he bought of Grow Existence, Corporation. the very first 10 days in October elevated 39.9% on October 11, 2012 (which was the date the pre-election spike began 2 yrs ago when Prop 19 in California was around the ballot). That’s on the $10,000 make money from only one stock. Other experts accept Perlowin it’s only the beginning of the particular company’s pre-election spike.

Overall, Perlowin and industry experts alike are betting the development spurt will begin between October 16 and October 23, 2012 and rising… particularly if legislation passes. Forging a path within the industrial hemp industry, while educating customers around the many uses of commercial hemp, Hemp, Corporation. (OTC: HEMP) (http://world wide web.hemp.com), can also be creating hemp-based items shown to boost the body’s all around health and gratifaction. The organization boasts HerbaGenix A GROCER inside a Paris suburb continues to be billed with “incitement to make use of drugs” for selling a hemp beer known as “Cannabia”.

Even though the bottles contained only hemp – types of cannabis with really low amounts of active component THC grown for fibre and seed products – labels were considered provocative because, aside from the title, additionally they demonstrated a cannabis leaf coupled with a piece labelled “scratch and smile” which emits a cannabis resin smell.

Police carrying out a routine check from the premises grabbed 20 bottles and billed the dog owner using the “incitement” offence which could carry as much as five years’ prison along with a €75,000 fine.

The incident was at Le Rancy, an eastern suburb of Paris – among the rare well-off districts of Seine-Saint-Denis, a generally disadvantaged area regarded as a hub for drug trafficking.

The manufacturers of Cannabia really are a German firm, Dupetit Natural Items, which states it’s permission to market it within the EU.

The EU recognises numerous hemp types – with low THC – for uses including animal bedding and insulation or (the seed products) for making an edible oil. France is Europe’s biggest producer.

The United States however restrictions the growing of a myriad of cannabis, including hemp.

Photo: world wide web.dupetit.p Read more: http://www.ganjanews.org/police-seize-cannabis-beer-the-connexion.html#ixzz299c7jLu7 Forecasted Mass Growth Curve increasing for Industrial Hemp and Medical … – Stocks.com | GanjaNews.Org.

Growing marijuana is still by far the most-efficient way to produce THC

Amazing Chemicals Invented by Nature, Rebuilt in Lab

By Aaron Rowe
01.31.09
For some ailments the treatment of choice is medicinal marijuana. But its active ingredient, tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), is hard to make. Many researchers have made the psychoactive substance, but their brews were often contaminated with chemicals that are slightly different from THC and don't have the same properties. Barry Trost and Kalindi Dogra at Stanford University were able to avoid that problem and other pitfalls in building the chemical by using a molybdenum catalyst. They eventually produced the substance successfully. Their research, funded by Merck and the National Institutes of Health, demonstrated the effectiveness of their catalyst, but growing marijuana is still by far the most-efficient way to produce THC!!! source: http://www.wired.com/science/discoveries/multimedia/2009/01/gallery_nature_chemicals?slide=4&slideView=5

Dude, it's your junk! Pot linked to testicular cancer

 
By Bill Briggs
NBC News
updated 9/10/2012 8:28:10 AM ET
Some blunt advice for the young, male fans of marijuana: You may want to kill that joint and clutch your crotch -- self-check style, that is.
Scientists at the University of Southern California say they've detected a link between recreational marijuana use and a greater chance among males in their early teens through their mid-30s of contracting a particularly dangerous form of testicular cancer --non-seminoma tumors, according to a small study published today online in CANCER, a peer-reviewed journal of the American Cancer Society. "The group that is at risk for developing these tumors is overwhelmingly young men. They should be looking and paying attention to changes in their testicles anyway," said Victoria Cortessis, one of the study's authors and an assistant professor of preventive medicine at the Keck School of Medicine of USC in Los Angeles. Further, the fellas' weed intake "might be something they would want to mention to their usual health-care provider." Cortessis and her colleagues analyzed the self-reported recreational drug use of 163 young men who had been diagnosed with testicular cancer. Among those patients who acknowledged indulging in pot, just over half (51 percent) told medical researchers they puffed or ingested cannabis more than once per week. The team then compared the illegal drug histories of those 163 afflicted men with the lifestyle habits of 292 healthy men of the same age and ethnicity. Inside the data, they saw that men who had used marijuana recreationally were twice as likely to developmixed-germ-cell tumors, including the deadlier non-seminona tumors. (The 292 unaffected men were "sampled" from the same neighborhoods in which the ill men had lived at the time of their diagnoses, Cortessis said.) "These tumors usually occur in younger men and carry a somewhat worse prognosis" than other types of testicular cancer, the study reported. Moreover, the USC findings confirmed two previous reports in CANCER of an apparent link between marijuana use and cancer of the testicles, the researchers noted.
Still, the rate of such cancers occurring in men is relatively low: There is a lifetime risk of slightly more than 1 percent, Cortessis said. "The truth is, the vast majority of men who develop testicular germ-cell tumors survive them. There's still a small proportion that don't. Those guys tend to have non-seminonas, unfortunately," Cortessis said. "But also, non-seminomas require more extensive treatment, including radiation and chemotherapy. "We're not concerned only with preventing non-seminomas so that the malignancy doesn't harm the man, but we're also concerned about the later health effects for men that may be related to the more-aggressive therapy" (such as chemo), she added. So, why would weed wield such woes for some cojones in some dudes? The USC scientists are unsure exactly what internal glitches marijuana may trigger that could cause cancer. But they speculate that the process may begin in the body's endocannabinoid system, which is the cellular network that responds to the active ingredient in marijuana. That same system has been shown to be vital in the formation of sperm. The study was was funded by the National Cancer Institute. The researchers also invested a few words of their report to speak directly to the young men living in the 17 states where medicinal marijuana is legal, stating: "The findings suggest that the potential cancer-causing effects of marijuana on testicular cells should be considered not only in personal decisions regarding recreational drug use, but also when marijuana and its derivatives are used for therapeutic purposes." At medical marijuana dispensaries in Washington state and California, that stance not surprisingly drew swift retorts. At the Harborside Health Center in Oakland, the proprietors read the USC study on Friday afternoon, then promptly emailed to NBC News a news link to a recent study in Madrid in which cannabis was found to be a cancer fighter. "The LA study stands in contrast to several recent studies which have found that cannabis actually has cancer fighting properties," said Steve DeAngelo, co-founder of Harborside.  "The LA study is reporting a correlation, as opposed to a causal connection between cannabis use and the cancers. It is a well-established scientific principle that correlation does not equal causality. "I would also note that the sample size is quite small," DeAngelo added, "and the size of the control group is double that of the cannabis users." Two states to the north, at Seattle's Northwest Patient Resource Center, chief executive John Davis argued that any person taking therapeutic drugs should know that all of those otherwise beneficial substances carry some health hazards. "And with a lot of them," Davis said, "the risk is death. "If you're using (marijuana) medicinally, you should understand the risks and the benefits, just like any other therapy," Davis added. "Marijuana, in general, is one of the safest therapeutically active substances on Earth. Can it have some side effects? Yeah. But compared to pharmaceutical drugs, those side effects are much less."
 

Is marijuana a potential cure for cancer?

  By  | September 21, 2012, 4:39 AM PDT   An extraordinary discovery may someday give the controversial notion of “medical marijuana” a potent new meaning. Turns out that the recreationally popular cannabis plant contains compounds that could stop and even reverse the growth of various aggressive forms of cancer. The finding, initially reported in 2007, may lead to the development of an effective treatment without toxic side effects. Since the late 80’s, researchers have investigated the possibility that marijuana may possess anti-tumor properties. It began after a biologist in Madrid noticed that exposing brain cancer cells to tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the chemical responsible for that sensation of being “high,” caused them to die. Follow-up studies conducted at Harvard University confirmed that injections of THC and other compounds known as “cannabinoids” lead to a positive outcome, both slowing down tumor growth by killing cancer cells while leaving healthy cells virtually unscathed. Now a pair of scientists at California Pacific Medical Center in San Francisco are hoping to take what has been years of promising research a step further. Dr. Pierre Desprez in collaboration with his research partner Sean McAllister found that the compounds halted the spread of cancer cells by disabling ID-1, a gene shown to be a mechanism for the kind of rapid metastasis common in aggressive types of cancer such as lung and brain cancer. After a series of lab tests using a non-psychoactive chemical extract called Cannabidiol to treat malignant human breast cells in mice, the researchers hope to develop a pill that can demonstrate efficacy in human clinical trials. It took us about 20 years of research to figure this out, but we are very excited,” Desprez, told the Huffington Post. “We want to get started with trials as soon as possible.” The researchers hope to develop a safe drug that, at the very least, can be integrated into a patient’s treatment program and help to lessen the toxic effects of conventional therapies such as chemotherapy. Another advantage is that as a non-psychoactive chemical, CBD wont produce any mind-altering effects and, in case you’re wondering, it won’t leave the door open for those who want to inhale it. “We used injections in the animal testing and are also testing pills,”  Desprez  said. “But you could never get enough Cannabidiol for it to be effective just from smoking.”  

LGBT History Month

October Is LGBT History Month!

Love, Understanding, Peace and Beautiful Life

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Icon Search

Search the entire LGBT History Month database of 186 Icons —from 2006 to 2011—by Icon name or by more than 200 tags including Academy Award, Athlete, African-American,  Author, Composer,  Entrepreneur, Germany, Lesbian, Politics, Transgender and Washington, D.C. Icon Search

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LGBT History Month celebrates the achievements of 31 lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender Icons. Each day in October, a new LGBT Icon is featured with a video, bio, bibliography, downloadable images and other resources. http://www.youtube.com/user/equalityforum soure: http://lgbthistorymonth.com/

Whoops-a-daisy: 'Significant' outdoor bust in Lethbridge history wasn't weed

 

Michael Platt

Yesterday at 8:55 PM

Which is which: Daisy and cannabis. Pick below the story to find out. (Left photo: www.123rf.com/Right: File)
Can you tell the difference? Find out below the story. — It’s blooming embarrassing, is what it is. The best part: police still won’t admit the plants they seized in what was supposedly the biggest outdoor marijuana bust in Lethbridge history are plain old flowers — daisies, to be precise. All police will concede at this point is the 1,624 plants torn from a suburban Lethbridge garden on July 30 isn’t marijuana, as first claimed after a phalanx of police marched in and starting plucking. “This is a significant bust, given the size of this operation,” is how a senior officer put it at the time, while proudly displaying garbage bags full of the dastardly daises. That same officer, Staff Sergeant Wes Houston, now admits the plant haul was a mistake. “In any investigation, police count public safety as our top priority — our decision to seize the plants was made with the best information we had at the time,” said Houston, leader of CFSEU-Lethbridge. Police were certainly convinced they had a huge haul of pot — and this was not the opinion of some lone rookie, frisky at the prospect of a big drug raid. This was the judgment of veteran officers from the Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit of the Alberta Law Enforcement Response Team — supposedly the best drug squad this province has to offer. So many badges, and apparently, so little clue — at least when it comes to the difference between daisies and dope. It’d be pure comedy if not for the damage the dubious raid may have caused. There’s the garden. These plants, called Montauk daisies, have been growing in Ryan Thomas Rockman’s yard for the past decade, and the once lush yard, tended by the avid gardener, is now trashed. And speaking of trashed, there’s the 41-year-old grandfather’s reputation. Rockman freely admits smoking pot to alleviate back pain, and says he’s applied to the federal government for a medicinal marijuana licence. But there’s a vast gap between possessing marijuana for personal use and growing huge crops of the stuff for the sake of trafficking. Rockman is still facing four charges connected to 1.5 pounds of marijuana and 6.3 grams of resin allegedly found in his home, but that’s a small-time bust by any law enforcement definition. It was the 1,624 plants that got cops excited, and it’s the 1,624 plants that made Rockman sound like a big league dealer. “They muddied my name pretty good,” Rockman told reporters shortly after the big bust. “The whole situation makes me want to hang my head and cry.” It’s especially sad when Rockman kept telling police that the plants they’d torn from his yard were daises — this wasn’t some ruse that caught police off guard. At first glance, and certainly to an untrained eye, the daisies do look a little like weed. Tamara Cartwright-Poulits, director of the Southern Alberta Cannabis Club, knows Rockman, and at one point, she had the very same daises growing in her yard. “To be fair, they do look very similar. You have to look close to see the difference,” said Cartwright-Poulits. She lists a number of obvious clues — the number and shape of the leaves being the most obvious — but she says it’s one thing for an average person to be fooled, another for a seasoned drug cop. “This just shows they are totally uneducated about marijuana, and when you’re dealing with law enforcement officers, that’s unacceptable,” said Cartwright-Poulits. “To me, this looks like they were scrambling for the big bust, hoping for a big headline.” She’s harsh, as you’d expect from someone dedicated to making marijuana legal. But her criticism about police being easily duped by a common garden plant has the sting of truth — and if the Alberta Law Enforcement Response Team isn’t asking tough questions, they should be. A major drug trafficker growing his crop outdoors in a backyard? That alone should have raised red flags — and when the target of the bust tells you the plants are daisies, it’s worth checking with a horticulturist before putting out a province-wide press release. It’s a funny story, and one that’s bound to make the rounds as an example of sloppy police work — but long-term damage to the reputation of Alberta’s crack drug squad is no laughing matter. Instead of catching criminals red-handed, this case has police red faced. Whoops-a-daisy, indeed. michael.platt@sunmedia.ca  

Sex, Cannabis & the Air we breath are all Natural

nat·u·ral/ˈnaCHərəl/

Adjective:
Existing in or caused by nature; not made or caused by humankind.
  I.E. Air, Water, Fired, Earth, Cannabis, Hair, Hyper pigmentation, Homosexuality, Emotions, Misunderstanding, Miscommunication, Communication, Love, Fear, Anxiety, Sex, Arousal, Flatulence, Body Odor, Flowers

nat·u·ral law

Noun:
  1. A body of unchanging moral principles regarded as a basis for all human conduct.
  2. An observable law relating to natural phenomena.

Shattered Illusions: Ten Things about the Natural World You Thought You Knew (But Didn't)

 
Monday, May 04, 2009 by Mike Adams, the Health Ranger Editor of NaturalNews.com (See all articles...)
Learn more: http://www.naturalnews.com/026197_natural_Wikipedia_MIT.html#ixzz27dFjgIA2 (NaturalNews) People tend to think that the things they believe are true. And even when they're terribly wrong, they still believe their fictions as if they were facts. It's a healthy exercise to have your false beliefs challenged by reality, so today I'm doing my best to shatter ten false beliefs most people hold about the natural world -- food, animals, nature and so on. Read the list below and see how many you used to believe.

#1) Quaker Oats was started by Quakers

Ummm, not really. In fact, the company has nothing to do with Quakers. It was started in Pennsylvania in 1901 when there were lots of Quakers around, mostly due to the fact that Quakers were known as being honest. But Quaker Oats isn't exactly honest. Today, it's actually owned by PepsiCo, and in the 1950s, Quaker Oats, Harvard University and MIT researchers conducted experiments on human children using radioactive elements to trace the flow of nutrients through their bodies. The children were invited to be part of a "special science club," but they weren't told they were being fed Quaker Oats laced with radioactive substances. Side effects of radioactive exposure include skin cell mutations and skin cancer. When parents found out about the experiments, they sued, and Quaker Oats was eventually forced to pay out $1.85 million, but the case wasn't settled until decades later -- 1997, actually. It's all detailed in the book The State Boy's Rebellion by Michael D'Antonio. (http://www.amazon.com/State-Boys-Rebellion-Michael-Dantonio/dp/074324...) Sources: MIT news: http://tech.mit.edu/V117/N65/bfernald.65n.html (Note how arrogant this MIT news story is, implying it was okay to experiment on the children because the levels of radioactivity were so low.) Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quaker_Oats

#2) Most of the Earth's oxygen is produced by the Amazon rainforest

Nope. Most of the Earth's oxygen is actually produced by marine algae, which generate more oxygen than all the trees and land plants in the world. Called cyanobacteria, algae release oxygen as a byproduct of photosynthesis (the solar-powered process by which they produce energy). Spirulina is an oxygen-producing alga that also produces food at the same time (70 percent protein, with anti-cancer nutrients to boot).

#3) The Great Wall of China is the largest man-made structure on Earth

Not even close. The distinction of being the largest man-made structure on Earth belongs to Fresh Kills, the Statin Island, New York landfill site. It's 4.6 square miles in size, and so much garbage was dumped there that at its peak, the dump was 80 feet higher than the Statue of Liberty. Fresh Kills was closed in 2001, flattened and turned into a wildlife refuge. Let's hope the wildlife doesn't dig too deep there. Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fresh_Kills_Landfill

#4) Seventy-five percent of the Earth is made of water

Far from it. In fact, on the basis of pure mass, only about half of one percent of planet Earth is made of water. The oceans occupy only a thin layer of water that sloshes around the upper crust of the planet. The vast majority of the Earth is made of other elements (99.5%), with about one-third of it being iron. From space, the Earth looks like it's made mostly of water, and it's true that the surface area of the Earth has more water than land, but that's not what the planet is made of internally. Source: http://www.universetoday.com/guide-to-space/earth/what-is-the-earth-m...

#5) Blue whales are the largest living things on Earth

Not even close. The largest living organism on Earth actually covers 2,200 acres and is nearly 3,000 years old. And yes, it's a single entity. What is it? A mushroom. It's in the Malheur National Forest in Oregon. Most of the mushroom mass is located underground. For further reading, check out the fascinating book: Mycelium Running. Source: http://www.extremescience.com/biggestlivingthing.htm

#6) Camels originated in the deserts of the Middle East

Nope. Camels came from North America, where they evolved twenty million years ago. They became extinct in North America during the last Ice Age, but continued to thrive elsewhere. As stated on the source page (below): ...the origin of camels can be traced to the Protylopus, an animal that occupied the North American continent during the Eocene period. That the Camelidae eventually disappeared from the mother continent is part of the enigma surrounding the extinction of North American Pleistocene mammals. However, by this time Camelidae had already migrated across the Bering Straits to Asia during the late Pliocene or early Glacial epochs. Source: http://www.ilri.org/InfoServ/Webpub/Fulldocs/Monono5/Origins.htm

#7) Light always travels at a constant speed

This high school science myth persists, but it's not true. Light travels at different speeds depending on what it's traveling through. Light slows down when it hits water, for example, or even glass (which is why prisms work). When shone through a diamond, light slows to about half its normal speed. In 2000, a Harvard University team of researchers were able to slow light to a transmission speed of zero by shining it into a Bose-Einstein condensate made from rubidium. Source: http://www.chemistrydaily.com/chemistry/Bose-Einstein_Condensate

#8) Human beings have only five senses

The right answer? NINE (or more). In addition to touch, taste, smell, vision and olfactory senses, humans also have proprioception (body awareness), nociception (perception of pain), equilibrioception (sense of balance) and thermoception (sense of heat). And that doesn't even count the typical "sixth sense" category such as intuition, precognition and other psychic sense. Nor does it consider hunger, thirst, empathy or the sense of electricity running through your skin (like when you touch a live electrical outlet). In truth, there are far more than five senses, and the actual number depends on who you ask. Source: http://health.howstuffworks.com/question242.htm

#9) Ostriches bury their heads in the sand when danger approaches

Naw, that would be stupid. Ostriches run away from danger like everybody else. If they buried their heads in the sand, they would suffocate and die. Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stereotypes_of_animals

#10) Penicillin was first discovered by Sir Alexander Fleming

Not by a long shot (ahem). There are numerous accounts of penicillin being discovered and used decades -- even centuries -- earlier. A scientist in Costa Rica, for example, named Clodomiro (Clorito) Picado Twight (1887-1944) discovered and documented penicillin in 1915, thirteen years before Fleming's "discovery" of 1928. Earlier than that, Ernest Duchesne documented penicillin in a paper written in 1897, but his paper was rejected by the science journals at the time because he was thought too young to know anything about science. (Dang kids playing around with mold again!) Even further back in time, the Bedouin tribes in North Africa have followed a process for well over 1,000 years that used mold to make a healing ointment (with antibacterial properties just like penicillin, no less). Western medicine, of course, tends to believe it is the first to discover things, and it fails to give credit to the use of such medicines by indigenous cultures or discoverers outside academic circles. Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penicillin

More stuff you thought you knew, but didn't

I first found these ten ideas in the book The Book of General Ignorance. I then researched each one further and cited new sources for most of them. This is a fascinating book to check out if you're interested in learning things you thought you already knew, but didn't. Find it on Amazon.com at http://www.amazon.com/Book-General-Ignorance-John-Mitchinson/dp/B0026... Or pick it up at your local bookstore. Just be careful not to read it unless you want to shatter many illusions you might presently hold dear. And while you're at it, if you're really looking to have your world rocked, pick up the book by Russ Kick called You Are STILL Being Lied To: The NEW Disinformation Guide to Media Distortion, Historical Whitewashes and Cultural Myths (http://www.amazon.com/You-STILL-Being-Lied-Disinformation/dp/19347080...) Or even my own little-known book on disinfo, called Spam Filters For Your Brain: How to navigate through the lies, hype and mind games of the food, drug and cosmetics industrieshttp://www.truthpublishing.com/spamfilters_p/yprint-cat21268.3.htm

Bonus item: #11) Hitler was a vegetarian

Not unless you think someone who eats sausages and game birds is a vegetarian. Hitler was an avid eater of certain meats, and the idea that he was a vegetarian is a complete myth. See the historical details in my own article on the subject here: http://www.naturalnews.com/025163.html Hitler wasn't a vegetarian, but he was a Catholic, by the way. His soldiers even wore belt buckles with the inscription Gott mit uns (God is with us). Read more in the article link above.

Bonus item: #12) Panthers are large black cats

Actually, there's no such thing as a panther. It's just a nick-name used by various people to describe a cougar, jaguar or leopard. Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_panther Learn more: http://www.naturalnews.com/026197_natural_Wikipedia_MIT.html#ixzz27dFcSrVM
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