Greetings!

...welcome to another OraMedia Newsletter.
I know that in last week's newsletter I mentioned how infrequently these newsletters go out because I really want to have something relevent to share.
Well, I was so encouraged by last week's newsletter covering Dr. Mercola's erroneous take on dental health, I felt that I'd get another one going right away. Besides, it is important that the stories on fluoride, along with Hillary's health care plan need to be shared now.
Anyway, thanks for all of the great feedback. I hope you enjoy today's newsletter and are able to get something useful out of it.
Tom
|
|
|
 Hillary Clinton's Universal Health Care Plan:
Buy Health Insurance or Else!by Mike Adams
(NaturalNews)
As candidates for U.S. President continue to battle for
their respective parties' nominations, details are beginning to emerge
about their (disastrous) health care plans. The New York Times is now
reporting that Hillary Clinton's universal health care plan will be
accomplished through "enforcement measures" that may include garnishing
the wages of people who choose not to buy health insurance. What this
comes down to, of course, is yet another form of medical tyranny where
citizens are forced by threat of financial penalty to participate in
conventional medicine's health
insurance
Hillary Clinton's universal
health care
plan, then, is nothing more than a system for threatening all Americans
to buy health insurance, and then financially punishing them if they
don't. For people like myself who choose not to participate in
America's drugs-and-surgery health
care scam, Clinton's proposal would equate to yet another
form of government-inspired financial tyranny
that further erodes personal freedoms in a country that claims to be
"free."
More...
|
Fluoride-Gate Naming Names at Centers for Disease Control
Dan Stockin of the Lillie Center has informed me
that his article on the CDC, "Fluoride-Gate," which was published on January 15
in the Juneau
Empire, Alaska, has been picked up by US Water News. This piece by Dan
names the people at the CDC who are not performing their public duty to inform
subsets of the public that they are especially threatened by drinking
fluoridated water, even though this agency promotes the practice throughout the
country.
U.S. Water News is a monthly hard copy publication mailed
throughout the country to water and wastewater treatment professionals and
organizations. The San Francisco Chronicle has called U.S. Water News "the 'Wall
Street Journal' of water publications."
We don't have an electronic link
to the U.S. Water News article, as the publication doesn't put its current
edition online. What's significant is that U.S. Water News viewed the
information as significant and worthy of reading by thousands of water industry
professionals. These engineers, water treatment operators, and others are now
learning about fluoride's harm and that CDC is not telling the whole story about
the dangers of fluoridation.
More...
|
ConcenTrace� Trace Mineral Drops The Most Powerful, Natural, Health Giving Trace Minerals in the World.
Formulated by Nature for Greater Bio Health and Body Mineral Balancing.
From Utah's Inland Sea -- Soluble � Liquid � Ionic
Low sodium ConcenTrace� Trace Mineral Drops (or tablets) are the
most powerful natural health mineral supplements in the world. It's
impossible to under- estimate the importance of minerals and trace
minerals for the human body. They are the catalysts for all the
vitamins and other nutrients your body uses for developing and
maintaining good health. ConcenTrace� captures the perfect balance of those minerals. Using ConcenTrace�
every day (mix with juice, food or remineralize purified water) will
help conduct and generate your body's entire electrical system. You'll
have more energy and will generally feel better. More...
|
Options for Getting and Keeping Your Teeth Healthy for Life
Tom Cornwell
In past issues we've discussed nutrition and frame of reference -- two of Dr. Robert Nara's seven factors for keeping teeth and gums healthy for life. Once we shift that responsibility from the dental professional to our ourselves (frame of reference) and add nutrition as a fundamental part of the process. We need to understand the rest of what is in play and knowing the options available will help put the rest in perspective.
If we look at options as a two-sided coin, we could put the owner of the teeth on one side and the professional on the other. With the objective being to keep the teeth as healthy as possible for as long as possible, we can decide which side of the coin gets that responsibility; the individual or the professional. If the decision is for the individual to take on that responsibility, then it is important, first, to know that it is possible to achieve that objective with little or no professional intervention -- in any event, less intervention than we are lead to believe. We fall short because of the time, education and lack of quality maintenance afforded to the task of keeping the teeth healthy. The profession claims that they do educate us, but we don't listen or fall short in our application of proper home care. Perhaps both arguments are true to some degree or another, but it isn't the individual who has anything to gain from ignorance, lack of application or too little knowledge. On the contrary, it is the profession which ultimately benefits.
Let's look again at Dr. Nara's seven factors:
- Nutrition
- Frame of Reference
- Options
- Knowledge
- Understanding the biological balance
- Taking action
- Money
It is the purpose of this article to point out that one does have options available. This is not to say that the only options are whether one is insured for dental care or not. Insurance, in fact, creates a situation whereby we become lax about our own care because we know that, if and when we fall, our problems will be taken care of and we will be able to afford to have them taken care of. In a sense, it can create a lack of personal responsibility, from one point of view. Professional care, on the other hand, does nothing to cure tooth and gum disease. At best, professional care repairs problems caused by the disease which can be prevented only by the individual. At best, a brush with professional care might educate so we can attempt to be more responsible. A quick glance in the yellow pages of any phone book would reveal a strong presence of dental professionals in any given area. This might lead one wonder about the amount of public education taking place...
In looking at the list above, however, we see that that the factors of gaining knowledge, increasing understanding and actually taking action to create the ideal situation must be in place to create and maintain healthy teeth. No matter the source of the information, as long as it is accurate and we properly apply it we are on the right track with the added benefit of hanging on to the 'hard earned.' This might require some effort on the part of the individual, of course, as learning about microbes and bio-films can be about as interesting as watching grass grow. Time spent with the tools (tooth brush, floss and irrigator) will have to be increased, of course, as one will need to spend whatever time is necessary to do a thorough job of the hygiene process. This however, is the option of choice for intelligent people who care for their bodies and have better use for their funds than spending it on dental scaling, bridges, crowns, root canal treatments and, eventually, dentures. Tooth and gum disease is, simply, every bit avoidable and 'healthy teeth and gums for life' is every bit achievable when you exercise your options -- and option #1 is to become one's own biological or holistic professional.
Tom Cornwell Publisher of the OraMedia Site for Dental Self Sufficiency www.Mizar5.com
|
|
|