When will Aids Day be No-Aids-Day?
Another Aids day – and naturally we will see some scientists and celebrities clamoring for more money for testing and drugs. Those are the people who haven’t yet understood that we should really be celebrating No-Aids-Day instead. The Aids mainstream is denying mounting evidence that Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome is multi-factorial, that it is not due to any dangerous virus, and that the best prevention is providing healthy nutrition. Aids should be treated by strengthening the body’s own immune defenses, not by destroying immunity with toxic “retroviral” drugs. Let’s make sure this is the last Aids Day and that next year we celebrate No-Aids-Day instead. Viceo: Aids Incorporated (Trailer) by Gary Null More than 200 million Americans…http://www.newmediaexplorer.org/sepp/
http://www.newmediaexplorer.org/sepp/index.rdf
Codex Alimentarius takes a step back on Nutrient Reference Values
November 2-6, 2009, the 31st Session of the Codex Committee on Nutrition and Foods for Special Dietary Uses (CCNFSDU) met in Dusseldorf, Germany to continue its work in developing standards for global nutrition. Some 260 delegates were in attendance, comprised of various countries’ functionaries and international non-governmental organizations (INGOs) representatives…
Projected Food supplement ban in 2010 may contravene EU law
The Alliance for Natural Health said it was mystified why sulphur was excluded from the list of allowed minerals when the Directive already allowed a number of sulphate salts of minerals, all of which delivered sulphur to the body. The continued exclusion of sulphur means that key supplemental forms of sulphur, such as MSM (methyl-sulfonyl-methane) that is used to support, among other things, healthy joints, skin, nails and energy levels, cannot be properly legitimised in the EU.
The ANH submission also slammed the contrasting approaches to risk assessment used by the EU’s scientific evaluation body for foods, EFSA. The ANH was surprised to see that selenious acid, a highly toxic form of selenium used in ‘gun blue’ solution that has been responsible for the death of a number of children following its consumption, had been approved. In constrast, selenocysteine, a naturally occurring form of selenium found in a variety of foods such as mushrooms, was not.


