- PDF eBooks
- MP3 audio book
- Videos
The new Hulda Clark Media Center is a free resource for those interested in the books and videos by Dr. Hulda Clark. Two complete PDF eBooks include Dr. Clark’s first two books: The Cure For All Cancers, and The Cure For All Diseases, which is also available excerpted as an MP3 audio book you can download and listen to. Free video, The Cure a documentary on those that discuss how they have used the Clark method effectively. The video, Conversations with Dr. Clark is a short video showing Dr. Clark testing with her Syncrometer. There is also a step by step instruction video on How To Build A Hulda Clark Zapper.
The free PDF eBooks, MP3 audio book, and Videos are at: HuldaClark.com
Feds inch forward on Clean Water update
We’ve been drowning in drug residue and toxic chemicals flowing from the faucets in our own homes. Now, the feds say they’re getting serious about cleaning up your water… but don’t start sipping from the tap just yet.
The Environmental Protection Agency may update its dangerously outdated list of regulated water contaminants by adding 13 drugs — mostly hormone meds that turn every sip and shower into a potential gender-bending experiment. They’re also considering 104 chemicals and 12 microbial contaminants for possible regulation.
It’s a start. But there are hundreds — maybe even thousands — of other dangerous contaminants in our water, and millions upon millions of people drink it every single day. Tests on U.S. drinking water routinely find the residue of legal and illegal drugs, poisons, chemicals and even rocket fuel.
One recent study showed that 62 million Americans drink substandard water. That’s bad enough — but since many of the chemicals, drugs (including those sex hormones) and toxins are unregulated, millions more drink dangerous water that actually meet U.S. government standards.
The feds are finally being dragged kicking and screaming into action only after repeated investigations and exposés — including my own work. But like everything else that comes from Beltway boneheads, you can bet these changes will be shallow and slipshod, miss the point and protect any big-money interests that feel the need to treat U.S. watersheds as their own corporate dumping grounds.
The FDA doesn’t make it easier — they actually recommend flushing as a disposal method for some two dozen meds, including Percocet, Demerol, Methadone and Oxycontin. Apparently, these meds are so dangerous they want to make extra sure no one else can take them after you’ve had your fill.
But if they’re that harmful…why even prescribe them at all?
New York State recently discovered two hospitals and three nursing homes disposing of meds like painkillers, antibiotics, antidepressants and hormones in toilets and sinks. These drugs ended up in the water supply used by 9 million people.
The problem isn’t that this happens occasionally…but that it’s actually routine.
Don’t wait for the feds to get their act together — a reverse-osmosis water filter can remove just about all the pharmaceuticals and most of the other contaminants that may be in your water. Just don’t put it under the kitchen sink. Install it where the water enters your home, so every tap in your house is safe.
But those aren’t the only chemicals in your home you need to worry about. Keep reading…
Surrounded by secret chemicals
They’re not just in the water…chemicals are everywhere, indoors and out.
Some of you sharper minds might think you have an idea of how dangerous these toxins are. Buddy, you don’t know the half of it. Not even most of the so-called experts have a clue. None of us do…because many of these chemicals are trade secrets!
A recent report in the Washington Post shows how laws designed to help the chemical industry remain competitive have actually helped them remain highly secretive…and once again, the rest of us get the short end of this poison wand.
The newspaper told of one nurse who fell ill after treating a worker injured in a chemical spill. When her doctors called the company to find out what she had been exposed to, they wouldn’t say.
Because they didn’t have to.
Nice guys, right?
Chemical manufacturers get to hide behind the misleadingly named Toxic Substances Control Act. Rather than help control toxic substances, the 1976 law actually helps companies keep their chemicals secret.
What’d you expect from our Corporate Congress, where lobbyists get the write the laws?
This particular law requires that companies disclose the ingredients in all their chemicals to the government. But it also protects any chemical that the company thinks is important to its bottom line.
Lately, that’s all of them — in recent years, 95 percent of all notices for new chemicals — some 700 of these are filed each year — have contained secrecy requests, according to the Post.
How can you avoid this garbage? You can’t. It’s in everything, even your clothing and furniture if they’ve been treated to be flame-retardant.
But you can wake up and realize that your government isn’t working for you — it’s working for America’s biggest companies. The solution can be found at the ballot box — if you can find a clean politician.
Good luck with that.
Spilling secrets,
William Campbell Douglass II, M.D.
Zapping Tapeworms with a Hulda Clark Zapper.
A NEW POSSIBILITY FOR EVER
First I thank the organisers for giving this opportunity to express my feelings on Dr.Hulda Clark, one of inspirations in the earth in my life. Her book “Cure For All Diseases” has made a big impact in the world on self care and is a light for ever for all the generations to come. I am deeply saded and shocked to hear the demise of this soul. I pray for the soul to rest in peace and to be with us invisibly with all of us and guide the world.
Conversations with Dr. Hulda Clark, 2007
Oscillatory Action of Microbes. The knowledge we have acquired concerning cellular radiation enables us to consider, under a new aspect, the problem of the pathological condition of cells which, as we have seen, function as minute living resonators.
I have pointed out that life - a phenomenon of oscillation in the cellular nucleus - is the outcome of radiation and is dependent upon it for its maintenance. We can easily understand that life, considered as a harmony of vibrations, may be modified or destroyed by any condition causing oscillatory disequilibrium, particularly by the radiations of certain microbes which overcome the radiations of weaker or less resistant cells.
It is essential that the amplitude of oscillation should have an adequate value so that the organism may be in a sound defensive state against the harmful radiations of certain microbes. The microbe, as a living organism, vibrating with a frequency lower or higher than that of the organic cell, causes, in the living being, an oscillatory disequilibrium. The sound cell which can no longer oscillate normally is then forced to modify the amplitude or the frequency of its own vibrations which the microbe overcomes more or less completely by induction. As a result of being forced to vibrate under abnormal conditions the cell can no longer function normally; it is, in fact, a diseased cell. In order that it may be restored to health it must be treated by means of a radiation of appropriate frequency which, in recharging the cell with the required energy, achieves the dual purpose of restoring it to health and to its original normal state.
The action of this auxiliary radiation neutralizes and overcomes the detrimental actions of the microbe.
“
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Georges Lakhovsky, The Secret of Life, 1929
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Popular air fresheners may have deadly scents
The next time you come across a kitchen that smells “lemony fresh,” or get a whiff of a cool mountain glen in your t-shirt, don’t breathe too deeply.
According to researchers from the University of Washington, air fresheners and fragranced laundry products often emit literally dozens of chemicals - some of which are considered toxic by federal law.
And the worst part is that none of the potentially hazardous chemicals that are thrown off by these “fresh-smelling” products are even listed on the label of ingredients. University of Washington researcher Ann C. Steinemann, PhD, said, “I didn’t find a brand that didn’t emit at least one toxic chemical.”
As shocking as this may seem, there’s a part of me that’s not the least bit surprised. After all, I’m a bright guy and I realize that laundry detergents and air fresheners that smell like a cleansing summer rain storm aren’t made from fresh-picked mountain flowers after a sun shower. There are chemicals - toxic and potentially deadly ones - that are replicating these odors. Of course the manufacturers of these products are already in full cornered-animal mode. They’re proclaiming that the products are safe when “used as directed,” and that the chemicals in question are present only in amounts not known to cause health issues.
But you’ve got to wonder, don’t you? Steinemann, a professor of civil and environmental engineering and public affairs at the University of Washington, says her idea for the revealing study was born of the fact that she had for years been told by many people that household cleaners and air fresheners caused them to have dizzy spells, or had spurred bouts of headache, asthma, shortness of breath - even seizures.
Steinemann’s study closely examined six popular consumer products: liquid spray air fresheners, plug-in air fresheners, fabric softeners, laundry detergents, dryer sheets, and the kinds of solid disc deodorizers used in airliner toilets. Steinemann found that these six products emitted a staggering 100 volatile organic compounds (VOCs).
But to me, the most disheartening discovery of Steinemann’s study came when she turned to federal law to find out what laws were on the books to protect consumers from this kind of thing. As it turns out, there’s no law that requires disclosure of all chemicals in fragrances.
It’s an outrage to say the least. Steve Gilbert, a toxicologist not associated with the study, put it very succinctly: “At the very minimum, we should have a right to know what’s in these products.”
Your best bet is to stop using store-bought air fresheners altogether. Try the real thing instead - cut open a lemon or orange, gather some mint leaves, or just open a box of baking soda.
William Campbell Douglass II, M.D.
EPA rockets new water regulations out the window
In a development that will surprise absolutely no one, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) declined to protect the nation’s drinking water supply from contamination by the chemical ammonium perchlorate.
Don’t expect to see a limit put on this stuff anytime soon, either. The reason? I’m willing to bet it has something to do with the fact that both NASA and the Department of Defense routinely dispose of the substance - used in both rocket fuel and the manufacture of munitions - by diluting it and dumping it on the ground.
The EPA argues that percholate has been found in less than one percent of American water supplies. One percent may not seem like much, but it still represents more than 150 municipal drinking supplies. And when you factor in that the substance has been linked to incidence of thyroid problems in both children and pregnant women, even one percent seems like too much.
Once again, when push comes to shove, you can always bet on the engines of government bureaucracy to put their own interests and needs before that of the public - even when it comes to the issue of dangerous chemicals in the drinking supply.