Re: Biodynamic cheeses
Victor @ Shanti yoga. Gideon. - Original Message - From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Wednesday, October 16, 2002 6:26 AM Subject: Biodynamic cheeses Is anyone familiar with a mail order or online source for biodynamic cheeses?Thanks, RB
Biodynamic cheeses
Is anyone familiar with a mail order or online source for biodynamic cheeses? Thanks, RB
Re: forest to farm
Hugh, Yes, you are right. And, I drink some of that forest understory organic coffee. M Good! Cheers, Robin - Original Message - From: "Hugh Lovel" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: 14 octobre, 2002 05:15 Subject: Re: forest to farm > Dear Robin, > > I think you'd find exceptions, such as some of the biodynamic and organic > coffee farms where the coffee tree is grown back in its original place as a > forest under story tree. A Large exception is affoot as the result of the > work of one of the speakers at Allan's conference, Howard Shapiro. Maybe > some sof the other attendees can tell you of his work restoring caccao to > is place in a cultivated forest diversity of a wide variety of species, > many of commercial value, which combined can raise caccao farmer's incomes > by roughly 300%. Enough to send the kids to college or to invest in a farm > for them when they wed. > > Best, > Hugh Lovel > > > > >All, > > > >Of course not! Transformation of forests to agriculture has been a > >disaster all over the world. This is because industrial agriculture > >systems are slaves to chemical and genetic industries. Thanks to Monsanto, > >and others... Forests converted to chemical agriculture is the main thing. > >Chemical agriculture to organic agriculture is the 'newer' sustainable > >thing, and organic to Biodynamic is the spiritually sustainable thing. Or > >something like that... > > > >Yes, you can find some examples of good management, and proper > >forest-to-agricultural conversions, but they are mostly the local initiative > >of earth loving people, such as Biodynamic practitioners, or other cultures > >such as the first nations of north America. Have a look at the C-Dar World > >Forest Foundation http://www.c-dar.com. They are both converting a forest > >to an agricultural land, and developing a method for bringing BD to > >forests... (that parts in the making...). > > > >Again... sustainability is subjective and a question of tradeoffs. What > >values do we want to sustain? Who is we? > > > >Cheers, > > > >Robin > > > > > > > >- Original Message - > >From: "Roger Pye" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > >To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > >Sent: 13 octobre, 2002 04:16 > >Subject: Re: forest to farm > > > > > >> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > >> > >> >Sure, we been doing that for three hundred and fifty years in the usa. > >> > > >> But with what long-standing - sustainable - success? > >> > >> roger > >> > >> > > Visit our website at: www.unionag.org > >
Re: grasses
Title: Re: grasses Actually Martha's present e-mail is "Rosemeyer, Martha" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> being Evergreen pleaded for her to come there. We miss her. L*L Markess From: Liz Davis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Date: Wed, 16 Oct 2002 06:17:03 +1000 To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Subject: Re: grasses I've just glanced over a book called "Agroecosystem Sustainability" Developing Practical Srategies, by Stephen R Gliessman, there is one study by a Martha E. Rosemeyer from Wisconsin, 'Improving Agroecosystem Sustainability Using Organic (Plant-Based) Mulch'. The eddress offered [EMAIL PROTECTED] If unable to obtain info, I may be able to help you once my semester ends, only a few weeks to go. L&L Liz on 15/10/02 8:43 AM, Roger Pye at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > COYOTEHILLFARM wrote: > >> Is this a study that one can read some where ?? >> Why mulch/straw ratter than wood chips ?? >> >> Companion planting with grapes any info?? >> > I have a poor photocopy of it somewhere and I'm looking for it. > > Grass-type mulches hold more moisture and retain it longer than wood > chips. Chips may also leach nutrients or compounds harmful to vines (eg > from radiata (monterey) pine, some australian native hardwoods). Grasses > break down and incorporate easily and more naturally into soils. > > Some cover crops: annuals - lupins, vetch, barley; perennial - lucerne, > clover, rye. > > I suggest also you have a look at > http://www.organic-europe.net/resources/downloads/hofmann2000.pdf > (COVER CROP MANAGEMENT IN ORGANIC VITICULTURE) > > Sorry I don't know much about grape growing yet > > roger > >
Re: equisetum
Allan, It's fine you've apologized, but I wouldn't go overboard with it. Some people have weak and defiled minds and can't help it, and you aren't responsible for their state--they are. They will punish themselves accordingly until they learn better. There is no reason you should shoulder their burdens and their pain in addition to them doing so. On topic, many years ago I was unable to find the arvense growing anywhere near me, though the hymale grew abundantly in sugar cane ditches south of here in both Georgia and Louisiana. So I asked my mentor, Peter Escher, about the advisability of using the hymale. He allowed that I might as well try it, even though the fine division of leaf in the arvense was a very desirable plant gesture (relating to sulfur, which the spirit "moistens it fingers" with in order to work into the physical--more or less as a sculptor moulding clay) and it would be preferable to use it. So I harvested a truckload of the hymale. It worked very well indeed. I could see little difference between the two, though it was possible to buy the arvense from Frontier in bulk at quite decent prices. Of course, a truckload for the labor of cutting it with my scythe and loading it with my pitchfork was much cheaper. You'll notice that Courtney, at your conference, identified the equisetum as the most under-used of the BD remedies. I'm not sure that is true, especially if he is basing his view on how much equisetum is purchased from him. His price doesn't compare with Frontier's bulk price, and it sure doesn't match the truckload deal. But let me assure those who have the hymale and don't have the arvense that the hymale works well and it can be used in lieu of the arvense whenever need be. People using equisetum tea as the fluid base in compost tea makers will doubtless want to use the most cost effective type, whichever it may be. It is great on fruit trees and tomatoes, and would be very good on leafy greens in wet periods. Much of the roadblock to putting BD into practice is this crazy idea that everything has to be done just so--as for example thinking one must use the arvense since that is the one Steiner mentioned in his lectures. Keep in mind that in Australia there is no horsetail whether arvense or hymale, so what they use there is the Katurina, also known as the Sheoak. It isn't even the same genus, let alone the same species. But it exemplifies the same principle in its operation, which is what is important. If BD is to wait until the perfect, ideal, ONLY right way of working is found we will fail utterly in putting it into practice. It is the same way with the so-called planting calendar. People sometimes wait for the ideal constellation to plant in--and then it rains cats and dogs and they either can't plant or make a hash of it and have a crop failure. Weather is a bigger consideration than the planting calendar. What is truly perfect is far more subtle, complex, amazing and beyond our grasp than we can possibly imagine. So generally we imagine we are falling way short of being perfect--when we are being more perfect than we realize. Maybe what I'm saying is this. Shame, blame and regret are victim trips--disempowering stuff. The notion that responsibility equals assumption of guilt is equally disempowering. If one is to get things done in life--in short, be empowered--one has to quit whining, take responsibility (shoulder the load) and get to work. To commiserate, go into agreement with other people's victim games, to heap coals on our own heads and the heads of others--what kind of hope, joy, satisfaction will that result in? Growing up with a father who was in a wheel chair, it didn't dawn on me until I was grown what a handicap it might be--because he never uttered a word of regret or sorrow or self-pity, but seemed able to do anything he set his mind to, which was a lot more than most other folks I knew. Gradually I realized we are all handicapped in a wide variety of ways. So what? So we have a choice to make the most out of it or not to. We can enjoy life or not. One of the best ways to learn to enjoy life is to get thrown in prison. It rather clairifies the fact one has a choice. Richard Cory, who had every advantage in life, committed suicide. Job, who had every kind of calamity befall him, unswervingly kept his faith up and his spirits high. One was empowered. The other was not. Some people, with nowhere near the supposed ideal in land, conditions, resources make BD work beautifully. Others seem to fall short here or there and end up failing completely. We have a choice. Best, Hugh Lovel >> > >One last attempt at explanation. > >First off, I didn't make those pictures. The pictures are from a >website called THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF EQUISETUM >http://members.eunet.at/m.matus/ where the botanical content of the >pictures are apparently deemed to be strong enough to offset the >potential objectionable portions. > >Secondly, I had no realization that the pictures
fwd 3-F event
- Original Message - From: "Linda Nagel" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Monday, October 07, 2002 10:36 PM Subject: Reminder: Colours of Money > Reminder: Colours of Money ; An Introduction to Associative Economics > 3 day seminar Oct 18-20th ALSO 2 Evening Lectures Oct 18th 8 p.m. & Oct > 19th 8 p.m. > With Dr. Christopher Houghton Budd, Ph.D. > > "Dr. Houghton Budd is an expert in Rudolf Steiner's threefolding and the > original model of pre-financing the first Waldorf School, 1919. He will be > sharing the evolution of this work and its practical application in our > modern life regarding the funding of initiatives, including education, > accounting/bookkeeping as a tool for consciousness raising, government's > role in the phenomenon of globalization and perceiving gift, loan and > purchase capital in modern economic life. This workshop is dynamic in its > use of image, colour and experiential application to support individuals in > bringing this good news to their school, their work, their vision." Tamara > Slayton, Executive Director of Initiative for the Renewal of Modern Culture. > Seminar web address http://colours.tripod.ca for details and > registration/program brochure. > $50 deposit required ahead for 3 day seminar. Contact Linda Nagel for > bursary possibilities, information, questions. 519-886-0662 > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Location: Rudolf Steiner Centre Toronto, Richmond Hill. > > "This unique opportunity is open to anyone interested in understanding > better the significance of modern economic events and seeking ways of making > practicable change, whether as individuals or in organizations and whether > in for-profit or not-for-profit contexts." - brochure > > This event is not to be missed! Car pool with others from your community for > the evening lectures! >
Re: equisetum
why cut off your nose to spite yer face Eh? My God, the equisetum was so beautiful I did not even notice there was a woman in the picture, it was the ire that broughth it to my attention. Well, if we must lose some contributors to the list due to this, so be it...life goes on, but your contibutions will be missed...Allen report to the dungeon for your whipping...sstorch
RE: equisetum
That's what happened to me when I first saw the JPG image on my screen. I use a laptop. Let's not get offended by other people's original good intention. Let's drop this accidental sidetrack all together. So what about this 508? Why would you use equisetum to make it? Regards TaChung Huang (¶À¤j©¾) -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of Allan Balliett Sent: Tuesday, October 15, 2002 2:41 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: equisetum > One last attempt at explanation. First off, I didn't make those pictures. The pictures are from a website called THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF EQUISETUM http://members.eunet.at/m.matus/ where the botanical content of the pictures are apparently deemed to be strong enough to offset the potential objectionable portions. Secondly, I had no realization that the pictures were as graphic as they are. I certainly wouldn't have forwarded the link had I seen that was the case. You have to understand that literally from the waist down the picture is not visible on my screen without scrolling, which I didn't do because I was looking for pictures of Hymale. For me, these picture is the first that really that make me realize that Hymale can be identified by SIZE as much as by form. I'd like to get this back on the topic of how to make good 508, something that is really important. If you need me to say that I'm not a pornographer and do not encourage the use of pornography, I'm happy to say that also. Hopefully, from the bulk of my work, this is obvious to many. Again, I apologize to anyone this carelessness has upset. -Allan >Please, I hope this does not happen again. I do find the >aforementioned disrespectul and degrading to the value of the female. > >Mary Ann >
Re: equisetum
Dears, Sheesh! When are some folks going to grow up and stop taking offense at the drop of a hat. The picture was a good one of Equisetum Hyaemali. Does one's "dirty" mind have to interfere with that? Some of us find meaning where we can and ignore the rest, and there sure is a lot of the rest in life. Are we to reject good information when it pushed one or another button? Unfortunately so many do that we have a remarkably poorly informed society. Hugh >allen ,you do what you want in your life , i don't endorse that >disrestectful view of women, nor do i want to allow it in my home, or teach >my son that it's ok . there is nothing natural in that photo. regretfully >you had better unsubcribe us.:)sharon >- Original Message - >From: "Allan Balliett" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >Sent: Monday, October 14, 2002 6:46 AM >Subject: Re: equisetum > > >> >Allen i can't believe you sent that site! >> >> I can't believe I found that site! ;-) >> >> Ah, Nature!! >> >> >> Visit our website at: www.unionag.org
Re: grasses
Hi Liz, emailed you WI source, but I be appreciative to receive any and all help when you have time, hope your studies goose well. Have you seen any one describing companion planting whit grapes??? Tanks and best \ Per Garp/NH - Original Message - From: "Liz Davis" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Tuesday, October 15, 2002 04:17 PM Subject: Re: grasses > I've just glanced over a book called "Agroecosystem Sustainability" > Developing Practical Srategies, by Stephen R Gliessman, there is one study > by a Martha E. Rosemeyer from Wisconsin, 'Improving Agroecosystem > Sustainability Using Organic (Plant-Based) Mulch'. The eddress offered > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > If unable to obtain info, I may be able to help you once my semester ends, > only a few weeks to go. > > L&L > Liz > > > > on 15/10/02 8:43 AM, Roger Pye at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > > COYOTEHILLFARM wrote: > > > >> Is this a study that one can read some where ?? > >> Why mulch/straw ratter than wood chips ?? > >> > >> Companion planting with grapes any info?? > >> > > I have a poor photocopy of it somewhere and I'm looking for it. > > > > Grass-type mulches hold more moisture and retain it longer than wood > > chips. Chips may also leach nutrients or compounds harmful to vines (eg > > from radiata (monterey) pine, some australian native hardwoods). Grasses > > break down and incorporate easily and more naturally into soils. > > > > Some cover crops: annuals - lupins, vetch, barley; perennial - lucerne, > > clover, rye. > > > > I suggest also you have a look at > > http://www.organic-europe.net/resources/downloads/hofmann2000.pdf > > (COVER CROP MANAGEMENT IN ORGANIC VITICULTURE) > > > > Sorry I don't know much about grape growing yet > > > > roger > > > > >
Re: grasses
I've just glanced over a book called "Agroecosystem Sustainability" Developing Practical Srategies, by Stephen R Gliessman, there is one study by a Martha E. Rosemeyer from Wisconsin, 'Improving Agroecosystem Sustainability Using Organic (Plant-Based) Mulch'. The eddress offered [EMAIL PROTECTED] If unable to obtain info, I may be able to help you once my semester ends, only a few weeks to go. L&L Liz on 15/10/02 8:43 AM, Roger Pye at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > COYOTEHILLFARM wrote: > >> Is this a study that one can read some where ?? >> Why mulch/straw ratter than wood chips ?? >> >> Companion planting with grapes any info?? >> > I have a poor photocopy of it somewhere and I'm looking for it. > > Grass-type mulches hold more moisture and retain it longer than wood > chips. Chips may also leach nutrients or compounds harmful to vines (eg > from radiata (monterey) pine, some australian native hardwoods). Grasses > break down and incorporate easily and more naturally into soils. > > Some cover crops: annuals - lupins, vetch, barley; perennial - lucerne, > clover, rye. > > I suggest also you have a look at > http://www.organic-europe.net/resources/downloads/hofmann2000.pdf > (COVER CROP MANAGEMENT IN ORGANIC VITICULTURE) > > Sorry I don't know much about grape growing yet > > roger > >
FW: [globalnews] SPECIAL REPORT-- World As Lover: Calvino,Krishna and Tibetan Refugees
Title: FW: [globalnews] SPECIAL REPORT-- World As Lover: Calvino, Krishna and Tibetan Refugees Long but so worth the read!! -- In Context A Quarterly of Humane Sustainable Culture World As Lover; World As Self Seeing the world as oneself - or as a lover - transforms ordinary reality and provides a greater sense of purpose by Joanna Macy One of the articles in Exploring Our Interconnectedness (IC#34) Winter 1993, Page 22 Copyright (c)1993, 1996 by Context Institute Spiritual traditions have tended to look at the world in four major ways: as a battlefield, as a trap, as a lover, and as the self. The first two - as a stage set for our moral battles or as a prison to escape - are probably familiar, and have in many ways contributed to our lack of care for the world. But what of the other two? Might they shed some useful light on life in an interconnected world? This is the focus of Joanna Macy's wonderful book, World As Lover; World as Self, published by Parallax Press, from which we have taken the following excerpts. Joanna Macy is a scholar of Buddhism and general systems theory. She is known in many countries for her trainings designed to empower creative, sustained social action. The way we define and delimit the self is arbitrary. We can place it between our ears and have it looking out from our eyes, or we can widen it to include the air we breathe, or at other moments, we can cast its boundaries farther to include the oxygen-giving trees and plankton, our external lungs, and beyond them the web of life in which they are sustained. I used to think that I ended with my skin, that everything within the skin was me and everything outside the skin was not. But now you've read these words, and the concepts they represent are reaching your cortex, so "the process" that is me now extends as far as you. And where, for that matter, did this process begin? I certainly can trace it to my teachers, some of whom I never met, and to my husband and children, who give me courage and support to do the work I do, and to the plant and animal beings who sustain my body. What I am, as systems theorists have helped me see, is a "flow-through." I am a flow-through of matter, energy, and information, which is transformed in turn by my own experiences and intentions. To experience the world as an extended self and its story as our own extended story involves no surrender or eclipse of our individuality. The liver, leg, and lung that are "mine" are highly distinct from each other, thank goodness, and each has a distinctive role to play. The larger selfness we discover today is not an undifferentiated unity. Our recognition of this may be the third part of an unfolding of consciousness that began a long time ago, like the third movement of a symphony. In the first movement, our infancy as a species, we felt no separation from the natural world around us. Trees, rocks, and plants surrounded us with a living presence as intimate and pulsing as our own bodies. In that primal intimacy, which anthropologists call "participation mystique," we were as one with our world as a child in the mother's womb. Then self-consciousness arose and gave us distance on our world. We needed that distance in order to make decisions and strategies, in order to measure, judge, and to monitor our judgments. With the emergence of free-will, the fall out of the Garden of Eden, the second movement began - the lonely and heroic journey of the ego. Nowadays, yearning to reclaim a sense of wholeness, some of us tend to disparage that movement of separation from nature, but it brought great gains for which we can be grateful. The distanced and observing eye brought us tools of science, and a priceless view of the vast, orderly intricacy of our world. The recognition of our individuality brought us trial by jury and the Bill of Rights. Now, harvesting these gains, we are ready to return. The third movement begins. Having gained distance and sophistication of perception, we can turn and recognize who we have been all along. Now it can dawn on us: we are our world knowing itself. We can relinquish our separateness. We can come home again - and participate in our world in a richer, more responsible and poignantly beautiful way than before, in our infancy. WORLD AS LOVER It is my experience that the world itself has a role to play in our liberation. Its very pressures, pains, and risks can wake us up - release us from the bonds of ego and guide us home to our vast, true nature. For some of us, our love for the world is so passionate that we cannot ask it to wait until we are enlightened. To view the world as lover is to look at the world as a most intimate and gratifying partner. We find some of the richest expressions of our erotic relationship to the world in Hinduism, for example in Krishna worship, but this erotic affirmation of the phenomenal world is not limited to Hinduism. Ancient Goddess religions, now
FW: [globalnews] Bush, US Navy Declare Global War on Whales
Title: FW: [globalnews] Bush, US Navy Declare Global War on Whales National Resources Defense Council Dear NRDC BioGems Defender, I am contacting you via email because NRDC is facing an imminent legal and financial deadline in a case of extraordinary importance. We need your immediate help. Just days from now, NRDC attorneys will appear in U.S. Federal Court and seek to stop the U.S. Navy from operating a new and extremely dangerous sonar system that would blast hundreds of thousands of square miles of ocean habitat with noise so intense it can maim, deafen or even kill whales at close range. NRDC is racing to court because the Bush administration has just given its approval for the Navy to begin deploying this Low Frequency Active (LFA) sonar system across 75 percent of the world's oceans. Even worse, the Navy intends to begin operations of this frightening new technology as early as November 1st! We need your immediate help. Please go to https://www.nrdc.org/joinGive/join/lfa2.asp right now to make an online emergency contribution that will help us fight this critical legal battle. Marine scientists are warning that this sonar system may threaten the very survival of entire populations of whales, some already teetering on the brink of extinction. As opposed to traditional "passive" sonar, which locates submarines by listening for sound in the water, the new "active" sonar uses underwater loudspeakers to blast the ocean with an effective noise level of 235 decibels and then waits for a response. At close range, the shock waves are so intense they can destroy whales' eardrums, cause their lungs to hemorrhage, and even kill. Further from the source, LFA noise still can result in permanent hearing loss in marine mammals after a single transmission, and cause whales to swerve from their migration paths. The dangers are hardly theoretical. Two years ago, the mere testing of high-intensity Navy sonar in mid-frequency range caused a mass stranding of whales in the Bahamas. Whales from at least three different species died, their inner ears bleeding from the explosive power of the sonar signal. Does the Navy have the right to conduct a giant uncontrolled experiment on our oceans and every living creature in them? The Bush administration seems to think so. It has issued a permit that exempts the Navy from having to obey the Marine Mammal Protection Act, in effect giving the military a blank check to harass and injure whales and dolphins at will. We think that's unconscionable and illegal. But we must have your immediate help if we are to prevail in court. We urgently need to raise significant new funds in order to cover litigation expenses and stop the imminent deployment of deadly, noise-producing sonar. Again, I urge you to help by going to https://www.nrdc.org/joinGive/join/lfa2.asp right now and making an online emergency contribution. Please join us in stopping the U.S. Navy before it unleashes this technological menace on the world's oceans. With your help, we can make sure that no more whales have to suffer and die from high-power sonar. Thank you. Sincerely, John H. Adams President Natural Resources Defense Council . “Inner speed, outer caution; inner caution, outer speed” --Words of Wisdom From the Great Caduceator
FW: [globalnews] URGENT VACCINATION ISSUES
Title: FW: [globalnews] URGENT VACCINATION ISSUES Compilation 10-01-02: on VACCINATIONS by Christopher Rudy (http://www.heartcom.org/bio.htm) Here are some key articles on the urgent issue of vaccinations right now: 1. OVERVIEW: Common Sense Uncommon on Vaccinations 2. Patricia Doyle, PhD on Polio link to West Nile Virus 3. Polio Caused by Polio Vaccines à 4. Vaccine-Caused Diseases 5. Smallpox Vaccination Concerns 6. Feds Prepare to Vaccinate Every American 7. Dr. Horowitz on the Profit Motive of Provocateur Bioterrorism --- 1. OVERVIEW: Common Sense Uncommon on Vaccinations by Christopher Rudy, Holistic Healer I've had 3 holistic health centers over the last 25 years. Many of the health problems I dealt with go back to vaccinations as evident from electro-diagnostics and classic symptomology profiles. I have fought the good fight to shift the health care paradigm from "treating disease" to "building health". Here are some things I've learned about vaccines. The politics and economics behind vaccines are far more complex than the science. Three out of the five largest and most profitable corporations in the world are drug companies. The book, DEATH BY INJECTION by the brilliant researcher, Eustice Mullins, goes into the profits-before-people mentality of this disease care industry (called "heath care") in great detail. Consider that John D. Rockefeller, who began by hawking snake oil out of the back of wagons, went on to use his oil well profits to finance 1200 medical schools early in the century with pharmacology at the core of the curriculum (his new "ethical drugs" snake oil)... turning out "ethical" drug-pushers every since then... and financing legislation that led to a legal monopoly, with big government enforcement (FDA), that has persecuted and prosecuted natural healing modalities as the "risky alternative fringe" every since. Vaccines play a huge role in monopoly medicine that values control of the market (people) above health. This last year I was Communications Director for Dr. Len Horowitz who has a Masters in Public Health from Harvard and is the leading health rights activist on the vaccines issue. He wrote the definitive expose' on the vaccine "plot out of hell" in his best-seller called AIDS, EBOLA and EMERGING VIRUSES. In this book he provides a well-documented paper trail on the big business collusion with government agencies behind the creation of the AIDS viruses in America's bio-warfare labs... and then the deployment through vaccines of those and other genetically engineered cancer retroviruses. Targeted mostly were homosexuals and blacks (Hepatitis B1 vaccines), but also elderly (flu shots) and children (polio shots). The AIDS-caused genocide of millions of black Africans by inoculation of their populations with B1 vaccines via the U.N.'s World Health Organization is well known by people worldwide. What is less well known, but well documented, is that the original polio vaccines were seeded with cancer retroviruses that, like biological time-bombs, would go off when the immune system of the genotypes targeted was compromised or fell off at middle age. This is a leading cause behind one-out-of-two adults getting cancer and one-out-of-three dying from it. Cancer was relatively rare early in this century. Now it's a half-trillion dollar industry. Of course this is all "unthinkable" and "unspeakable". It's like saying that Roosevelt had prior knowledge of Pearl Harbor and Bush had prior knowledge of 9/11 "to further their military-industrial war agenda". The parallel is pertinent. Government patriotism (God & Country) has become a "religion" as has modern medicine; people believe "religiously" in our government leaders as they do the high priests of medicine with their drug "sacraments". The average elderly American is a walking pharmacy with 6 prescriptions. Vaccines are a core part of this "BS" (Belief System). From cradle to grave, American are inundated with official misinformation about the efficacy, harmlessness and value of vaccines. In reality, vaccines inject disease organisms into the body along with heavy metals and toxic genetic poisons that weaken the immune system so the disease organisms will "take hold". The idea is that the body's immune system will then recognize and resist those disease invaders. Unfortunately, Americans hear just enough about the good effect of vaccines to immunize them against the truth of their greater harm. It's like chemotherapy where chemicals similar to mustard gas poisons used in World War I, are injected into a body with the idea that you've got an enemy within you and the poison is going to kill it hopefully before it kills you. The unfortunate "collateral damage" is that chemo wipes out the immune system, which you can't live without. Then people die of "other causes" than the cancer which the doctors say was "cured". Vaccines have much the same long-term effect on the immune system. All studies show that you've got a
Re: equisetum
> > > > Please, I hope this does not happen again. I do find the aforementioned disrespectul and degrading to the value of the female. > Mary Ann > Most women probably would - however - unsubscribing from this list (as Sharon did) is certainly a major over reaction to a minor and uncharacteristic stuff up on Allans part - poor reward for the time and effort he has put into running BDNOW for our benefit! The chance that something like this will appear again on the list in the next twelve months is about zero, and I just dont understand why anyone would leave because of this one posting?? Lloyd Charles
Re: The Stakes
Essie Hull wrote: > Your reminders are empowering and encouraging, Steve. I appreciate > your clarity. > Essie > > At 08:07 AM 10/15/02 -0400, you wrote: > >> Yes, the stakes are high, but the powers forget the other branch of >> government, the people. Media skews viewpoints, and makes the >> majority feel >> alone and as a minority. I am finding it harder to believe that so many >> folks are so asleep as I meet more and more likeminded people. >> Americans, >> like the Islamic/Muslim people will soon also be pushed into a corner >> and >> forced into action to claim what is theirs. Freedom is hard to come >> by and >> will be increasingly harder to remove. The old paradigm is crumbling >> and the >> events we see are a last attempt to grab freedoms and destroy >> wills...SStorch > I suggest you send these encouragements to my friend Roger vanFrank in Salt Lake City, he could use the help. A hardened 80-yr old USN veteran with more battle stars than I care to think about, he expressed similar sentiments in public in Feb of this year and has been hounded by the powers ever since, to the extent that his mail has been monitored, his privacy interfered with, and his wife interrogated and intimidated on their front doorstep by federal agents. roger
Re: The Stakes
Sorry, I'm a bit tired. Roger's address is [EMAIL PROTECTED] Roger
Re: The Stakes
Your reminders are empowering and encouraging, Steve. I appreciate your clarity. Essie At 08:07 AM 10/15/02 -0400, you wrote: >Yes, the stakes are high, but the powers forget the other branch of >government, the people. Media skews viewpoints, and makes the majority feel >alone and as a minority. I am finding it harder to believe that so many >folks are so asleep as I meet more and more likeminded people. Americans, >like the Islamic/Muslim people will soon also be pushed into a corner and >forced into action to claim what is theirs. Freedom is hard to come by and >will be increasingly harder to remove. The old paradigm is crumbling and the >events we see are a last attempt to grab freedoms and destroy wills...SStorch
Re: The Stakes
Yes, the stakes are high, but the powers forget the other branch of government, the people. Media skews viewpoints, and makes the majority feel alone and as a minority. I am finding it harder to believe that so many folks are so asleep as I meet more and more likeminded people. Americans, like the Islamic/Muslim people will soon also be pushed into a corner and forced into action to claim what is theirs. Freedom is hard to come by and will be increasingly harder to remove. The old paradigm is crumbling and the events we see are a last attempt to grab freedoms and destroy wills...SStorch
unsuscribe
Hi all, I have appreciated being privy to so many enlightened and enlightening postings. However, time constraints force me to unsubscribe for now. Thank you, Paul
Re: grasses
Roger, thanks this very interesting It looks to me that the selections of grasses rather than wood chips is do to the toxicity of some Australian wood types, I think that we in the USA have some problem tree's like nut-tree's. This make me wonder what is practices in Blueberry farming wood chips or grasses as mulch ? If you by chance find your photo copy, love to read it, or find my self a copy if you can direct me. The cover crop's : ->annuals - lupines, vetch, barley; perennial - lucerne, clover, rye. -<_- Some are better than others, can you tell me, why you believe this are good. I have confirmed vetch, and clover but have problems to confirming the others. A problem can be "lupines" some information tells me they are ok, for others it's no, no Any comments are very much appreciated Per Garp/NH - Original Message - From: "Roger Pye" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Monday, October 14, 2002 06:43 PM Subject: Re: grasses > COYOTEHILLFARM wrote: > > >Is this a study that one can read some where ?? > >Why mulch/straw ratter than wood chips ?? > > > >Companion planting with grapes any info?? > > > I have a poor photocopy of it somewhere and I'm looking for it. > > Grass-type mulches hold more moisture and retain it longer than wood > chips. Chips may also leach nutrients or compounds harmful to vines (eg > from radiata (monterey) pine, some australian native hardwoods). Grasses > break down and incorporate easily and more naturally into soils. > > Some cover crops: annuals - lupins, vetch, barley; perennial - lucerne, > clover, rye. > > I suggest also you have a look at > http://www.organic-europe.net/resources/downloads/hofmann2000.pdf > (COVER CROP MANAGEMENT IN ORGANIC VITICULTURE) > > Sorry I don't know much about grape growing yet > > roger >
Re: equisetum
> One last attempt at explanation. First off, I didn't make those pictures. The pictures are from a website called THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF EQUISETUM http://members.eunet.at/m.matus/ where the botanical content of the pictures are apparently deemed to be strong enough to offset the potential objectionable portions. Secondly, I had no realization that the pictures were as graphic as they are. I certainly wouldn't have forwarded the link had I seen that was the case. You have to understand that literally from the waist down the picture is not visible on my screen without scrolling, which I didn't do because I was looking for pictures of Hymale. For me, these picture is the first that really that make me realize that Hymale can be identified by SIZE as much as by form. I'd like to get this back on the topic of how to make good 508, something that is really important. If you need me to say that I'm not a pornographer and do not encourage the use of pornography, I'm happy to say that also. Hopefully, from the bulk of my work, this is obvious to many. Again, I apologize to anyone this carelessness has upset. -Allan >Please, I hope this does not happen again. I do find the >aforementioned disrespectul and degrading to the value of the female. > >Mary Ann >