Roberto Abraham Scaruffi

Wednesday, 16 September 2015

Humans Are Free-Blog



Posted: 15 Sep 2015 10:00 PM PDT
Avocados are nutritious, delicious, and versatile in the kitchen. They’re also expensive and many of them come from California, a state experiencing a harsh drought.

We certainly wish them the best for their crops and livelihoods, but you can also grow your own avocado trees at home. How?

Step 1: Starting

Remove the seed from the avocado and gently wash any of the fruit still stuck to the seed.


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Posted: 15 Sep 2015 09:00 PM PDT
by Scott McMan, GhostTheory via In5D

We’ve all heard of alternate dimensions and universes. Many believe we are just a frequency away from an alternate existence. Still others claim that beings from other dimensions pop in and out of our world at will, somewhat likeThe Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy.

Now a story comes to us out of Spain about a woman who claims to have woken up one day to find her life and past had changed.  Unfortunately, she remembers a different reality than those who know her best.

Lerina García, a 41 year old, well educated professional opened her eyes one morning to discover she was in what she later assumed to be an alternate universe existence of her own life.


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Posted: 15 Sep 2015 08:00 PM PDT
It’s probably not something you think about every day, whether or not the foods you are eating could contain carcinogens, but with almost 1.5 million people diagnosed with some type of cancer just last year, perhaps it’s time to look at what is in our foods that could be causing such a huge number of new cancer patients.

by Natural On

Here is a list of the top 10 foods that you most likely consume every day that may contain carcinogens or be suspected of causing cancer.

1. Microwave Popcorn

Those little bags of popcorn are so convenient to just stick in the microwave, you wouldn’t think for a minute that they could be dangerous to your health, but they are.


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Posted: 15 Sep 2015 07:00 PM PDT
The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission is considering a move to eliminate the “Linear No-Threshold” (LNT) basis of radiation protection that the U.S. has used for decades and replace it with the “radiation hormesis” theory — which holds that low doses of radioactivity are good for people.

by Karl Grossman, Counter Punch

The change is being pushed by “a group of pro-nuclear fanatics — there is really no other way to describe them,” charges the Nuclear Information and Resource Service (NIRS) based near Washington, D.C.

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