Thứ Hai, 13 tháng 2, 2017

Waching daily Feb 13 2017

this is actually a really interesting

viewpoint to view the run-out zones for

rock falls from glacier point usually

we're looking either across the valley

over at Glacier Point or down at the

bottom looking up and those are valuable

views as well but this is really useful

to be able to be up here and look down

and from right here i can see run out

zones for about five different rockfall

events that have occurred you know in

the past decade or so the cliffs are

eroding very slowly grain by grain all

the time but when suddenly you know a

piece of the cliff that's 200 feet wide

and a hundred feet tall and 20 feet

thick just falls off the cliff and falls

thousand feet to the valley floor and

breaks up in all these pieces you know

that's a really different style of

erosion

we look around you somebody Valley bc

abundant evidence that rock falls have

been occurring for thousands of years

yosemite valley is a glacially car

canyon and since glaciers retreated

about 15,000 years ago rockfall has been

the major force shaping this landscape

we don't always know what causes a

rockfall in particular event

sometimes it's obvious and that there

might have been a large rainstorm or

snowstorm and then caused a lot of

seepage and so we surmise that that

seepage must have caused the rockfall

it's not always the case sometimes

rockfalls happened without any node

trigger so it could just happen on a

nice bright summer sunny day we had

decided to rent bikes to ride around the

valley we only hear about an hour and

heard this loud thunderous roar and

couldn't tell where the sound was coming

from and looked around and I thought

rocks falling off the wall over to my

right

black koala

how to get my camera off the bike as

quickly as I could

that's why the footage is a little shaky

how to take the wide-angle lens off of

it and was lucky enough to catch the

third rockfall

play that piece

in the particular rockfall that was

captured on video you can see a rock

slab detaching from the cliff face sort

of skipping down the cliff face hitting

a prominent ledge breaking up into a

bunch of pieces and some of those

individual pieces are 40 50 feet on the

side and those pieces that are free

falling through the air spinning on

their way down they fall several hundred

feet and then they impact the talus

slope at the bottom

and some of those huge boulders will be

moving down the talus slope at 40 50

miles an hour

snapping large trees like matchsticks

and going all the way down to the base

of the talus slope in the valley floor

was standing at the base of the rockfall

that happened on august 26 of last year

2009 and this is one of the rocks that

fell from it

I thought they were about that big you

know because we're about a half mile

away so they didn't seem that big but

now looking at it there it's there yuge

it's amazing to think that came down

from up there and then bounce i guess it

must have bounced right and prior to

august of 2009 this slope at large oak

trees on it but when several thousand

tons of rock came down off the cliff and

landed in this area and then move down

the talus slope those boulders basically

wiped out all the trees that were on

this slope and this talus slope leads

right down to the floor of Yosemite

Valley and just beyond the edge of the

talus slope is the want a hotel if these

Rock Falls were occurring in a remote

valley they would be of scientific

interest only but because these Rock

Falls are occurring in Yosemite Valley

narrow Valley with nearly four million

visitors a year they are more than a

spectacular natural process depending on

where and when a rockfall occurs it can

have potentially serious consequences in

1971 in 1972 there were two large rock

falls they came off the face of elephant

rock this was the impact area for the

March 1987 middle brother rockfall this

is the impact area for the July tenth

1996 happy isles rockfall this Boulder

hear that i'm standing on roughly 400

ton Boulder that came down in October of

2008 so this Boulder here is an old

rockfall boulder and you can tell that

this is an old rockfall boulder because

it's covered in lichen and moss it's not

a fresh boulder now in contrast this

Boulder here is fresh it has no moss or

lichen growing on it and this Boulder is

just like those other boulders that came

down from early

Rock Falls the differences when this

Boulder came down in October of 2008

these structures were here in Korea

village and the consequences of that are

obvious a scary situation hitting

visitors at Yosemite today for the

second time in as many days a rockslide

is it the parks Curry Village area we're

getting some eyewitness accounts of that

rock slide that hit this morning sending

people running and crying in fear and

there are some unconfirmed reports of

injuries in that area and we've got some

pictures from kcra3 livecopter3 HD was

over the scene of that walk slide this

morning that took place at about seven

o'clock our primary concern is saving

people's lives 15 people have died from

rock falls in yosemite national park in

the last 150 years and that's not an

insignificant number it is much smaller

than the number of people that have died

in Yosemite streams and rivers and it's

certainly much smaller than the number

of people that have died in traffic

accidents but one big rock fall at the

wrong place at the wrong time could

dramatically increase that number and

that's why we are focusing on learning

everything we can about rockfalls using

laser scanning computer modeling

monitoring of the cliffs but the scope

of trying to understand all these

complexities and all of these different

rock faces to a point where we can start

to predict rockfalls is going to be

really challenging predicting Rock Falls

is a very difficult scientific question

to go after it similar to predicting

earthquakes you know rockfalls can

happen anytime and so we're interested

in determining how often and when

essentially where

so much of what we know of the assembly

landscape the iconic clips of El Capitan

and Half Dome the forest to talus slopes

the big boulders out the floor of the

valley all these features

oh they're existence to rock falls and

Rock Falls have been occurring in

Yosemite for thousands of years and they

will continue for thousands morale

For more infomation >> DISCOVER ROCK FALL AT YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK - Duration: 8:54.

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DISCOVER GRANITE AT YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK - Duration: 7:35.

most of the national parks in the United

States were founded on their geology

Yellowstone displays volcanic features

the Grand Canyon shows millions of years

of sedimentary history and here in

Yosemite the geologic story is primarily

one of granite

granted is what's known as an igneous

rock which means it's born of fire it

cooled and solidified from magma or

molten rock and when magma erupting on

the surface we think of it as lava

basically granite started off as

something similar to that it was red hot

fluid rock but instead of making it up

to the surface interrupting as lava in a

volcano it stayed many miles below the

surface and cool they're very slowly

over thousands of years and because it

cooled so slowly it allowed very large

crystals to form it's a very

coarse-grained rock and that's the key

to its strength this rocks been a long

time at high temperatures cooled very

slowly and that allowed a lot of the

cracks to be annealed out of it making a

very strong rock so the glaciers had a

hard time moving it and that's what

allows you to carve the kind of

landscape that you can see over my

shoulder here

granite is among the toughest rocks on

the planet

I mean it's very very strong stuff so

when glaciers are moving through here

they certainly were able to a road and

sculpt the landscapes on but a lot of

the domes the smooth ridges that we see

up here in the high country there really

a testament to the fact that glaciers

weren't able to do a lot of a roading of

this landscape one of the things that

makes you a semi such a great place for

us as geologists to work is that nature

has taken these rocks and polish them

for us and so we can come out here and

literally crawl around on her hands and

knees looking at beautifully polished

specimens that in places are polished

almost as well as a commercial company

would polish up your kitchen countertops

for you so we can see the relationships

among these minerals we can see into the

guts of what was a magma chamber and see

what was going on then frozen in time

for us every visitor to yosemite I think

experiences granted in some way I mean

you can't hardly not experienced granted

a park like this where most of what you

see is granted on that can range from

just taking a quick stroll off the side

of the road to a place like homestead

point2 taking the hike up half dome

to the summit to spending for five days

climbing up el capitan I think more than

most visitors rock climbers have a

really good sense for granted

climber's take advantage of lots of the

geologic features of the granite such as

these feldspar knobs that stick out such

as the occasional cracks such as some of

the dark blobs of different kind of rock

in the granite that weather out that you

can use for handholds and footholds

ok so what minerals he got so far

five-time chords and potassium felt

would be what else might you expect is

like my class it's a first-year seminar

at the University of North Carolina we

come out here every fall and we always

bring them into Yosemite for at least a

day because it's an experience that

everyone needs to have as soon as

possible in their lives in Yosemite is a

great place to just come learn more

about granitic rocks you'll see them

everywhere you can easily walk around on

them look at them closely and I think it

helps that you can be studying these

rocks in such an inspiring place you

know where the landscape just sort of

opens your mind up to trying to

understand it better when I walk around

here and look at the Granite's I think I

understand a lot about how most of the

features that i see formed I can see

cracks that filled with magma I can see

blobs of a dark magma that were caught

up in a lighter magma and we can

understand that by studying it by doing

chemical analyses by doing experiments

to try to duplicate some of these things

but there are a lot of features out here

the none of us understand

you walk around on these glaciated

surfaces you can find a lot of really

unusual things some of them i think we

understand some of them are great

mysteries

I've been to this place maybe half a

dozen times and and I really have no

idea how this formed it's one of the

weirdest things I've ever seen in the

granite things like this is kind of

humbling I think we understand a lot

about the Granite's in Yosemite and how

they farm and over what time period they

form and so forth but you walk around

the corner you're into something like

this and it's really humbling it says

there are a lot of mysteries out there

still left solve

I think a lot of visitors when they come

to the park they're not thinking about

geology per se but you know they're

they're here to experience this

beautiful place

it's right here in the core of Yosemite

that we have the best exposure of

granite and that's also where we have

the most amazing landscapes in 12

meadows in yosemite valley they are a

direct result of the granite here

For more infomation >> DISCOVER GRANITE AT YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK - Duration: 7:35.

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DISCOVER BLACK OAKS AT YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK - Duration: 8:07.

everybody knows what an oak tree is but

you don't necessarily associate oaks

with the mountains most people are

thinking of conifers you know our pines

and in that sort of thing and so when

they come to yosemite valley they

quickly realize and identify a tree that

is familiar of course this tree is is

beautiful and most people are quite

content with just a beautiful tree but

there's these other levels this tree has

been vitally important to the wildlife

and an integral part of the human

history here

so this crime i'm estimating is probably

about five feet in diameter near the

base and I would correlate through an

age of about 250 to 300 years old

unlike conifers they change throughout

the season was conifers are green

throughout the year oaks like the black

oak are deciduous so they lose early

winter look dad in the winter but

they're actually still alive

springtime comes around the leaves start

to unfurl and those leaves are coated

with little tiny red hairs and as that

leaf gets bigger those red hairs start

to disappear the pendulum catkins are

the clusters of male flowers that appear

when the leaves first come out in the

spring time and they pollinate the field

map wires on different trees and female

flowers are really inspect with small

green flowers that are normally seen my

visitors summertime the the leaves have

expanded and its trying to soak up as

much Sun as it 10 those flowers that

would have been pollinated in the spring

are now starting to turn into acorns

these oak woodlands are some of the most

diverse habitats in all of California

and the reason for that diversity is the

Acorn the Acorn that's attracting the

wildlife black bear mule deer California

ground squirrel and probably the most

obvious the Acorn woodpecker so the

Acorn woodpecker is collect blacker

acorns and other corns and a lot of

times they tend to cash them in certain

trees so you'll find hundreds of

thousands of these acorns in holes of

the drill into the trio really quite

remarkable find one

not only is the Acorn important wildlife

but you know human history here we have

an extensive human history and a large

portion of their diet was tied to these

black ok courts

this tree is the one that was giving up

all the Acorn seat

it's a good one and let's see here's

another one here and there

well the black oak was very important to

the first people they all want EG people

and to the assembly Indians and 27 CR me

what can motivate why you people they're

all 11 Brad defendants my story starts

with acorn when I came to the valley

hero good number of years ago and i was

introduced to the Indian people at the

indian village and course intermarried

there and then I learned a lot of story

about the Acorn from my husband's

grandmother Lucy tell us she said that

you have to lift the acorns dry has to

dry thoroughly and what it dry she says

then you can crack it open

ok there you hear that snap see whatever

snaps like that it tells you it's going

to be a good acorn then we can peel it

open like this and i always say be good

acorn be good so you're not guaranteed

you're going to have a good acorn every

every time you crack it you know because

you know it's just only natural that you

might have some that don't death that

aren't good

I was newly married in the village and I

could hear this pounded you know

pounding pounding pounding and i was

wondering what that was so I came out of

the house and I went over to reduce you

tell us his house was and she was

sitting out there like I'm seeing here

with a party around she's putting your

acorns you'll be surprised how quick you

can get your flower when you do this way

they some of it's already turning into

flour down there

the flower

some of my favorite things in this part

are the more subtly beautiful things

that might not notice right off but once

you get tuned into that you become a big

fan for the rest of your life

to me the black oak tree is the most

beautiful beautiful tree because of the

food that he gives to the people i like

to use anyway

black cloak is very special

For more infomation >> DISCOVER BLACK OAKS AT YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK - Duration: 8:07.

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DISCOVER HORSETAIL FALL AT YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK - Duration: 8:36.

I mean horsetail fall is an amazing

natural phenomenon if you see it under

the right circumstances when there's

enough water when the lights right

this thin ribbon of water just glowing

neon orange with the cliff in the shade

behind it so it just seems like it has

its own sort of light that there's

there's nothing else creating it so it's

it's really an amazing and beautiful

thing to see you know even if you don't

photograph it just standing there

watching it under those circumstances is

I think a really cool thing horsetail

falls I've always called El Capitan fall

was something we saw in the spring every

year and was wonderful but it was a sort

of an ephemeral waterfall that if you

had a good snow year and you had a lot

of water at once it was pretty

spectacular the earliest photograph of

course their fault that I know it was

made by Ansel Adams sometime in the

thirties and it's black and white it's

it's hard to tell whether he or anyone

from that era knew about you know that

orange color that orange glow on course

they'll fall at that certain time of

year even if Ansel Adams didn't know

about it

beep I didn't care because he's

photographing black-and-white so you

know what does he care about some orange

color this is an Ansel Adams photograph

of the horsetail falls or or el capitan

falls in a profile view this was taken

around 1952 according to his notes the

colors there but but his camera is only

going to produce a black-and-white image

and his exposure and his treatment of

the darkroom was such to make it look

like what he wanted it to be not

necessarily what you and I would see at

that same time the first photograph of

that neon orange glow on horsetail fall

that that I know over i think anyone

knows of was made by Galen ral very

famous photographer in 1973 I think and

he describes being here in the valley

being kind of on the other side of the

valley and seeing that light on

horsetail fall and driving around the

valley exceeding the speed limit to get

to a spot and photograph it and I think

his photograph is is still one of the

best that I've ever seen of it

hi I'm Tony Ryall we're at the mountain

light gallery in Bishop California we're

looking at my father Gallagher Alice

famous image of last light on horse

he'll fall on El Capitan 38 years later

after thousands of people of photograph

the fall i think he would be flattered

that so many people are coming to

photograph this rare phenomena

well we're here because we want to see

the famous fire falls i don't because he

wants to see I'm the photographer

well you don't get a cds in anywhere in

a world where I think this is a more

special waterfall glowing red where you

got there

yeah well it looks a little bit like the

old far fold with the used to have off

the glacier point the Firefall basically

was around five in the afternoon they

would build a bonfire light a bonfire of

red fir bark right on the edge of

Glacier Point and burned down and

usually about nine o'clock it was just a

pilot red coals and they had these long

pushers they opened the little gate and

started pushing and they tried to keep a

steady flow of the coals going over the

edge until all the cold spring on

and the waiting fire tenders push the

coals over the brink silently the

glowing cascade bands out into a fiery

cataract drifting down in slow majestic

motion for a fleeting moment its beauty

origin spellbound then you gather it up

as your most treasured memory of

yosemite valley of enchantment

we're hoping to capture that that

fleeting moment when nature kind of

comes together and produce something

spectacular i think if the sunlight

cooperates and the clouds don't come in

we could we could have something that'll

be really special trying to photograph

for still fall gives you an appreciation

for the movement of the Sun that the

changing angles of the Sun during the

year you know the changing water flow

from the snowpack in the temperature

only occurs in February for two week

period and doesn't occur every single

year it depends on if there's water

flowing if you've got a nice clear sky

you have any clouds or any fog you won't

get this so you may miss it for years

and may not occur

that's one thing is a photographer you

learn more about whether than anything

else and just looking at this I'm hoping

that it doesn't you know get anymore

included anymore tight between those

series cloud as the sun starting to set

the shadows will run across the face of

El Capitan that light source will will

start to shrink in and just hit the fire

fall or hit the waterfall and cause the

water to glow yellow orange red makes it

look like lava that makes the picture

very especially if you can take good

pictures because is that nothing to do

with your technique all with anything is

just

well the luck you sit here and you watch

this gray and silver and white and

pretty soon a little pink comes up

and then it gets redder and redder and

it's it likes up like like someone put

makeup on it

I mean obviously there's the photography

aspect and then there's people who like

Yosemite and if you happen to like both

of things then that's probably why you

want to keep trying to come back i'm

sure many of these people have come

every year they don't just come once no

matter what your your level of expertise

'as you're going to go home with

pictures that you're going to love

because it's hard to take a picture of

you so many this is great for divers

probably excuse to come out here see the

sights good excuse to come up here and

spend some time you can't go anywhere

without getting something special

everything here is special everything

from the air you breathe to sunrise the

Sun sets the fog in the valley

it just goes on and on I don't know it's

just breathtaking me just breathtaking i

think that's it there's always another

photo there's always another experience

in the exact same spot you just need to

be open it just keeps giving gift after

gift after gift

For more infomation >> DISCOVER HORSETAIL FALL AT YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK - Duration: 8:36.

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DISCOVER BIG TREES AT YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK - Duration: 8:33.

greatest sense of what constitutes the

large

deficit or the vast when you're in the

presence of a giant sequoia I think that

we adjust ourselves to its scale and

once we make that adjustment we're with

you can easily be overwhelmed by it i

mean that it's not just that there's one

there's a force to them you know so it's

pretty it's pretty impressive it's rare

for succour to be 300 feet tall they're

usually not quite as tall as a football

field is long but they can easily be 20

to 30 feet in diameter at ground level

as you get close to these trees it's

amazing how large and impressive they

truly are these trees are thousands of

years old

whether they're closer to one or two or

three thousand years of age it's hard to

wrap your mind around the time that

these individual trees have been on the

face of the earth

we've got a lot of precipitation we've

got deep facial soils here we've got the

Western aspect which gives them a lot of

warmth but squeezes the clouds as they

come off the pacific ocean and it's just

the perfect condition for growing the

biggest trees in the world there's

people visiting this area from all over

the world and they come to the mariposa

grove and they think all the trees are

big when you come to a Sequoia forest or

a lot of areas throughout so many

national park you can be dwarfed by

sugar pine trees you can be dwarfed by

ponderosa pine and really large other

species other than just giant sequoia

trees so this is certainly a big tree by

anyone's measure not as big as the

biggest sugar Pines in the world but in

in any setting a magnificent specimen

but just dwarfed when you look over your

shoulder at the the Giant Sequoias here

so that magnificent sugar pine we were

looking at viewing it from here in the

shadow of this giant sequoia expiry by

comparison in the eighteen sixties when

early european americans were exploring

these groves they had a hard time trying

to explain to people back it camper back

at the cabins how big these trees were

the Grizzly giant is in the neighborhood

of twenty seven and a half

feet in diameter it's about 96 feet in

circumference you know these trees are

so large that tunnels were cut through

them so you'll find a lot of old

photographs of early stage coaches

horse-drawn stages whole troops of

Calvary lined up on fallen trees just to

try to showcase their mammoth-sized it's

kind of ironic that probably the most

photographed really throughout all the

time that your son has been a tourist

attraction has been the now fallen one a

tunnel tree wanna tunnel tree the most

photographed three on the globe that was

got to accommodate the height of a

stagecoach the tree that you can drive

through there were a lot of photographs

of that tree became part of popular

culture and some people probably even

displays is really a tree that you can

drive through is there a tree so big

that you can put a road through it

measuring and something bigger than your

car is pretty good size for many people

i like to their trip to yosemite

national park would be driving through a

living tree and this is what's become of

that tree the whole was originally

cutback in 1881 and it stood fine and in

all its glory until the winter of

1968-69 when a severe snow storm brought

it down one of the things about giant

sequoia and their mortality is that it

usually is caused by a wind in the

wintertime and heavy burden of snow

they can also be caused by human beings

just selling them for their own

individual collective reasons back in

the eighteen sixties when groves were

being explored and discovered throughout

a lot of California people have very

different views of these big trees some

people looked up at these mammoth trees

and were in AA other people looked up at

these big trees and saw board feet and

dollar signs

that's part of the conflict in the

dynamic that has always existed in

regard to these trees in our culture you

know what are they good for you know the

good for the heart or they good for the

pocketbook

it amazes me that in the midst of our

country's civil war back in 1864 when

nobody honestly knew what the future of

america was destined to be Congress

discussed whether or not the assembly

valley and this Grove of giant sequoia

trees and mariposa grove of giant

sequoias should be protected for all

time that idea of preserving a grove of

big trees so they wouldn't be cut down

by Lumberjacks so they wouldn't be

harmed by humans was the first idea of

its kind that later led to the larger

expansion of national parks in the

western part of the United States the

idea of national parks is wrapped up in

the roots of these big trees you can

talk about national parks without

talking about trees you can talk about

being a ranger without talking that's a

giant sequoia that's right here it's

even who we are as an agency when people

protected these trees

yes they were protecting this unique

ancient species but they were literally

protecting this tree the fact that it's

been standing here for hundreds of years

that when people come and visit this

Grove in another hundred years hopefully

this same tree will be what they're

standing by and it'll be even larger

than what we see today

many people describe when they find

themselves in the sequoia for said it's

like entering a cathedral and people

begin to automatically talk in hushed

tones and it's just something about

being in the presence of giant sequoias

that seems to be contagious for many

people

maybe it's good to have something out

there that Dwarfs us that's alive that

makes us realize that our concerns and

our problems are really petty are very

small and they're not really as big a

problem as we think I think that's the

value of national parks to some degree

in the living extension of that are the

giant sequoia that we can be in their

shade and feel that our problems are

small

For more infomation >> DISCOVER BIG TREES AT YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK - Duration: 8:33.

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STORM OF DESPERATION... - Duration: 21:15.

maybe we can fix our camera now here we go

luckily there was no cameras in her room

it's everywhere that was kind of creepy

ok so where do i fix my best posters or

fix the camera at do I just talked to

her

you got a whole suite you can sit at my

desk and fix your camera

now let's not take some knowledge of

candles man is busted fix it so broken

so i can't fix this thing

are these your photo yeah i just put

them today on the face

wait

before no way what did you take this you

took this photo your breath in the

bathroom today you set off the alarm

that's why I'm even raised after you it

totally makes sense you have seen my

life now tell me the truth max

i was there i was there hiding in the

corner and you're a ninja I knew I would

have cut my head off

I just took a butterfly photo that is so

badass

oh yeah I almost wet myself I saw the

gun so did you recognize me

not at all not at all your hair and

clothes are so different i hope so i'm

sure this is all so weird to you after

coming back like you said it's been that

kind of day so you must have overheard

our conversation just a bit just a bit

there's no way you didn't hear every

single valve ok i only heard something

about my drugs but that's it now for the

big questions did you tell anybody

I wanted to do what he going on from

rampage Nathan friends like a five buddy

the soil punk-ass bee-atch

he would have shot you Chloe that the

fact i should tell the principal the

principal are you still 12 that drunk

jackass only cares about cash Blackwell

Academy don't trust him

seriously I didn't blab to anybody

promise

thank god I'll tell you more sunday and

i seriously owe you max

also there was a good idea we didn't

tell the principal now

oh man my mistakes are going to help me

I know it was your birthday last month

this is my real father camera i want you

to happen

that's so cool you remember my first day

but I can't take this

of course you can my dad would be pissed

if I never used it and now I know it'll

be used awesomely and all tonight this

picture of the symbol of our unions go

yes of course cool thank you

this camera is so sweet now that we got

that money shit out of the way I feel

like stage-diving the straps like

just crazy yep i'm fucking insane in the

brain that pickup only one task or take

my picture with your cameras

ok looks like they're having fun now

and we will do as we are commanded of

the wooden from starting six space-time

fucking roles they advance we become my

stock after our first person to be able

to make your host right all the photos

shit really wow oh you're dumb music not

even on o.o all the fucking way you need

to hide now like that will kill me if

you find you here

yeah I'm changing is that ok find a

place to hide

now the closet I'm economy would apply

because it i'm changing me a minute

smart just let me know what we do in the

second like Bryce other underneath the

bed nuts but it's not a kid anymore I

can't hide under the fan

are you kidding me what I go I'm giving

you exactly 30 shit open but don't catch

one through I don't over here by the

quarter

what's going on in here why is she here

then your business

I don't like strangers here that's

freaking she's not a stranger this is my

friend

great another one of your friends i

tried to hide

I'm so sorry one of my guns is missing

did you take it

oh god I didn't take your stupid gun you

do not believe in gun control is that

grass you weren't talking up again and

here we have guns we'd you're tripping

balls i'm sick of your disrespect

tell me the truth that's an order it's

not my pot it's from Max is this true

shit shit

oh no what do we do take the blame for a

friend obviously at yeah my pot so

you're bringing drugs into my home

how about if I call the police that

screw up your spotless Blackwell record

you do seem to get around max I'm sick

of you losers dragging Chloe down mr.

you sure do like a pop up and start

trouble like this afternoon

you don't have anything smart to say now

there's a hell away from her man stop

harassing my friends you don't have any

friends like you know you're not even a

real cop your fucking security guard I

was a soldier Khloe and max if I see you

here again you'll learn all about real

trouble

oh my job for taking the heat we totally

smack it punk ass down max he's no match

for you and me now that was an epic lint

not really anyway you know we got the

window there is one cool place we can

hang in a pickle man that did not go

well for me if I want to keep my black

wolf scholarship I shouldn't lie for

anybody even Chloe I have to think about

my own future

oh shit

now can we get out of the out of the

room before I don't know maybe I should

rely rewinded time find out if it don't

know the Hurricanes the coven that good

there was a lighthouse you know she's

gonna go down

oh it's nice scenery but i will say that

look at the Sun shut up here how's it

going mr. veers is this authors are

totally reminds me of when we were kids

come on

well pop haha

daijobu her been hearing forever so why

do I feel like it was just here

the dream this is each exact same path I

was on during my nightmare today so no

something's going to happen signs

lighthouse what this building before

trash littering this place so warrants

for system lucky you can always escape

but the order today

no problem and you are still to be tell

a big secret

check that I haven't heard can so long

Oh campfire looks like the use of

Arcadia Bay still come up here to party

graffiti just under 1 it who's doing all

the graffiti clearly that Bigfoot's are

everywhere

ok the let's go through a glorious day

the bird

what is this what is this i don't

remember this at all but it seems like

it's been here for a long time

interesting well they're closed through

the democracy for it so we always be

able to find each other in case of

emergency

ok maybe we need to meet with her and

then past or whatever and you're Chloe

as day

ok so you don't want to be alone have a

seat

you're in a good mood my pleasure my

pleasure

feels nice out here after all that drama

you really took one for Team Khloe I'm

not as brave as you and David is indeed

a step douche who sorry you had to

experience it for tents you have to live

with you and he always been this way

ever since my desperate mom dragged his

ass to our home

I never trusted David

he freaked out on Kate he freaked out on

for Kate Marsh today I know her she's

cool

only that prick would bully her we have

some kind of weird agenda he has a lot

of secret files Rambo still thinks he's

gathering enemy intelligence did you

take a peek

well yeah well yeah I couldn't help it

never change what did you find

creepy photos of Kate Marsh other black

wolf students this dude takes his job

too seriously still think there's a war

or something

he's a total surveillance fetish where

they're like and in the house I knew you

didn't know Chloe your house is under

surveillance

are you talking about there are cameras

all over the house I saw it on a monitor

in the garage

I knew it he's the hell fucking paranoid

i'll keep this a secret from our

sometimes ignorance is bliss

no wonder I'm deliverable everybody in

this town knows everybody's secrets

what makes it a secret oh yes what made

him he could easily asshole himself at

shit cup blacks and he goes me with some

drug environment like that humans should

hold father didn't card me he was too

rich for the place in your waist and he

kept flashing bills just tell me what

happened Chloe now I was an idiot are

you so blaze it was easy squad you need

money that bad actually sio2 kind and I

thought I'd have enough for me and

Rachel

what happened so what about you and

Nathan we went to his room block well we

drank and I laughed his rich kid

bullship he was one step ahead and put

something in my beer

call me i can't believe this i mean i do

then what i know i passed out on the

floor i woke up and that purpose smiling

how important the Carolina everything

was a blur

I tried to kick him in the balls and

broke a lamp making freak so I managed

to bum rush the door and get the hell

out that is seriously fucked up that is

self fucked up

what did you hand I figured I would make

him pay me to keep quiet so many and he

brought a gun that was Nathan's last

mistake he is still dangerous and

apparently he owns the police though

we're here dangerous Chloe not just to

you that they even tell anyone

Nathan Prescott better watch his back

now i will always be here to save you

you are here today left you save me I'm

still tripping on that thing you after

all these years feels like destiny

Edward maybe bad word

apparently

this is destiny i hope we can find

Rachel I mr. max

the ship is taken away everyone I've

ever loved like a drop a bomb on Arcadia

Bay and turns fucking glass

Oh

don't know i'll now it's happening

oh now we're back at the pass ball

happening

am I here again because you

I guess you gotta follow go to the year

I know the hurricanes coming

oh shit i have to find out

ok let's go around this side but we

don't get my damn brother

oh ok well that's not helpful and we

actually get over it i'll be ready to

power and there we go go go for it falls

on you horse off on you

now that's a lighthouse that's my dog

was falling out over the tree the tree

my god I'm shit go go

who keeps those things there are you

serious

there's the hurricane the rock airport

but I was back

re one that shit

go go go oh my god our shit

there we go

you've got to meet you inside our it's

not let me going

for

whatever go

super maybe are you going to read the

newspaper at this time of a girl having

it is training not only four days away

shit

he did

where it's really with had a trick

are we going to make a decision Molly

you're here i'm back for real it's real

home and struck math what's going on

totally blacked out I didn't black out i

had another vision

the town is going to get wiped out by a

tornado or didn't get about five points

every 20 years just no no no I thought I

can actually feel the electricity in

Monte depressed ok

probably i'm not crazy there's something

else I have to tell you something

part4 talk to me max I have the same

division earlier in class when I came

out of it

I discovered I could reverse time like I

said not crazy but high right listen to

me how do you think they do in fact i

was wasting time

yeah sure I saw you get shot Chloe so

you actually tie i was able to go back

and hit the pirate okay i think your

heat now with a great imagination but

this is an anime or video game people

don't have those powers max I don't know

what i have but i have it and I'm scared

shitless you need to get high

it's been an LSA and fucking day

no what the hell is this

hopefully it's like 80 degrees how I'm

the cheese storms coming max

start from the beginning three

everything

that it

now it's the music 36

don't repeat your mom

how's more Hawaiian black you got jack

however what the character was I was in

fact or with

who

and there's Mitch

Rachel file

Oh does the dad have a file on Rachel

how they shared if she maybe he he

snagged her

oh my cat that was episode 1 of life is

trade i gotta say this was little

fantastic i love this game this was i

don't know why i put this thing off for

so long I've have a listing in my team

inventory my Steam library for quite

some sometime is is is a such a good

game it's so interactive and you could

fix your mistakes i love it

oh man with that if you enjoyed this

video hit that like button and subscribe

for more otherwise thank you guys for

watching

life is strange and as always you guys

in the next one

and

For more infomation >> STORM OF DESPERATION... - Duration: 21:15.

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What is the Difference Between Oral Sedation and IV Sedation? | Dr. Donald Wilcox - Duration: 1:12.

Because of our use of oral sedation here in the office we're often asked how well it works

and how does it compare to IV sedation.

I've done hundreds of cases of both.

We had discontinued the IV sedation here in the office because we found that the oral

sedation was just as effective and much easier and safer for us to provide dental care.

Cause usually when people are having dentistry done under sedation they're in our office

we're performing a large number of procedures at once, the oral sedation is slower to take

effect.

You're using similar medications as IV sedation, which provides sedation and amnesia which

is great for the apprehensive patient, but the medications don't wear off as fast so

it's easier for us to provide comprehensive dentistry.

IV sedation is great for short procedures; maybe it's getting wisdom teeth out or something

that is a fairly short procedure.

But for our comprehensive restorative or cosmetic cases where the work is going to take longer

the IV sedation is certainly superior in our mind and much safer for the patient.

For more infomation >> What is the Difference Between Oral Sedation and IV Sedation? | Dr. Donald Wilcox - Duration: 1:12.

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20 Don't give up this person / situation - Duration: 5:46.

For more infomation >> 20 Don't give up this person / situation - Duration: 5:46.

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2016 Edmonton Artists' Trust Fund Recipients - Duration: 10:18.

I think cities have different qualities

and if I had to give a one word quality

to Edmonton it would be community

My name is Conni Massing and

I'm a playwright and screen writer

I've worked in a theatre for a lot of my professional life

and I think there is something important about

sitting in community, watching a live performance

Seeing something of yourself in the people

onstage, and you carry that impression with you out into the world again.

And I think that can be life altering in a small way

I'm very fascinated by areas of the city

where people just pass through.

Um, kind of temporary spaces

like intersections and maybe even places where

people don't walk physically.

My name is Taryn Kneteman and I'm a visual artist

I guess I think art is important to community

because it can provide a little bit of a glimpse of quiet

or um a glimpse to look closely but also to look inside oneself

I'm interested in these spaces that maybe they appear empty or transitory

but they're really full of maybe just things

that from one perspective you don't know about until you look more closely.

Edmonton's just a very dynamic community.

Um, when I said I wanted to start a theatre company

people said, well, that's an interesting idea, how can I help?

And that's the kind of place Edmonton still is.

My name is Gerry Potter, I'm a writer, director and filmmaker

I started Workshop West in 1978.

A couple other companies that I've helped start are still going too.

Rising Sun Theatre.

I've been lucky in that I've been able to... I like starting things,

even though it's really hard.

Um, it's been a, Edmonton's been a good place to do that in,

it's a good place to build things in.

For me, I'm a theatre guy so I take inspiration from

people like Shakespeare.

His advice to the artist was to hold a mirror up

to nature. And I think art is something that reflects

the community back to itself.

I'm interested sort of in very classical theatre.

I love Shakespeare, but,

then I'm also interested in very new work,

so sort of the two ends of the spectrum.

My name is Jessy Ardern, I'm an actress and a playwright

here in Edmonton.

Theatre is something that absolutely has to be experienced in the moment

within a community, we tend to stay in our bubble, because that's what we're fed

what we have watched and what we're planning to watch is so tracked that

it's easy not to see anything that you hadn't planned on.

And it's very easy to stop watching or viewing something that

makes you uncomfortable.

And theatre is one of the few art forms where you...

there is an expectation that you will keep watching

that you will bear witness. And you gotta keep watching! For better or for worse.

I'm Dwayne Martineau, I am a visual artist and musician.

You can almost think of art as more of a verb than a noun.

It's something that is done, it's active, it's.. it's a form of community engagement

it's a form of creating communities.

A lot of my work um, visual arts work, revolves around sort of

explorations of the natural world.

I do a lot of experimental photography.

One of the great things about Edmonton is that in most of the neighbourhoods

that you live um, you know, you can go five minutes in some direction

and basically find yourself in an urban forest, or a piece of

you know, river valley.

[goodness Harriet.. laughing... off! off! Harriet off!]

I have um, writer's block a lot, and it is difficult

but I just feel compelled to keep telling stories and I feel compelled to be

creative. Um, my name's Jason Chinn and I'm a playwright in Edmonton.

I usually write about, um, the things that we don't talk about.

Kind of, secrets that we carry with us.

Whether it's sexuality or regret,

or things that are lurking underneath

that bubble up in unexpected ways.

I think it's very important that art makes us uncomfortable because

we can be complacent in our daily lives,

and we can turn a blind eye to injustices or things that maybe we should actually

confront... whether those are personal or out in the world, it's just a means for us

to do better and improve.

The places that I use usually, now in this present time is outdoors.

Um, I don't get inspired whenever I am in a studio set-up.

My name is Tony Olivares, I am a dancer, a choreographer, performer,

a visual dance artist, in the Edmonton area.

In terms of being an artist, creating art in a site specific place.

It just brings awareness to the space.

As an artist, I find it challenge, there's

a lot of challenge happening in those kind of spaces because they're just

you know, everything is unpredictable. It can be unpredictable.

And a specific place where we are is always giving you a different

vocabulary, it's pushing you to create a different vocabulary of movements.

I do a lot of voice memos in my car, a lot of the time you can hear the

signal going in the background, a lot of the time I'll be driving

and something will just pop in my head so I'll pull over and just hash through

a melody, and make up some words. I'm Lauren Gillis

I'm a singer-songwriter, I'm also known as Lucette.

I'm here, this is my parent's house. I've lived in Edmonton my whole life

and, was raised playing the piano behind me.

Art um, music, is thought provoking but it also brings people together.

I think art creates community. it's not only important to get new

opinions and new ideas but it's the one thing that I think brings

people together. It's not only the music community

but it's also just having that kind of, deeply rooted family life that I love

coming home to if I go on tour.

[singing... Out of the rain... out of the rain is there somebody out there

to help get me out of the rain.]

For more infomation >> 2016 Edmonton Artists' Trust Fund Recipients - Duration: 10:18.

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ЧТО ТАКОЕ ЛЮБОВЬ? / WHAT IS LOVE? - Duration: 7:11.

Love - what is it? Above this question for centuries

beating many philosophers and scientists. What medicine

He thinks about it? This will tell on another

secret dossier. Hello, my darlings!

not find in this world a man who would be spared

magical and at the same time mysterious feeling under

called love. For centuries many prominent

minds struggled with his unraveling, and poets and writers chanted

it in their works. The first mention of love

can be found in most ancient myths of Greece and

these ancient philosophers, Socrates, Plato and Aristotle,

We gave a lot of the world theories attempting to explain

her. According to the concepts Greeks love

divided into four types: 1. Eros - carnal love;

2. Storge - love friendly; 3. Agape - selfless,

selfless love and 4. Mania - mad love

- Obsession. Despite on all of the above, or

the ancient Greeks, nor the other enlightened nations of the past

It did not succeed in the dense to come to a solution perhaps

one of the most mysterious feelings. And what about today?

Is all technology and the achievements of modern

the world did not give us an answer to this question? partly

so, if we talk about medicine, it can be described

processes occurring in the body at the time of love,

but unfortunately dry tongue science without considering spiritual

sides of the issue, completely destroys the aura

romance and mystique surrounding love. What it says

the science? Dry figures Statistics It tells us that every

second in the world fall in love 3330 people and only one-third

of them have a mutual and love the way it turns out,

to fall in love There is very short

period of five seconds. The average duration of

feelings of love 2-3 years, but Unfortunately, only about

four hundred pairs of reach to create a family.

Hard to believe, but modern medicine treats

love as just a series of biochemical processes

taking place in our bodies. Lovers feel euphoria

and a surge of vitality under the influence of natural

hormones and chemicals produced by our

bodies at the time of love. According to some experts,

First chemicals launching the process of love,

They are pheromones. Pheromones are biologically

surfactants products external secretion secreted

certain species of animals which provide chemical

interaction between individuals one species. animal pheromones

familiar with every girl, since perfumes are very

often used substances is sexual stimulants

animal - musk, ambergris, civet and kastorium. Existence

the pheromones in humans is very controversial issue until

proven science. therefore pheromones topic worth discussing

separately in a future issues.

The following substances, are produced

in the body at the time of the first dating men and women,

They are dopamine and norepinephrine. They are formed directly

in the brain and are direct stimulants

nervous system. dopamine It is responsible for the feeling of satisfaction

and pleasure. thanks his action man becomes

stubborn and trying by any ways to woo

the object of passion. Influenced noradrenaline in Valentine

dramatically quickens the pulse and increased frequency

heart rate. The next substance coming into

fight under the banner of love is phenylethylamine. phenylethylamine

has an effect mostly on the frontal lobes of the brain

the brain responsible for the ability of to reason and analyze.

It was he responsible for the absence of appetite and conducting long

sleepless nights in dreams the object of adoration. The next

replace phenylethyl amine come endorphins. Endorphins

- A group of substances, often More hormones called

happiness. They cause man feeling ecstasy

and makes full to surrender to the senses. Exist

proverb: love Evil fall in love with a goat, with

who agrees and modern Science says that the wise

solution would be to wait acute period of love

before you marry. It turns under the influence

hormone of love are disabled areas of the brain responsible

for vigilance, fear, negative emotions, adequate

assessment of the world, completely ignored

all the disadvantages of the second half. After 1.5 - 2 years Chemical

storm boiling in organisms lovers, gradually

subsides. In place of passion and a mad desire come

feeling of tranquility, union and security. At that time

to the fore Work hormone vasopressin

and oxytocin. The main function hormone vasopressin - regulation

water-salt metabolism, but he has a different

no small mission - Cause monogamy,

that is, the desire to live and love only one

partner. Oxytocin More It is known as

hormone absolute reciprocity, can form a

during sexual intercourse, and in moments of psychic

proximity when in love They hold hands, pat

each other, or even just They are close by. Under the influence

this hormone in the beautiful half of humanity

there is a sense of well-being and security.

The next phrase may sound Surprisingly, the majority of

of these substances its structure and effects

like drugs. They cause human euphoria,

serenity, peace, joy at blunting

This ability to logically think. It turns out that

act of love on the human the body is akin to drug

dependence. No matter how dry was a scientific

language, but the finish date conversation still want

on a romantic note, the words great Russian writer

Leo Tolstoy: "Love - this is an invaluable

gift. This is the only thing we can give

and yet it is still you. " Love and be loved!

Do not be ill! Put huskies! I wish you health!

For more infomation >> ЧТО ТАКОЕ ЛЮБОВЬ? / WHAT IS LOVE? - Duration: 7:11.

-------------------------------------------

The Lego Batman Movie - What is the Password - Duration: 0:24.

What Is The Password

Iron Man Sucks

For more infomation >> The Lego Batman Movie - What is the Password - Duration: 0:24.

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garage door repair service killeen tx (254) 207-0323 - Duration: 0:53.

garage door repair service killeen tx (254) 207-0323

For more infomation >> garage door repair service killeen tx (254) 207-0323 - Duration: 0:53.

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There is a pokemon center | Minecraft pokefind - Duration: 16:01.

For more infomation >> There is a pokemon center | Minecraft pokefind - Duration: 16:01.

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6 REASONS WHY MANY PEOPLE THINK CHEMOTHERAPY & THE CANCER INDUSTRY IS A GIANT SCAM - Duration: 22:03.

6 REASONS WHY MANY PEOPLE THINK CHEMOTHERAPY & THE CANCER INDUSTRY IS A GIANT SCAM.

In 2016, approximately 1,685,210 new cases of cancer will be diagnosed in the United

States alone, and approximately 600,000 people will die from the disease. The number of new

cancer cases is 454.8 per 100,000 men and women per year, based on cases from 2008-2010.

Men have almost a 50 percent chance of contracting the disease at some point within their lifetime,

and women have a 1/3 chance. Pretty crazy isn�t it? (source)

In a time where so much information is coming to light, challenging the belief systems of

so many, it�s important to keep an open mind to new information to help us see through

what�s really been happening on our planet. It�s no secret that a small group of corporations

dominate almost every aspect of our lives, from energy to education, all the way to modern

day healthcare.

The Cancer Industry

One aspect of healthcare is the cancer industry, and while people still scoff at the idea that

there could be a suppression of cures and a lack of funding for proven alternative treatments,

this is a fact that continues to come to light and is necessary for people to acknowledge

if we are going to move forward and save millions of lives.

It�s important to accept the fact that, as Linus Pauling, Ph.D, and two time Nobel

Prize winner in chemistry told us, that �most cancer research is largely a fraud, and that

the major cancer research organisations are derelict in their duties to the people who

support them.�

Pauling�s �anger� with regards to cancer research is well documented, especially in

his book, How To Live Longer and Feel Better.

Dr. John Bailer, who spent 20 years on the staff of the National Cancer Institute and

is also a former editor of its journal, publicly stated in a meeting of the American Association

for the Advancement of Science that:

�My overall assessment is that the national cancer program must be judged a qualified

failure. Our whole cancer research in the past 20 years has been a total failure.�

These few quotes won�t tell you everything about what is going on, but the documentary

below will. It�s a 2 hour segment from the film, The Truth About Cancer.

The segment below features interviews with renowned health professionals from around

the world, so you can hear it directly from the horses mouth.

Most health professionals who are skeptical of the information below, often haven�t

done the research for themselves to stay updated with what is going on. Real medical education

goes well beyond medical school. As illustrated in the video below, medical school is largely

a brainwashing tool for pharmaceutical medicines. This is becoming more evident as information

keeps emerging that the average health professional has no idea about.

We got, hours and hours and hours on how to use, basically patented medicines, which as

you know, are what usually goes on a prescription pad as a molecule that can be patented which

means that it�s not found in nature�.And that�s what we get educated in.

� Dr. Jonathan V. Wright, M.D. Medical Director and Founder

The doctor is brainwashed when he/she gets out of medical school because the medical

school has too much subsidization of the professors who are being paid by the drug company, so

the professor never teachers any student in medical school, why don�t you try vitamin

C, they�re going to tell them the latest drug.

� Dr. Gary F. Gordon

Unfortunately, doctors today are simply taught how to prescribe drugs. Although their knowledge

of the human body and how it operates is fairly good, and they often have the best intentions

at heart, they are often being used to push an agenda, and it�s one of the primary causes

for the rise of disease in the past few decades. In fact, medical error is now the third leading

cause of death in the US.

Doctors get paid to write prescriptions. Over a century ago, the Carnegie and Rockefeller

foundations started to engineer the curriculum. They put their money into drug-based research

and made that the main focus of �healthcare�.

Since then, the Rockefeller�s and banking elite have been able to control and profit

from the drug industry. The AMA � which is the largest association of physicians in

the U.S. � enforces the drug-treatment paradigm by heavily lobbying Congress and publishing

one of the most influential journals, JAMA, which is largely funded by pharmaceutical

advertisers. It is also engaged in suppressing alternative health treatments, such as the

Royal Rife cancer cure.

�The medical profession is being bought by the pharmaceutical industry, not only in

terms of the practice of medicine, but also in terms of teaching and research. The academic

institutions of this country are allowing themselves to be the paid agents of the pharmaceutical

industry. I think it�s disgraceful.� � (source)(source) Arnold Seymour Relman (1923-2014), Harvard

Professor of Medicine and Former Editor-in-Chief of the New England Medical Journal

There is a problem that�s well known in the medical community, which is why John Ioannidis,

an epidemiologist at Stanford University School of Medicine published the most widely accessed

article in the history of the Public Library of Science (PLoS) entitled Why Most Published

Research Findings Are False. In the report, he stated that most current published research

findings are false.

This was more than 10 years ago, fast forward to today where a more recent �cry� to

the public masses came from Dr. Richard Horton, current editor-in-chief of The Lancet. He

stated that half of all the published literature could be false.

Check out the Truth About Cancer series for more.

It�s hard to believe that approximately one in every two people will develop some

form of cancer within their lifetime. As a result, cancer awareness has skyrocketed.

Millions of people around the globe are helping to raise money and awareness for cancer and

cancer treatment. This overwhelming support from the public just goes to show how many

good hearts are out there, and in no way should we dismiss that generous spirit. There are,

however, some important facts relating to this disease about which many people are still

unaware.

While it is of course disturbing that cancer rates are at all time time high, the prevalence

of this disease is causing people to take notice and to question, which is always a

good thing. People are becoming more aware of the disease, looking into alternative treatment

options and trying to determine the cause of this illness. People are starting to wonder

why so many of us are so sick. So despite how gloomy it may appear, there is hope for

all of us.

The 5 facts about cancer below are indeed disturbing, but what�s even more disturbing

is the fact hat nobody even talks about them. If we want to get to the root of this disease,

ignorance is not the answer. Hopefully this article helps you learn some important information

about cancer that you probably won�t hear much about in the mainstream. If you want

to find out what your personal cancer risk is, you can find out here: www.collective-evolution.com/a/cancer-truth

Questionable Cancer Research/Fraud

Linus Pauling, Ph.D, and two time Nobel Prize winner in chemistry, has revealed: �Everyone

should know that most cancer research is largely a fraud, and that the major cancer research

organizations are derelict in their duties to the people who support them.�

He is considered one of the most important scientists in history. He is one of the founders

of quantum chemistry and molecular biology, and was also a well known peace activist.

He was invited to be in charge of the Chemistry Division of the Manhattan Project, but refused.

He has also done a lot of work on military applications, and has pretty much done and

seen it all in the scientific field, so his words are not to be taken lightly.

And it�s not just Pauling making these kinds of statements. Many other well respected scientists,

who are definitely in a position to know about this type of thing, have made similar statements.

For example, Dr. Marcia Angell, a physician and longtime Editor in Chief of the New England

Medical Journal (NEMJ), which is considered to be one of the most prestigious peer-reviewed

medical journals in the world, said that:

It is simply no longer possible to believe much of the clinical research that is published,

or to rely on the judgement of trusted physicians or authoritative medical guidelines. I take

no pleasure in this conclusion, which I reached slowly and reluctantly over my two decades

as an editor of the New England Journal Of Medicine. (source)

Dr. Richard Horton, Editor in Chief of another one of the world�s most best known medical

journals, The Lancet, recently published a statement expressing that a large quantity

of published peer-reviewed science is actually completely false. He revealed:

The case against science is straightforward: much of the scientific literature, perhaps

half, may simply be untrue. Afflicted by studies with small sample sizes, tiny effects, invalid

exploratory analyses, and flagrant conflicts of interest, together with an obsession for

pursuing fashionable trends of dubious importance, science has taken a turn towards darkness.

(source)

A lot of the �credible� research out there has been supported and funded by the pharmaceutical

companies themselves, and much of it conflicts with the work of independent scientists from

all over the world.

The field of U.S. cancer care is organized around a medical monopoly that ensures a continuous

flow of money to the pharmaceutical companies, medical technology firms, research institutes,

and government agencies such as the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the National

Cancer Institute (NCI) and quasi-public organizations such as the American Cancer Society (ACS).

� Ralph Moss, Ph.D., quoted by John Diamond, M.D., & Lee Cowden, M.D. in Alternative Medicine:

The Definitive Guide to Cancer

People Are Actually Having Success With Alternative Treatments

A growing trend amongst people who have been diagnosed with cancer is to seek out alternative

treatment, and this is largely because so many people have reported solid success rates.

We can also attribute this shift to the vast amount of published scientific literature

pointing people in this direction. For example, here is a quick video clip of Dr. Christina

Sanchez, a molecular biologist who explains the power of THC. Other ingredients within

cannabis have also been shown to annihilate cancer tumours.Here is an older article with

just a few out of hundreds of studies sourced, just to give you an idea. It�s worrying

that no human clinical trials have been conducted on the use of cannabis to treat cancer, despite

the fact that scientists have known for decades that it is effective.

Mykala Comstock is a wonderful example of cannabis� efficacy; she had T-cell acute

lymphoblastic leukaemia, a very rare and aggressive form of childhood leukaemia. In July of 2012,

doctors discovered a basketball-sized mass of lymphoblasts in her chest. Her mass was

so large that she was not able to be sedated for risk of death from the pressure on her

esophagus and heart.

More people are to turning to other herbal remedies as well. Research has shown that

artemisinin, found in various plants, can also kill cancer cells.

Dietary changes are also taking a more prominent role in alternative cancer treatment. Chris

Wark, a man who had stage 3 colon cancer, credits his recovery to a vegan diet.

The point is, these stories are out there, and so is the science to back them up. It

makes you wonder why these aren�t considered mainstream treatment suggestions? Perhaps

it has something to do with the fact that these treatments cannot be patented?

There are only two approved treatments for cancer � radiation and chemotherapy.

Here is a clip from the Thrive documentary that gives us all something to think about.

Our Toxic Environment

�How could we have ever believed that it was a good idea to grow our food with poisons?�

� Jane Goodall

Billions of pounds of toxic chemicals are sprayed on our food and in the environment

every single year. We�re talking about organophosphates, chemicals that were used to kill people in

warfare during WW2. After decades of spraying, a number of alarming studies have been published

which lead to many of these chemicals being completely banned.

Children today are sicker than they were a generation ago. From childhood cancers to

autism, birth defects and asthma, a wide range of childhood diseases and disorders are on

the rise. Our assessment of the latest science leaves little room for doubt; pesticides are

one key driver of this sobering trend. � October 2012 report by Pesticide Action Network North

America (PANNA)

Yet only recently did the World Health Organization admit that glyphosate, the most active ingredient

in Monsanto�s Roundup herbicide, can cause cancer. (source) A number of countries around

the world have also banned glyphosate. Sri Lanka, for example, decided to completely

ban it after their scientists discovered that it was linked to chronic kidney disease.It

has also been completely banned in various countries across Europe.

As far as pesticide accumulation in the body goes, a recent study conducted by researchers

from RMIT university, published in the journal Environmental Research, found that an organic

diet for just one week significantly reduced pesticide exposure in adults by 90 percent.

Cynthia Curl, an assistant professor in the School of Allied Health Sciences Department

of Community and Environmental Health at Boise State University, recently published a pesticide

exposure study in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives. Results of her research

indicated that among individuals eating similar amounts of vegetables and fruits, the ones

who reported eating organic produce had significantly lower OP pesticide exposure than those who

normally consume conventionally grown produce.

These studies are important because the pesticides sprayed on our food are also very toxic and

have been linked to a number of diseases, like cancer. Why are we consuming chemicals

that were used to kill people in warfare? How can we possibly justify such irresponsible

behaviour?

And the problem extends further than simply what is being put on our food. Our food itself

has been genetically modified by biotech companies, to the point where it bears little resemblance

to its natural form, and is equally unrecognizable by our bodies. These companies incorporate

genes from one species into a completely unrelated species.This, according to many, is bad science.

The problem is this, geneticists follow the inheritance of genes in what we call a vertical

fashion � within a species. What biotechnology allows us to do is to take genes from this

organism and move it in what we call horizontally into a totally unrelated species�. What

biotechnology allows us to do is to switch genes from one to the other without regard

for the biological constraints�. It�s very very bad science. We assume that the

principles governing the inheritance of genes vertically applies when you move genes laterally

or horizontally. There�s absolutely no reason to make that conclusion. � David Suzuki,

geneticist, activist, and environmentalist

Furthermore, no studies have been cited by global health authorities which prove the

longterm safety of GMOs on our health. This is not good science, and we know for a fact

that GMOs are harmful to other animals which we have tested them on. For example, the chronic

toxicity study examined the health impacts of eating commercialized genetically modified

(GM) maize, alongside Monsanto�s NK603 glyphosate-based herbicide Roundup, on rats.The study found

severe liver and kidney damage as well as hormonal disturbances in rats fed with GM

maize in conjunction with low levels of Roundup � levels which were below those permitted

in most drinking water across Europe. Results also indicated high rates of large tumors

and mortality in most treatment groups.

You can read more about that here.

Other studies have found issues with GM foods and pesticides appearing in maternal and fetal

blood.

As part of the process, they portrayed the various concerns as merely the ignorant opinions

of misinformed individuals � and derided them as not only unscientific, but anti-science.

They then set to work to convince the public and government officials, through the dissemination

of false information, that there was an overwhelming expert consensus, based on solid evidence,

that GMOs were safe. � Jane Goodall

These examples barely even scratch the surface of carcinogens we are exposed to. Cosmetics,

flame retardants, everyday household products � these are all a concern. It�s not a

mystery why cancer rates are so high, but we never really talk about the issue in this

way. Waster fluoridation is another example. Fluoride was recently categorized officially

as a neurotoxin.

In point of fact, fluoride causes more human cancer deaths than any other chemical. When

you have power you don�t have to tell the truth. That�s a rule that�s been working

in this world for generations. There are a great many people who don�t tell the truth

when they are in power in administrative positions. This amounts to public murder on a grand scale,

it is a public crime. � It is some of the most conclusive bits of scientific and biological

evidence that I have come across in my 50 years in the field of cancer research.�

Dr. Dean Burk, Biochemist, Founder of Biotin, and Former Chief Chemist at the National Cancer

Institute of Heal

Cancer Charity Fraud

The Brooklyn-based National Children�s Leukemia Foundation has been shut down. This comes

years after they raised millions of dollars through professionally run fundraisers. They

lured people in, claiming that the funds would be used to conduct cancer research and locate

bone marrow donors, while they ran their �Make a Dream Come True� campaign.

This is disturbing information, but it�s not the first time that a major cancer charity

has been called into question, not by a long shot. For example, a complaint filed by the

Federal Trade Commission describes four connected groups, all with cancer in their name, as

�sham charities,� saying they instead �operated as personal fiefdoms characterized

by rampant nepotism, flagrant conflicts of interest, and excessive insider compensation.�

One of those names was the Cancer Fund of America Inc. These groups stand accused of

taking in almost 200 million dollars.

You can read more about that here .

Cancer Prevention

It�s remarkable how much time we spend raising money for cancer treatment without ever speaking

about cancer prevention. With out toxic environment, there are a number of things you can do to

minimize your risk of developing cancer.

So what can you do? Stop buying household cleaning products with toxic, carcinogenic

chemicals. Do your research, ask around. Stop eating foods that are sprayed with pesticides,

or at least properly soak and clean your fruits and vegetables for a decent amount of time

before consuming them. Indeed, eat more fruits and vegetables to begin with. Exercise more,

engage in activities/experiences that make you feel good and bring you joy � these

are all simple steps we can take to show our bodies the love they deserve.

Again, I would emphasize diet, as a lot of what we are put into our bodies on a weekly

basis isn�t healthy at all.

For example�

�Studies are confirming the health benefits of meat-free eating. Nowadays, plant-based

eating is recognized as not only nutritionally sufficient but also as a way to reduce the

risk for many chronic illnesses.� � Harvard Medical School

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