Thứ Ba, 6 tháng 6, 2017

Waching daily Jun 6 2017

Why the �James Hewitt is Prince Harry�s dad� conspiracy doesn�t add up.

ROYAL gossips have for years now rumoured that Princess Diana�s former love, James

Hewitt, was the real father of her youngest son, Prince Harry.

Most who believe the conspiracy theory have one simple piece of �evidence� to back

up the allegation: Harry�s strong resemblance to Hewitt, particularly when contrasted with

Prince Charles.

More than three decades after their affair, Hewitt is still answering questions about

the rumour, categorically stating in a new interview with Sunday Night that he is not

Prince Harry�s biological father.

But those who still don�t believe him are missing a vital part of the puzzle.

There�s no denying that a young Hewitt, with his red hair and boyish grin, shares

a likeness with Prince Harry.

But there�s someone else who shares this same likeness.

It�s Princess Diana�s brother, Charles Spencer:

Those who argue that Hewitt must be Harry�s father because of the �family resemblance�

between them ignore the fact that the resemblance can be found within the family, with Harry�s

pale, red-haired, blue-eyed uncle.

Hewitt had an affair with the princess when he was an officer in the British army.

At the time rumours were circulating that Prince Charles was also having an affair with

his current wife, Camilla Parker-Bowles.

In his interview with Sunday Night, Hewitt was circumspect about the years of speculation

Harry may be his son.

�It sells papers,� he said.

�It�s worse for him (Harry) probably, poor chap.�

thanks for watching.

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For more infomation >> Why the 'James Hewitt is Prince Harry's dad' conspiracy doesn't add up. - Duration: 1:48.

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Antonio Cromartie Is Babymooning In Vegas Before The Birth Of His 14th Kid! | TMZ TV - Duration: 1:13.

SO ANTONIO CROMARTIE AND HIS

WIFE TERRICKA, THEY'RE HAVING A

BABYMOON IN VEGAS.

SHE'S 7 MONTHS PREGNANT.

THE THING IS, THIS IS GOING TO

BE HIS 14TH KID.

WHAT?

THEY'RE IN VEGAS GETTING

READY FOR THE NEW KID, RIGHT?

EVERYBODY NEEDS A LITTLE BREAK.

BUT WHO'S WATCHING ALL OF THE

OTHER KIDS.

HARVEY: HOW MANY MOMS?

HE'S GOT EIGHT OTHER KIDS

WITH OTHER PEOPLE.

HE HAD A VASECTOMY.

HE TRIED TO STOP IT BUT THREE OF

THEM GOT THROUGH.

HARVEY: THERE ARE STILL WAYS TO

STOP IT.

YEAH, IF YOU HAD A VASECTOMY

AND YOU HAD ONE KID, WEAR A

CONDOM OR GET AN I.U.D.

THEY'RE ALL ACTING LIKE -- FOOL

ME ONCE.

ACTUALLY, THIS IS FOOL ME THE

THIRD TIME.

FOOL ME 13 TIMES.

[LAUGHTER]

For more infomation >> Antonio Cromartie Is Babymooning In Vegas Before The Birth Of His 14th Kid! | TMZ TV - Duration: 1:13.

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THE METAL NERD #22: IS SHE WITH METAL (BVS Wonder Woman's Metal Theme) - Duration: 4:48.

For more infomation >> THE METAL NERD #22: IS SHE WITH METAL (BVS Wonder Woman's Metal Theme) - Duration: 4:48.

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Spending Wisely: Is What You Buy Worth Your Time? - Duration: 6:07.

How's

it going everyone I'm dono and this is how to happy.

In this video we're going to be talking about is what you spend your money on worth your

time.

So you may have a problem that a lot of people have where you're looking through your expenses

at the end of the month and you feel like the money just disappears a lot quicker than

you thought it did so maybe you're trying to figure out how to keep your budget a little

bit tighter how to spend your money a little more wisely.

So what I want to talk about in this video is the strategy that I use to kind of help

me keep a lot of my spending in check.

So what I do is when I go out to buy something you know that kind of expensive or frivolous

or you know just something that don't necessarily need but I want to some degree I ask myself

is what I'm buying worth the amount of time that it took me to earn that money.

So for a lot of us we're working in positions where we get paid by the hour.

So if for example you're making $10 an hour and you want to buy something worth $100 is

what you're buying worth 10 hours of work.

That's the question to ask yourself and a lot of times when you ask yourself this question

it's going to help reframe the value of what it is that you're buying.

Now I know that I simplified it to make the math a little bit easy but a lot of times

yeah if you think about it in terms of would I spend 10 hours of work in order to get this

thing.

A lot of times some of the smaller things that we dont care about as much kind of fall

off of the radar.

Often when we think about it in that way that when we ask ourselves am I going to get ten

hours worth of enjoyment out of this object a lot of time it'll slow us down at least

from purchasing things that we don't really need because you know we're spending too much

time working for how much enjoyment we're getting out of what we're buying.

As you make more money the guidelines loosen up and change a little bit right so if have

you ask yourself is going out to dinner today worth 10 minutes of work - you know for most

people it probably is but for others it may not be.

So it's really about just spending time reflecting on what's actually valuable to you and what

money means in terms of how difficult it is for you to actually earn it compared to what

you're spending it on.

This idea is the reason that a lot of people say time is money.

When you spend money you're spending your time really because it took you time to earn

that money.

Now going along with this framework everyone is at a different place and on top of that

don't feel bad if you spend you know money on something that you actually enjoy.

If you think about it and you go ok I had to work 5 hours to do this activity I think

it's worth it then don't worry about how much work it took just feel good and focus on knowing

you're spending your money in a way that resonates with you.

What im trying to get to the root of is spending your money in a way that you feel like you're

not getting as much benefit out of it as you put in work.

This idea is not about limiting yourself and cutting a bunch of things out it's about spending

money on the things that you truly care about.

Whenever we spend money on something that we don't really care about that money is gone

and spent but we could have used it toward things that brought us more happiness or that

were more useful.

So the reason that it's important to pay attention to these things is the opportunity cost.

You don't want to spend money on things that are too expensive for how much value they're

giving you when you could be spending you know that money on something that really does

bring you value.

Another way that you can do this to kind of feel more of the impact is to tally up how

much you spend on certain things in the course of a month.

So for example if you buy a cup of coffee every morning when you add all that time together

is it really worth a days worth of work or whatever it happens to be.

that's something to ask yourself and sometimes these aggregates can give you a little bit

better idea but on the flip side sometimes it's a little bit too much data to process

and feel real.

So that's just another tool that you can try if you think it's something that would help

you out.

If not I just recommend making the purchases as you go and thinking about them as you make

the purchase and comparing it to your time to see if your'e spending your money in a

way that you feel really resonates with you.

So again I'm not saying don't every buy anything or anything like that, it's just an exercise

that you can try to see if what you're buying is what you want to be buying.

Now if you try this exercise and you find it to be more stressful than it is helpful

then I wouldn't recommend using it anymore right.

The whole point is so that you're spending more of your money on things that make you

happy but if you're freaking out the whole time over every single thing that you buy

that's going to cause just as much stress as probably spending your money in more frivolous

ways.

So as with a lot of the things that we talk about here it's just an exercise that you

can try to see if it works for you.

With that being said lets move on to the exercise section.

1.

Think of the last 3 things you bought.

How long did you have to work to get them?

2.

Evaluate each object.

Was it worth it?

3.

Are you buying anything regularly which is money better spent elsewhere?

That's all I've got for this video hopefully that gives you an idea that you can use to

spend your money a little bit more wisely that'll lead you to some more happiness.

As always if you have any questions comments topics you want me to cover put them down

in the box below and I will see you next time.

You can check out more content at www.howtohappy.com Also don't forget to subscribe so you can

stay up to date on the videos we've also got a twitter instagram and facebook you can check

out.

Reflect take action and enjoy life.

See you next time.

For more infomation >> Spending Wisely: Is What You Buy Worth Your Time? - Duration: 6:07.

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What is the Season of Serendipity? | ALEX AND ANI - Duration: 1:36.

Serendipity happens.

It happens suddenly.

It happens unexpectedly.

It's so much greater than a random event.

But it is a random event because we don't set out looking for serendipity.

We set out looking for something else.

And it usually wipes us off our feet for a minute.

And we remember and discover, all in one moment, so much more than we ever set out to find.

As summer a season, thinking about serendipity can open the doors for the universe to conspire

with us and work with us in limitless ways.Imagine if the universe was your partner, in creating

serendipity.

You have this vast intelligence that was limitless in its power and its ability to

help you, take us in directions we never expected, that lead us to exactly where we need to be.

That is serendipity.

For more infomation >> What is the Season of Serendipity? | ALEX AND ANI - Duration: 1:36.

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MORNING JOE 6/6/17 Columnist writes that 'Trump Is Out of Control' - Duration: 5:18.

For more infomation >> MORNING JOE 6/6/17 Columnist writes that 'Trump Is Out of Control' - Duration: 5:18.

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THIS IS WHY THE FDA SHOULDN'T REGULATE ANYTHING - politics - Duration: 6:39.

THIS IS WHY THE FDA SHOULDN�T REGULATE ANYTHING

�New dietary ingredients� are the government�s code phrase for supplements, and the U.S.

Food and Drug Administration (FDA) wants to prohibit your access to all-natural, health-supporting

herbs and food ingredients which have been used as medicine for centuries.

These �new dietary ingredients� aren�t new, despite the FDA�s lingo. They�ve

been tested over time by award-winning chemists, doctors, indigenous healers, and lay people

alike. So, why is the FDA tying to regulate the supplement industry with such renewed

vigor?

The FDA often attacks specific, natural, herbal supplements when they compete with a chemical

drug needing approval through drug trials. For instance, when Eli Lilly recently put

the drug Solanezumb, meant to treat Alzheimer�s, through its final drug trial phase, it was

projected to bring in more than $7.6 billion by 2024 for the drug company. In direct competition

with this drug were any supplements containing picamilon. Many natural herbs are neuroprotective.

The FDA began sending warning letters to five different supplement companies which were

promoting picamilon � even though it is simply a natural combination of Vitamin B3

(niacin) and GABA, a substance made by our body which crosses the blood-brain barrier.

Low GABA levels have been associated with depression and anxiety, but more importantly,

picamilon � 3 natural ingredients � were proving to be astounding neuroprotective agents

that could boost brain functioning, even in Alzheimer�s patients.

The FDA argued that although picamilon can be synthesized from naturally occurring niacin,

it is a different chemical entity, and is therefore �adulterated,� making it illegal

under the FDA�s new rules.

Do you think it�s a coincidence that as Eli Lilly was finishing its drug trials for

Solanezumab, supplement companies were getting warning letters about promoting its natural

alternative?

Moreover, this is just one recent example of the FDA trying to regulate medicine when

it has been guilty of faking X-rays, forging renal scans, conducting phony lab tests, secretly

amputating legs, and altering drug trials, all in the name of �science.�

Another famous FDA snafu, is their nonchalant glossing-over of airport scanners, despite

piles of evidence that they contribute to cancer, yet this agency wants to tell people

which supplements they can sell or buy?

Another favorite assailant of the FDA is any supplement company which claims to be able

to help people suffering from cancer. It seems odd that they approve machines that likely

cause mutation of our cells, yet say that they are �safer than eating a banana.�

All while attacking people who provide natural solutions.

Max Gerson was attacked by the cancer industry and FDA for healing people with coffee enemas

and fruit and vegetable juicing. He had to open his clinics in Tijuana to avoid being

shut down.

Dr. Max Gerson had to move his clinics across the border to prevent being shut down by the

industry.

Laetrile compounds (B17 Vitamins) have also been covered up by the industry for more than

40 years. These have also been proven to be very effective in treating cancer.

Stanislaw Burzynski, a PhD biochemist who discovered antineoplastons, nontoxic peptides

and amino acid derivatives that act as molecular switches capable of turning on cancer, suppressing

genes, and turning off oncogenes (cancer genes), won the largest and possibly most trying legal

battle against the FDA in American history. These are but a few examples of hundreds of

disease-killing natural herbal supplements that have been attacked by the FDA.

FDA insiders have even called medical devices into question after they�ve been given a

green-light following forged medical-consent letters. One blood clot device ended up killing

27 people while the FDA looked the other way.

Then there are the many drugs which are later pulled from the market after causing serious

side effects, though they are approved by the FDA:

Accutane was on the market for 27 years, even though it caused birth defects, miscarriages,

suicidal tendencies, and irritable bowel disease. Cylert, a nervous system stimulant drug used

to �treat� ADHA was on the market for 30 years before it was pulled for causing

liver damage. Darvocet, an opioid pain reliever was on the

market for a whopping 55 years even though it caused more than 2100 deaths and serious

heart toxicity. But which natural compounds has the FDA attacked

instead?

Walnuts, a nut eaten for centuries Vitamin C, a natural antioxidant found in

leafy greens and citrus fruits Apricot seeds, a known cancer cure

Herbal teas, and more. Moreover, a large proportion of medical reviewers

working at the FDA go on to find subsequent work in the industry regulated by the agency,

according to a report published online in the BMJ.

When reviewers leave the FDA, 57.7% of them end up working or consulting for the pharmaceutical

industry, the study found.

Finally, the FDA�s own �guidance� document, (Docket No. 2006D-0480) reveals plans to reclassify

virtually all vitamins, supplements, herbs and even vegetable juices as FDA-regulated

drugs. Massage oils and massage rocks will be classified as �medical devices� and

require FDA approval.

Herbal supplements have been used without regulation for thousands of years. Ancient

Chinese emperors used them. The Vedic scriptures talk about the wonders of certain plants as

medicine.

Is this agency, beholden to the pharmaceutical industry looking after your best interest?

It doesn�t seem so

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