Phytoplantkton - Natures Secret

Unlike any other food, Phytoplankton is being hailed as the new 'super food' as it is 100% nutritionally useful and bio-available to the body; when you eat it, nothing whatsoever gets wasted. Most normal foods like fruits, vegetables, nuts, grains, meat and fish actually contain less than 50% nutritional value that is useful to the body.

During the digestive process humans produce a significant quantity of waste by-products from consuming these conventional foods. These waste by-products produce toxicity and stress in the body, particularly if the gut, liver and other organs are not functioning correctly. Over time, this toxic stress overload can lead to illness and disease, hence the record levels of drugs being prescribed nowadays.

As Hippocrates, the famous Greek Physician once said, "Let food be thy medicine, and let medicine be thy food." Logic says that the lower you get on the food chain the more nutritious the food. You cannot get any lower on the Earth’s food chain than Marine Phytoplankton. Pretty much all diseases in the world come from malnourishment, toxins in the body, and stress. Doesn’t it make sense that if you are suffering from something serious the best thing you can give your body is the most nutritious food on the planet? The primitive character of this micro-algae’s cellular structure give it a number of advantages over higher plants and animals as a food source. For starters, practically the entire organism can be nutritious, with minimal indigestible structures. By contrast, typically less than half the dry weights of raw fruit & vegetables have any nutrient value. Marine Phytoplankton consists almost entirely of nutritionally useful and uniform cells. Furthermore, Marine Phytoplankton exhibits superior photosynthetic efficiency, using light approximately three times more efficiently than higher plants. Micro-algae are among the most productive organisms on the planet.

For The Truth On How To Order Marine Phytoplankton Call
Don Carl (702) 490-9584

To View Story Of How Marine Phytoplankton Cured Tom Harper Of Lung Cancer and Diabetes
Click On "Testimonials" Tab

Too Many Rx Meds


Are you completely dependent on prescription medications to make you feel better?

Did you know you can restore your body's health naturally to a point where you may not need to take 
as much or as many prescription medications?

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Are the prescription 
medications you are
currently taking
making you 
still feel tired
when you wake up?




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Are the meds you now take making
you feel down in the dumps?  

No energy?









Prescription for trouble common drugs, hidden dangers.
Tens of millions of people at risk

U.S. consumers have been buffeted by bad news about the safety of the prescription drugs they take. One shock was the revelation of serious heart risks from the pain reliever Vioxx. Then “black box” warnings about an increased risk of suicide in young people were slapped on all antidepressants.

Almost all of the drugs are used to treat relatively common conditions that are not usually crippling or life-threatening, such as acne, eczema, and head lice. None is the only drug option. Among the 12, which are made by a wide range of manufacturers, are the pain reliever celecoxib (Celebrex), a close cousin of Vioxx, linked with heart attack and stroke; the cholesterol reducer rosuvastatin (Crestor), which may cause muscle breakdown and kidney damage; and the eczema drugs pimecrolimus (Elidel) and tacrolimus (Protopic), which may increase the risk of cancer. (For a complete list and guidance on what to do if you take one of the 12 types, High-risk drugs.)

The 12 drug types we have identified are not a “dirty dozen.” There are plenty of others with worse risks, such as those used to treat cancer or severe rheumatoid arthritis. And each of the 12 types has legitimate medical uses, especially when other treatments fail.
But their known or possible adverse effects--which include heart attack, stroke, kidney failure, irreversible bone loss, and cancer--were undetected or underestimated when the FDA approved them for use. Some still don't carry a black-box warning--the most serious label alert--that our chief medical adviser says they should.
Even a perfect drug-safety system might miss some of the adverse effects of medicines before they hit the market. But our investigation has identified serious flaws in both the initial drug-approval process and the monitoring of products after they reach the market, which have almost surely delayed the detection and public disclosure of adverse reactions of many widely sold medications. Indeed, our investigation suggests that our list of 12 is not exhaustive.

For The Truth About Using and Ordering Marine Phytoplankton Speak To Don Carl First. Call Don Carl Direct (702) 490-9584



An absence of leadership

The problem with the drug-safety system starts with the FDA. The agency's regulatory might has been undercut by constraints on its enforcement power, limited resources, dependency on drug-company fees to help finance the approval process, and what critics claim is a lack of will to enforce tough requirements.

In a statement by e-mail, Susan Cruzan, an FDA spokeswoman, said, “Drug safety has been and will continue to be a top priority for us.” Cruzan added that “a recent internal audit showed that our professional staff spends about one-half its time addressing safety issues.”

But at a time when strong leadership is most needed, the FDA has had only temporary, acting commissioners for three of the past five years. At press time the agency still had no permanent commissioner to replace Lester Crawford, D.V.M., Ph.D., who resigned in Setember 2005 after less than three months on the job.

The inspector general of the Department of Health and Human Services is investigating Crawford's departure. Crawford could not be reached for comment on published reports saying that financial conflicts may have contributed to his decision to leave. In an interview posted on Forbes.com on September. 28, 2005, he said the reports are untrue. Crawford's attorney, Barbara Van Gelder, declined to answer our questions, except to say that he “retired” from the FDA.

Compounding the safety problem, drug companies have often failed to conduct the studies needed to identify risks that often emerge after approval. Wide distribution of newly approved drugs before their long-term safety has been established, plus immediate, heavy, and sometimes misleading advertising, may increase the chance of harm.

Consumer Reports' exclusive, ongoing analysis of consumer-drug ads identified a wide range of inaccurate information about safety and efficacy, including what the FDA deemed misleading claims for some brands of every high-risk drug we identified, except the malaria and head-lice medications. Our analysis further suggests that the FDA's regulation of drug ads has weakened considerably since the late 1990s, although we found some improvement in the past two years.

Some companies have withheld publication of studies that found serious risks, or have failed to conduct post-approval studies that they promised to the FDA. Such studies are crucial for promptly detecting adverse reactions that surface when large numbers of consumers start to use new medications.

The safety system's failings were illustrated in October 2005. A study released first on the Web site of the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) reported that the diabetes drug muraglitazar, which an FDA advisory committee had recommended approving six weeks earlier, appeared to double the risk of heart attack, stroke, or death. Some analysts expected the drug to be a billion-dollar seller, but now drugmaker Bristol-Myers Squibb says it's talking with Merck, its cosponsor, about scrapping the application or conducting more studies.

That report averted “a potential catastrophe,” says Steven Nissen, M.D., medical director of the Cleveland Cardiovascular Coordinating Center. Nissen, lead researcher of the JAMA study, said in a phone interview that “the advisory panel just dropped the ball completely.”

An accompanying editorial in JAMA reported that the study results were presented to the FDA in ways that may have fostered an “illusion of safety.” Tony Plohoros, a Bristol-Myers Squibb spokesman, said by e-mail that the company's analytic methods “are widely used and have been validated by the scientific community.” The FDA would not offer specific comments while a decision on the drug was pending.

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