The Kevin Trudeau Show: 6-11-11

June 11, 2011 by admin  
Filed under Archives

Today, Kevin welcomes Chicago radio legends, Wendy Snyder and Bill Leff, as special guest hosts of The Kevin Trudeau Show! Find out how swearing in public could be the next excuse for the government to take your money, why Cadbury is being called racist, and why dead bodies are rising to the surface of New York’s harbor!

Everything Kevin:
Become An Insider!
Support Kevin!
Kevin is on YouTube!
Sign Up For Kevin’s FREE Podcast
Follow Kevin on Twitter
Become A Fan of Kevin on Facebook
Kevin’s Film Club
Kevin’s Book Club

Take Trudeau on the Go! Click here to download this show to your iPod, mp3 player, or PC through iTunes!

Click below to watch the Kevin Trudeau Show!

The Kevin Trudeau Show: 6-2-11

June 2, 2011 by admin  
Filed under Archives

Today, special guest hosts, Wendy Snyder and Bill Leff, explain how swearing in public could be the next excuse for the government to take your money! Plus, find out why dead bodies are rising to the surface of New York’s harbor!

Everything Kevin:
Become An Insider!
Support Kevin!
Kevin is on YouTube!
Sign Up For Kevin’s FREE Podcast
Follow Kevin on Twitter
Become A Fan of Kevin on Facebook
Kevin’s Film Club
Kevin’s Book Club

Take Trudeau on the Go! Click here to download this show to your iPod, mp3 player, or PC through iTunes!

Click below to watch the Kevin Trudeau Show!

Never Before Seen Pictures!

February 7, 2011 by admin  
Filed under Kevin's Blog

Old School KT

24 Photos

Business As Usual

17 Photos

Leisure Time

18 Photos

Famous Faces

11 Photos

Pool Days

7 Photos

The Kevin Trudeau Show: 2-4-11

February 4, 2011 by admin  
Filed under Archives

Today, Kevin gives you even more proof that drug companies have absolutely no interest in making you healthy. Plus, find out why 1979 was such a historic year in Kevin’s life.

Self Help:
Change Your Energy    
Make Your Dreams Come True    
Purify Your Drinking Water 
Check Out KT’s Gallery!         

Health:
Super Bowl Loss Increases Cardiac Death in Fans    
EPA to Regulate Rocket Fuel Chemical In Drinking Water    
Organic Milk Beats Conventional Milk For Nutrition    
The Burning Question: Are Food Dyes Safe?    
Swine Flu Shot Linked To Narcolepsy Risk    

Scary:
Scientist Works To Grow Meat In Lab   

Everything Kevin:
Become An Insider!
Kevin is on YouTube!
Sign Up For Kevin’s FREE Podcast
Follow Kevin on Twitter
Become Kevin’s Friend on Facebook
Kevin’s Film Club
Kevin’s Book Club

Take Trudeau on the Go! Click here to download this show to your iPod, mp3 player, or PC through iTunes!

Click Below to Watch the Kevin Trudeau Show LIVE!

The Kevin Trudeau Show: 1-13-11

January 13, 2011 by admin  
Filed under Archives

Today, Kevin finally reveals exactly how he developed his wealth and where he has invested that wealth to create even more!

Self Help:
Change Your Life
You Can Win Too!
Create A Cash Cow

Health:
FDA Admits Heartburn Drugs Cause Brittle Bones
Animals With Antennae Are Vanishing In Epidemic Amounts
The Truth About High Fructose Corn Syrup

Everything Kevin:
Become An Insider!
Kevin is on YouTube!
Sign Up For Kevin’s FREE Podcast
Follow Kevin on Twitter
Become Kevin’s Friend on Facebook

Take Trudeau on the Go! Click here to download this show to your iPod, mp3 player, or PC through iTunes!

Click Below to Watch the Kevin Trudeau Show LIVE!

Pictures of Nature Help Reduce Cancer Pain

October 20, 2010 by admin  
Filed under News Stories

October 20th, 2010

The Telegraph

By: Peter Hutchison

Scientists at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, America, claimed that patients’ feelings can be lifted without them having to leave their beds.

Looking at pictures of tranquil scenery is enough to help alleviate the suffering of excruciating cancer treatment, they discovered.

Researchers analysed patients undergoing bone marrow aspiration and biopsy (BMAB), a painful form of cancer treatment in which marrow is extracted from the pelvic bone with a local anaesthetic.

Some were treated in a standard hospital environment while others were exposed to the sights and sounds of outdoors – either the tranquillity of birds and waterfalls or the stress of cities and traffic.

The nature scene often involved surrounding the patient in images of Victoria Falls in Zambia.

The researchers measured the levels of pain felt and found that those subjected to the peacefulness of nature experienceed less pain.

Levels of pain in a stressful urban setting were the same as they were under standard procedure, the Hopkins Pain Rating Instrument showed.

The findings prove that it is not necessary just to distract a patient to alleviate pain but that the distraction must have a calming effect.

It also gives hope to sufferers who have tried other techniques which have failed to reduce pain, such as hypnosis or sedation.

Noah Lechtzin, who led the research, said: “I think there are certain elements of nature that are beneficial and others that could be frightening.

“You wouldn’t want to have rocks that potentially dangerous animals could hide behind, whereas our scene was a very open picture that had running water, the sounds had birds chirping and wind rustling through trees.”

Click here for the full report from the The Telegraph

The Kevin Trudeau Show: 1-20-10

January 20, 2010 by admin  
Filed under Archives

Today, Kevin delves deep into the healthcare bill and shows you how the government is trying to control every aspect of your life.

And get the stories you aren’t hearing anywhere else!!
Fecal Matter Found In Fast-Food Soda Fountains
Artificial Food Dye Causes Cancer

Window Cleaning Chemical Injected Into Fast Food Meat

Dominican Republic
Contest Winner
Clean & Clear Anti-Acne Ad Banned in UK
IRS Commissioner Doesn’t File Own Taxes: Too Complex

25% of Americans Get Sick from Food

‘Smoked’ Flavoring May Be Toxic To Humans

Strangers On A Plane
Six Deadly Chemicals in Your Body

Plus, raw foods chef and author, Paul Nison, stopped by to explain how eating raw foods can change your life forever. Click here to purchase The Daylight Diet: Divine Eating for Superior Health and Digestion.

Take Trudeau on the Go! Click here to download this show to your iPod, mp3 player, or PC through iTunes!

Click below to hear The Kevin Trudeau Show RIGHT NOW!!!

New Google Picture Search Threatens Personal Privacy

December 15, 2009 by admin  
Filed under News Stories

December 15, 2009

The Independent

By Jeremy Laurance

An internet service launched last week by Google to help cameraphone users to identify strangers in the street has been blocked because of alarm over its threat to personal privacy.

The new service, called Goggles, is a picture search which uses images rather than words to trawl the web . By taking a picture of an object and clicking “search”, owners of smartphones can recognize landmarks, identify a species of plant or animal, or obtain tasting notes for a bottle of wine.

Users focus their phone’s camera on the object, and Google compares elements of that picture against its database of images. When it finds a match, it provides the name of the object pictured and a list of results linking through to the relevant web pages and news stories. Googles is claimed to be able to recognize tens of millions of objects and places and is growing all the time.

But the most controversial aspect of the new visual search tool is its capacity to allow users to take a photo of a stranger to find out more about them. With millions of people having an online presence, complete with photos, on websites such as Facebook, it is possible to use the search tool to identify people, obtain contact information, and learn about their tastes in music, their friends and their background.

Google has now confirmed that it is blocking this use of Goggles until the implications have been fully explored. Marissa Mayer, the vice-president of Google’s search product and user experience, said: “We are blocking out people’s faces if people try to use Google Goggles to search for information about them. Until we understand the implications of the facial-recognition tool we have decided to make sure we block out people’s faces. We need to really understand how this tool affects people’s privacy and we cannot change that decision until we do.”

Angela Sasse, professor of computer science at University College London, who is researching public perceptions of privacy, said Goggles created unease because it left people with fewer hiding places. “People manage their relationships by selective disclosure,” she said. “Only people with certain mental-health conditions disclose everything all the time. These systems [such as Goggles] lose that. You might go somewhere on the assumption that you won’t be recognized. But if people find out who you are they can see where you have been. We have seen this problem on Facebook where people have uploaded pictures from a party forgetting that their bosses can see them too.” She added people were prepared to accept risks attached to new technology, including a loss of privacy, provided they could see the benefits. But some developments got the thumbs down. When Facebook started broadcasting what people were buying, there was a backlash as the public judged the intrusion as a step too far.

Professor Sasse said Goggles could potentially be used as a marketing tool. When surveillance cameras identified the face of someone who regularly passed by, the business might send them details of a special offer. “People tend to have a strong reaction to that,” she said. “But you could have an opt out so people could choose whether the system would be allowed to recognize them or blocked from doing so.”

Google has said it has the technology to recognize faces as well as millions of other objects but admitted the service is limited. Skeptics say existing face-recognition programs are still basic and the capacity to discriminate different faces restricted.

Professor Sasse added: “There does seem to be a certain threshold of accuracy for face recognition that has not yet been reached. At present, you need a full-face shot. The scary thing is that the next generation [of software] will be able to use a large number of images snapped from different angles so this technology is going to get more accurate.”

If Goggles proves successful, it would mark a breakthrough in the use of the mobile internet. It has a database of more than 1 billion images and can recognize landmarks, CD covers, logos, barcodes, books, shop fronts and business cards. It is less good at identifying the natural world, but that is expected to improve with time. It is available on phones run by Google’s mobile-operating system Android, and later introduced to other smartphones

Vic Gundotra, Google’s vice-president of engineering, said: “Google Goggles works well on certain types of objects. It is our goal to be able to identify any image. We want to work on the issues of user opt-in and control. We have the technology to do the underlying face recognition, but we decided to delay that until safeguards are in place.”

Click here for the full report

Photographer Arrested for Taking Too Many Pictures of Christmas Lights

December 2, 2009 by admin  
Filed under News Stories

December 2, 2009

Mail Online

By Daily Mail

An amateur photographer taking pictures of Christmas lights was questioned by police under anti-terror laws.

Andrew White, from Brighton, was taking pictures in a busy town centre in nearby Burgess Hill when he was spotted and followed by two Police Community Support Officers.

They stopped him and asked why he had been taking pictures and if he was a professional photographer.

Mr White, 33, asked why they wanted to know and was told it was to do with counter-terrorism legislation.

Police said he was stopped for ‘taking too many photographs in a busy shopping area’.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1232513/Photographer-taking-pictures-Christmas-lights-questioned-police-anti-terror-laws.

The PCSOs demanded his personal details, including his name and address.

Mr White said: ‘I had nothing to hide so I just provided the details. Now I’m concerned about where those details are going to end up.

‘I only took one or two photos but even if I had taken more, who are they to say what is too many?

‘I don’t think taking too many photos in the street warrants being considered some kind of terrorist threat, which is what they were suggesting.

‘I think the money spent on getting PCSOs to waste my time and harass me in the street could be better spent elsewhere.’

Mr White said the officers were polite but they insisted that they had to take his details because they had stopped him.

A Sussex Police spokesman said they spoke to Mr White because they were concerned he was taking too many photographs in a busy shopping area.

The spokesman said: ‘They were acting in good faith, balancing individual liberty against the need to ensure public safety.’

Under the 2002 Police Reform Act, PCSOs have the power to demand the name and address of a person suspected of committing a criminal offence or for antisocial behaviour.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1232513/Photographer-taking-pictures-Christmas-lights-questioned-police-anti-terror-laws.

Click here for full report