You don’t have to have money to eat & live right…
November 6, 2009 by Brandy
Filed under Testimonials
Kevin,
I read your Natural Cures book around four years ago and after reading just a little, it changed my life. I went into my kitchen and threw out everything, including my food, pots, and microwave. I then went to various health stores to purchase pure water to drink and bathe in until I was able to purchase a water filter. I also purchased organic fruits and vegetables. After a week of this, I felt great and wanted to smoke no more!! Four years later, I feel better by the day and am still learning more and more!
I just want people to know you don’t have to have money to eat and live right. I am poor and in debt due to child support, but am rich in health and spirit and am a living example to my children.
Thank you, Kevin!
Michael Conti
Buy Gold Without Dealer Markups
October 18, 2009
DailyWealth.com
By Brian Hunt
For the past few thousand years, gold has seen a lot of competitors try to become the “ultimate form of real money.” Folks have used everything from cigarettes to butter, stones, livestock, salt, and seashells to store their wealth and trade for goods.
But when crisis hits… when wars break out… when bank runs grip a nation… when it’s really time to just “grab the money and run,” humans keep coming back to gold as the ultimate form of money.
Gold beats the competition so easily for six reasons …
1) Gold is easily transported. Land is a good store of wealth, but you can’t take it with you if you have to get out of Dodge.
2) Gold is divisible. If I owe both Peter and Paul and I have just one piece of gold, I can split it in half.
3) Gold does not rust or crumble. As just mentioned, folks have used cattle as money, but cows don’t survive long in a locked vault.
4) Gold is consistent all over the world. I’ll accept the pure gold you mined in China just as easily as I’ll accept the pure gold you mined in South Africa.
5) Gold has intrinsic value. Gold has wonderful conductivity, it’s super malleable, and it doesn’t break down… so it has lots of industrial uses. Seashells lose big on this one.
6) Gold cannot be created by the government. People who saw their wealth disappear in the great inflation of the 1970s know that holding lots of paper money can be disastrous.
Most of the “requirements of money” were laid down by Aristotle over 2,000 years ago. The great investor Doug Casey is the world’s best at reminding us why gold is still the ultimate form of real money.
And now that America is inflating its money supply in an attempt to pay for all kinds of wars, mortgage bailouts, social programs, infrastructure buildouts, and green-energy boondoggles, it’s vital to own a chunk of real wealth.
To protect your wealth from the government, I recommend you buy physical gold. The problem is, physical gold is in short supply and prices are at ripoff levels. I called two dealers recently and both said they were out of stock. They told me they could get gold bullion for me, but I’d have to pay a large premium over the gold price to buy it… as much as 13%.
Would you give me $1 for 87 cents? Probably not. And you shouldn’t give it to a gold dealer either.
That’s why I’ve written this report, so I can show you several ways to eliminate big dealer markups and get more gold for your paper dollars. Let’s begin…
Click here to read the rest of this article.
Green Spaces ‘Improve Health’
October 16, 2009
USA Today
By Amanda Gardner
The closer you live to nature, the healthier you’re likely to be.
For instance, people who live within 1 kilometer (.6 miles) of a park or wooded area experience less anxiety and depression, Dutch researchers report.
The findings put concrete numbers on a concept that many health experts had assumed to be true.
“It’s nice to see that it shows that, that the closer humans are to the natural environment, that seems to have a healthy influence,” said Dr. David Rakel, director of integrative medicine and assistant professor of family medicine at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health.
One previous study had noted fewer health inequalities between rich and poor people in areas with lots of green space, and other studies have echoed these health benefits. But much of this research had relied on people’s perceptions of their physical and mental health.
This new objective look at the matter involved scouring medical records of 345,143 people in Holland, assessing health status for 24 conditions, including cardiovascular, respiratory and neurological diseases. This information was then correlated with how much green space was located within 1 kilometer and 3 kilometers of a person’s postal code.












































