DAILY
DIGEST
Wednesday February 6,
2006 ]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]] “We'll
know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American
public believes is false.” -- William Casey, CIA Director (from first staff
meeting, 1981) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
THE ANDREA YATES CASE (Part Three)
Tryptophan, Thyroid Gland, Circadian Rhythms and
Murder ~~~What the Drug
Makers Didn't Want You to
Know~~~
(Hang on tight – This is one roller coaster ride)
The previous Part Two was heavy reading and hard to slog though.
That's because there was not a lot of story -- but mostly definition. It
is difficult to make definitions interesting. It's like reading the
dictionary as a storybook. I defined “Winter Person” as those people born
between November 1st and February 2nd, plus a month or so either side of those
dates, depending one the time of birth, night or day. I defined circadian
rhythm as the daily variation in the brain temperatures, compared to the daily
clock times and calendar dates.
I further defined “Winter Person” as those who have much longer
free-running circadian rhythms of 27 to 29 hours per day, compared to the usual
24 hours per day of most of the human population. Most Winter People have
circadian cycles, that seem to slip forward a few minutes each day. With
the onset of the shorter days of winter, these people have circadian cycles,
which by December have slipped forward 12 hours, or a complete reversal of the
night/day or sleep/wake cycle. This is similar to traveling around the
world, and suffering 12 hours jet lag. This 12 hour sleep/wake cycle
reversal is called Winter Depression or Season Affective Disorder. This
may often be cured by using bright morning lights to shift the person back to
match the current clock time.
I introduced the concept of “Extreme Winter Person.” These are mostly
the people who have the longer 29 hours cycles, and they will have two
sleep/wake reversals each year, mostly in January and July. I gave the
picture of Katie Holmes and Britney Spears as two well known examples of the
behavior of Extreme Winter Women. I did not explain that there actually is
a group which I call Ultra-Winter Person, who have four time-reversals each
year, in January, April, July and November. This usually occurs with
aging, and the elderly British Prime Minister, Winston Churchill is
typical.
I also explained the ancient and scientific meanings of Halloween and
Groundhog's Day and their effect on human circadian rhythms and even the
weather. What I did not define or explain is what I call the “Umbilicus
Effect.” When you are still in the womb, your circadian rhythms are
defined by hormones circulating in your mother's blood. Exactly at birth,
or more accurately when the umbilical cord is cut, you suddenly are running own
your own circadian rhythms, based on your own external time sensors. This
is why the moment you are born determines your circadian cycles, either long or
short. This explains why your behavior and personality are determined when
you were born and not when you were “conceived.”
I will not discuss the many internal clocks which all must start at the
same time at birth. I have identified about 18 circadian clocks in the
human being which mostly are synchronized by the thyroid gland. I will
discuss them later under the title of “The Umbilicus Effect.” These
are known by doctors as “birth defects,” and are such problems as: the hole
between the two halves of the heart not closing at birth, resulting in Blue Baby
Syndrome, or parathyroids not closing the pores in the lungs so that fluids do
not drain out of the lungs, or the thyroids do not turn off bilirubin, resulting
in Baby Jauntice or Bilirubin Baby, which is treated with exposure to strong
lights – thus starting a proper circadian cycle by bright lights.
I only mention the Umbilicus Effect here to show that the reason for
studying circadian rhythms is to eventually show that “when and what time” you
were born does affect your personality, behavior and your response to the events
in your environment. Modern scientists has long pooh-poohed astrology as
false, since they ask, “How could when you were born affect you or your
behavior?” They claimed that genetics and biochemistry would only be due
to the moment of conception and not time of birth. I strongly disagree and
the purpose of this investigation of circadian rhythms is to show that the
moment you are born has a strong influence on your future personality and
behavior.
But, hold on, I am not as an astrology, so put away your horoscopes, signs
and charts. I am a scientist, who has shown that what ancient astrologers
knew many thousands of years ago, that personality and behavior are affected by
time of birth, is actually a true and verifiable fact. Where the ancient
astrologers failed, is that they did not have the modern tools of computers and
TV, thus their “predictions” had little basis in fact. They just didn't
have enough data to go on. Was Egypt's Cleopatra a Winter Woman? She
had all the flash and dazzle of a modern Britney Spears, and the “morality” of
Wolfgang Mozart. But the ancients didn't know about either Britney nor
Mozart, so they couldn't use them as examples of typical “winter” human
behavior. Watch for the upcoming series, “The Umbilicus Effect.”
In 2001, I made an absolutely amazing discovery. I wasn't even
looking for it. I was trying to figure out a way to explain to my
friends what a circadian rhythm looked like. I wanted to draw a
graph. Not just draw a picture on paper with a pencil. I wanted to
make an equation and then let my computer draw the picture of the
equation. That way I could just change a number in the equation and then
it would show the circadian rhythm of a summer person and then a winter person,
or whatever. What does the graph look like if the circadian rhythm,
instead of being 24 hours long is actually 25 hours long. What does it
look like if you graph it for a whole year? I wanted to find out.
So what I wanted to make was not just a picture, but a program that would
let me put in an equation and then let the computer draw the graph. This
is called an “analytical chart” since it's used for analysis. But how do
you do that? I knew how. Don't forget I have long had a university
degree in electrical engineering, along with a few other degrees. And for
over 50 years I have been a licensed radio engineer, fixing and repairing radios
and radio stations. Those kind of engineers know how to draw analytical
charts. It's part of the job to analyze electrical circuits. You
enter into the computer the equation of a circuit. You then use a tool
like an oscilloscope which draws pictures of the current actually going through
the circuit. And if the two pictures don't match, then you know there is
something wrong with your circuit.
I already knew what the chart was supposed to look like. Back in
1986, I began to take my temperature with a thermometer every hour on the hour,
all day long for several years. I graphed many of those
measurements. I showed those charts to several doctors. They were
amazed. Back in the 1980's doctors didn't know that the body and brain
temperature go up and down every day and night. They were taught in
medical school that the body temperature is supposed to be 98.6 degrees, and
that's that. Any other temperature meant you had a fever or something else
and were sick. I showed them pictures of my fever charts and my normal
daily charts. They all went up and down every day and night. None of
the circadian rhythm experts had expected that. They all thought that the
body's circadian clock had to do with hormones and chemicals in the brain and
body. So that's what they measured. None of them ever thought to
look at the temperature changes in the brain and how that was connected to human
behavior.
So I knew I wanted an analytical equation which produced a chart that went
up in the morning to about 98 degrees and then sort of wavered all day long
about a degree or so with the average of 98.6. Then in the evening it
dropped down to about 95 degrees during sleep. But how do I make that
chart? It looks something like a curve called a square wave. It
jumps up in the morning, stays pretty flat, then drops down at night and again
stays kind of flat at night, and then jumps up again the next morning. But
how do you draw the curve of a square wave?
Well, not to get too technical, but to synthesize a square wave you simply
add up all the odd harmonics of the base frequency wave. Alright, so
that's too technical. What that means is that I draw a curve of the base
frequency sine wave which is 24 hours. In my final version of this article
I will show pictures of what that looks like so you can see and understand what
it means. This first step is simply a sine curve with the frequency of 24
hours. It rises up during the day with a peak at noon, then drops down and
hits a bottom at midnight. Not a very useful picture but I called that
Clock 1 of the circadian rhythm. It's the place to start.
The next step is to add in the next odd harmonic. That is the third
harmonic, or one-third of 24 hours, which is a sine wave with a length of 8
hours. That picture shows the curve reaching a peak about 10 o'clock in
the morning then trailing off in the afternoon, and then dropping to a bottom
about 4 o'clock in the morning. Again not a very useful picture and this
adding of the 24 hour clock and the 8 hour clock, I called Clock 1 plus Clock
2. Then I added the next clock. This is the next odd harmonic or the
5th harmonic, or one-fifth of 24 hours, which is a sine wave with a length of
4.8 hours, or 4 hours and 48 minutes. A rather strange number but that is
1/5 of 24. I call that Clock 3.
When I added up all three clocks and drew the chart on my computer, I did
not get a perfect square wave. But, I was stunned and amazed at what I
saw. The chart that the computer drew was exactly the same as the charts
which I had shown the doctors of my own temperature measurements. They
were not perfect circadian square waves, they were curves with rounded edges,
slowly rising in the morning and evening, and slightly varied during the
day.
The chart showed exactly three peaks during the day, at around 6:00 am,
exactly at noon, and around 6:00 pm. This corresponded to when we eat
breakfast, lunch and dinner. It explained why humans eat three meals a day
and not just two, five or seven meals. Other cultures have learned
variations which I will explain in a moment. The chart also showed two
minor temperature dips in between the three daytime peaks. These occurred
about 10 o'clock in the morning and 2 o'clock in the afternoon. What
happens at those times? People's brain temperature starts to drop, they
lose concentration and become tired. It's time for a coffee or tea
break. This is usually accompanied by a light snack, donut, cookie or
scone. The coffee, tea or coke are mild stimulants which raise the brain
temperature. The light meal will trigger the release of insulin which
causes tryptophan to go into the brain which raises the level brain
serotonin. It slightly raises the temperature of the brain. We
regain the ability to concentrate and think, and we go back to work, after our
short coffee break. Suddenly my analytical chart of Clocks 1, 2, and 3 was
starting to show that it actually predicts and explains normal human
behavior.
I then with just a single number raised the level or the amount of Clock
3. This produced a curve with not much day/night difference, but with 6
humps or daily temperature rises, centered around 98.6 degrees F. This
looked like the chart of a newborn infant. Babies eat about 6 meals a
day. For the first several months, parents of newborns know you need to
set the clock for several baby feedings in the middle of the night.
Parents hope and pray that this will soon go away and not go on forever.
Next, on my chart, I slightly reduced the level of Clock 3. Two of the
peaks went away. It looked more like just three peaks in the daytime and
only one in the middle of the night. This was similar to the chart of a 3
to 6 month old infant.
Again, slightly reducing the amount of Clock 3, produced a chart with three
daytime peaks but with strong dips in between. This was the chart of a 2
to 4 year old toddler. There were three main daytime meals like and adult,
but the strong morning and afternoon dips in temperature were turned into
morning and afternoon nap times often with a short snack of cookies and
milk. Reducing Clock 3 again produced the the chart of
kindergartener or pre-schooler. The morning dip becomes a snack time and
the afternoon temperature dip remains an afternoon nap. By age 7 or
8, the amount of Clock 3 becomes about equal to the other two clocks and begins
to look like the chart of an adult. Both the morning and afternoon dips in
brain temperature are changed from nap times to snack breaks, or recess or even
in adults they remain as coffee or tea breaks.
Unbelievably, what this shows is that our circadian rhythm which control
our behavior is not one circadian clock -- it is the sum effect of three
clocks. Circadian rhythm researchers for decades have long sought the
“holy grail” of circadian studies, the “circadian clock” but so far have never
found it. Is it hormonal, or genetic, or even learned behavior?
Nobody knows. But here's a clue for researchers, look in the hypothalamus
for three chemicals which control brain temperature. They are precursors
for the production of serotonins, which control brain temperature. They
are chemical oscillators with natural frequencies of 24, 8 and 4.8 hours.
The chemical effect of the output from the sum of those three clocks together IS
the circadian clock.
Much of learned human behavior is about suppressing the effect of Clock
3. Parents of neonate infants try to suppress all those meals and wake
times in the middle of the night. Parents of toddlers suppress
morning and afternoon naps by turning them into snack times, which slightly
raise the serotonin levels and raise the brain temperature. Some cultures
have different solutions. Central Americans often suppress Clock 3 by
enhancing Clock 2. This turns an afternoon snack time into an actual nap
or Siesta. Some Italians often skip breakfast and then replace it with a
very late dinner about 9 o'clock at night. This actually exists in almost
all cultures, as a remnant of Clock 3, but it's often called “raiding the
fridge” before going to bed. Thus humans are controlled by their own
circadian clocks, but they also have the ability to shift or suppress certain of
the circadian clocks. Learned cultural behaviors can produce changes in
the circadian rhythms. This is what makes humans different from
animals. Animals do not have the ability to control their own circadian
rhythms, but humans can and often do.
For this reason, the many decades of circadian rhythm research using lab
animal models has been a waste of time. The data from animal rhythm
studies have no application to human beings. We all know about Jet Lag. We
travel from one time zone to another. If we travel from New York to Tokyo,
Japan we experience a complete reversal of day and night time. We arrive
in Tokyo at what we think should be bedtime, but instead everybody in Japan is
just waking up for breakfast. You try to attend a morning business meeting
in Tokyo, but your body says “It's the middle of the night. My body and brain
are asleep.” Your boss wonders why you didn't meet your sales goal at that
Tokyo meeting. You don't tell your boss you slept through the
meeting.
But humans can adjust and control their circadian clocks. You shift
the time you wake up. To adjust to Tokyo time, you set the alarm clock
about an hour earlier each day and also eat breakfast an hour earlier.
After a week or so you are now waking up and having breakfast at midnight.
But when you get on the plane for Tokyo you sleep most of the flight and then
arrive in Tokyo at breakfast time and are now ready to go to the business
meeting. But try to get a lab rat to shift his circadian
rhythms. He can't do it. You can't just say, “Mr. Rat, shift your
circadian cycle ahead four hours.” But you can shift your own, by setting
your alarm clock ahead. For animals, the only way to shift the circadian
clock is to change the schedule of light and dark in the lab. Many people
can do it without changing the light/dark schedule, but just using the alarm
clock. The few people who can't do that are called Winter People with
“winter depression” -- they also need the morning lights.
My computer model with the three clocks showed that it seemed to explain
and demonstrate human circadian rhythms. Simply by changing one number,
the amount of Clock 3, I could make charts which seemed to match the behavior of
new born infants, young children and then adults.
But what about Winter People, with long circadian cycles, or airplane
travelers who suffer jet lag. Could I also use my computer model to see
what happens to human circadian cycles when they are shifted in time.
Yes. Simply by changing one number I could make each clock, Clock 1, Clock
2, or Clock 3, start at a different time from the other clocks. By just
changing another number I could change the lengths of the clocks from their
usual 24, 12 and 4.8 hour length. But what did it show or mean?
I could show the shifting of clocks, such as creating or curing Jet
Lag. I could make slightly longer clocks which looked like the sleep/wake
reversals of Winter People. If I shift Clock 3, about an hour forward or
back, it produces a minor Jet Lag effect, but it then drives the other two
cycles and then they synchronize within several days. We do this twice
each year when we switch from normal to daylight savings time in April, and then
back to standard time again in October. It is probably the October switch
from daylight savings at the end of October which triggers the onset of Season
Affective Disorder in most Winter People.
What I did not expect was the radical change in the circadian cycle when I
shifted Clock 2 compared to the other two clocks. When Clock 2 is shifted
forward one hour, there is an extreme rise in brain temperature about 9:30 am to
10:00 am and then followed by an extreme drop from 10:00 am to 10:30 am.
This sudden rapid rise in the morning is about several degrees above normal
quickly followed by a dip several degrees below normal. All the rest of
the day except for this one hour in the morning seems to be normal. If
Clock 2 is shifted back, instead of forward, the sudden rise and drop in brain
temperature appears in the afternoon about 2:00 pm, and the rest of the day the
circadian pattern seems normal.
What could this sudden rise then drop in brain temperature mean for human
behavior? What happens when the brain temperature suddenly rises? We
call this being feverish. We may go in and out of consciousness. We
may hallucinate and see strange visions. This is often caused by high
fevers due to viral infections. It is the primary effect of
antidepressants to slightly raise the brain temperature. But it can also
be due to drugs or drug interactions. A typical street drug which raises
the brain temperature is called MDMA, or street named Ecstasy or simply
“E.” This raises the brain temperature to about 101 degrees F and produces
a heightened sense of well-being. But a second dose of E will suddenly
raise the brain temperature to about 105 to 107 degrees. This quickly
produces a feverish hallucinatory state immediately followed by brain death at
107 degrees.
Is this sudden and rapid increase in brain temperature what happened to
Natalee Holloway in Aruba last year in the summer of 2005? Despite a whole
year of Fox New's Greta Van Sustren, blaming the boys for killing Natalee, it
seems that the police finally admitted that “drugs” were involved. But
what drugs? It seems nobody asked Natalee's friends which drugs. Van
Sustren made the mistake most people make in calling MDMA or Ecstasy, the old
common name “the date rape drug.” That is an old misnomer from the
1980's. But actually, since the mid-1990's Ecstasy has become a drug of
choice among most high school girls. The girls take it themselves -- they
don't wait for the boys to give it to them. And how do I know? I
spent 6 years on the Internet CuSeeMe video chat program with hundreds of teens
around the world. Usually E, methamphetamines or crack cocaine were used
one or more times by almost all the teens. Around 2001, E became the
preferred drug, since it was much cheaper than crack. Those drugs were
brain temperature raisers or mood enhancers. But E has the bad side-effect
that a double dose, can cause brain death in about an hour or so.
Actually, in 2001, this was the focus of one of the episodes of Dawson's
Creek. It was a warning story for the teen audience. One of the
girls on the program had taken E. She seemed Ecstatic at a rave party, but
then passed out. She was rushed to the hospital and saved at the last
second from a soaring brain temperature and sudden death. That was the
focus of that whole TV episode of the Creek. Why? Because it was
such a common event at rave parties in the last 10 years, that thousands of
teens had died from overdosing with Ecstasy. That episode was a warning to
the teens to be careful when playing with MDMA. Fox's Greta Van Sustren
who claims, that it's always boys or men who are responsible for all the bad
things that happen to women, should watch that episode of the teens at the rave
party. Did I tell you I once watched 500 hours of Dawson's Creek and took
notes about typical teen behavior? Oh, I did. Just
checking.
OK, so we looked at some extreme examples of what happens when there is a
rapid and sudden rise in brain temperature. So what happens when there is
a sudden and rapid drop in brain temperature. If the sudden drop is low
enough then there is actual sleep. This is similar to narcolepsy where the
person suddenly falls asleep. With a lesser drop in temperature the person
may experience lucid dreaming, sort of a half way state between being awake and
being asleep and dreaming. This lucid dreaming may include fanciful
visions from the dream state being built around the objects seen in the
simultaneous conscious state. As noted earlier, a mild drop in brain
temperature is accompanied by a loss of concentration, or mild day-dreaming and
these seem to accompany the morning and afternoon temperature dips at coffee
break times around 10 am and 2 pm. So those are some examples of the human
behavior during extreme to mild temperature drops in brain temperature.
What happens to people when we combine the two events, a rapid rise and
then a sudden drop in brain temperature, all in a period of about an hour?
What if this is the common result of shifting Clock 2 compared to the other two
clocks? What if shifting Clock 2 backward or forward is the usual
result of taking an SSRI anti-depressant and then suddenly stopping the
drug? Nobody has ever asked that question before, so let's take a
look. Does this account for the strange events called “Alien
Abductions?”
During the rapid rise in brain temperature the individual sees strange
visions of people and events. Then during the rapid drop in brain temperature
the individual enters a lucid dream state, something like sleep walking, and
then begins to interact with the people and events seen in the previous high
temperature state just minutes before. Could this explain another common
event called “flashbacks?”
Ralph, was a Vietnam era veteran. One day he is shopping at the mall
store. He wanders up and down the aisles looking for his purchase.
Suddenly his brain temperature rises, and he sees five “Viet Cong” dressed in
black, sneaking down the aisle. He is transformed back to Vietnam with his
squad of buddies sleeping in a night time bivouac He can't call out to his
sleeping buddies since that would alert the oncoming enemy. He can't find
his rifle. His brain temperature lowers. He remembers the revolver
in his pocket. With rapid fire he uses his revolver to kill the Viet Cong
sneaking over the hill, and he saves the lives of his his squad of
buddies. His brain temperature returns to normal and he sees that he has
just shot and killed five K-Mart shoppers gathered around the Blue Light
Special. Is it possible that the shift in Clock 2 is what brought on the
“flashback?” Ralph has no idea what happened and can't explain
it. He is arrested by the police and locked away, probably for
life.
What about another similar event which has occurred in increasing numbers
since the invention of SSRI antidepressants, “Going Postal.” A worker
walks or sneaks into his place of business, carrying several rifles or hand
guns, and several bags of ammunition, seemingly ready for an assault. He
begins shooting randomly and kills numerous employees, and then may or may not
kill himself. Is this related to the shift in Clock 2, with the
sudden rapid rise and then drop in brain temperature? One clue would be
that most of these lethal events occur at the Clock 2 shift time of 9:30 in the
morning or 2:30 in the afternoon, but not at noon, or 5:30 closing time.
Is this true?
I don't have access to that information, but there are a lot of doctors,
psychiatrists and lawyers connected with these cases who do have such pertinent
information as: the individual's birthday, were they previous users of SSRI's,
and the time of day when the psychotic event started. These important
facts are usually not reported in the press. These facts are usually
considered private or confidential personal client or patient information and
usually are not obtainable by asking. I have tried asking, and am usually
told, “I can't tell you that.” But there are people who do have that
information. Nobody has ever put that information together to find out
what happened. But to do that, you would have to know about circadian
rhythms and about shifting Clock 2.
Is what happened to Andrea Yates in 2001 a form of “going postal” at her
place of employment?” In this case her place of employment was home, and
her job was taking care of five children. Is what happened to Andrea that,
about 9:30 am her brain temperature suddenly rose, she saw demons or devils, one
of them told her the only way to save her children from “going to hell” was to
kill them before they sinned – that was the only way to save them from sinning
and going to hell. Her brain temperature suddenly lowered and she
sleep-walked through an event of obeying the demon's instructions. Her
brain temperature returned to normal and she calls her husband and the police to
say that she had just drowned her children. That may sound very strange,
but that is exactly what she stated in her 2001 videotaped statement to a court
psychiatrist. But no psychiatrist could explain it, since no psychiatrist
knows about the circadian rhythms with three clocks, and the result of shifting
Clock 2 caused by taking and then stopping an SSRI antidepressant. The
psychiatrists don't have a clue.
For some five or six years I have observed the behavior of many Winter
People, some of them Extreme Winter People. In many cases I was able to
predict when they were going to change their employment or career, and even
their relationships such as with husbands or boyfriends. In some cases I
actually told some of my Winter friends about my predictions. But I did so
in the arcane imagery in a strange poem or song. I told them that this is
what is see in your life two years or five years from now. Years later, I
point out that what they had just done was what I had predicted in the strange
images of the song several years before. I tried to cloak the image so it
would not appear as a prediction. I did not want them to simply follow
some plan which I had planted in their mind. When I do point out that I
had correctly predicted their future behavior, a strange thing happens.
They quit talking to me. It seems fairly consistent behavior. My
assumption is that most people just don't want to believe that their behavior is
predictable. Most people want to believe that they are the ones who make
the choices about what happens in their lives. It turns out that this may
be a false assumption.
To prove scientifically that an individual's behavior is predictable far
into the future goes against modern psychiatry, medicine and most people's
personal belief system. Most people believe that you are the one who makes
the choices in your life. If I told you that, based on when you were born,
based on the length of your circadian rhythms, based on observations of the
length of the day as shown by the calendar, and the observations of shifts and
reversals of the earth's magnetic field, I could predict your feelings and
behavior far into the future – How you you respond....?
What you have just read overturns the basic precepts of modern medicine,
psychiatry, and basic religious concepts, about the relationship between
individuals and the universe. It disrupts the basic arguments between
“predestination” and “free will.” Did you survive the roller coaster
ride? For more information See: “The B6 Bomber,” or do a BroJon site
search on “tryptophan,” “thyroid gland,” or “circadian rhythm.”
Click here to find the live links to the full stories in the Gazette
- http://www.brojon.com """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" Here
are the stories you won't find yet on Drudge, Fox, WorldNetDaily or elsewhere
-- Topping Today's News in the Brother Jonathan Gazette:
BroJon TOP STORY:
It's The Middle of July -- What Do You Expect Britney To Do or Say?
TABLOID TAKES BACK BRITNEY SPEARS STORIES -- The National Enquirer
apologized to Britney Spears in its British edition Tuesday for reporting that
she was ready to divorce Kevin Federline
------------------------------- THE
EXTREME WINTER WOMAN Britney Spears has the circadian rhythms of an extreme
Winter Woman, born December 8th. She has demonstrated these cycles for over 6
years. During January and July, she doesn't know if she is coming or going. She
usually does both. Then three months later, she tries to sort it all out. Good
luck Britney.
==================================
WHO IS REALLY RUNNING THE WORLD?
N.Y. TIMES TO REDUCE PAGE SIZE, CUT JOBS -- The New York Times Co.
plans to reduce the width of its flagship newspaper by an inch and a half and
close a printing plant in Edison, N.J., resulting in the loss of about 250 jobs,
the company announced Tuesday. (Decades ago, the NYTimes
became the media outlet for the CIA. See: the quote at the top of the page.
Since then, as a propaganda outlet, the NYTimes has lost readership and is going
out of business.) BUSH "CURSES" HEZBOLLAH ON LIVE MIC -- It
wasn't meant to be overheard. Private luncheon conversations among world
leaders, picked up by a microphone, provided a rare window into both banter and
substance — including President Bush cursing Hezbollah's attacks against Israel.
===================================
THE NEW MEDICINE MAN: Dr Shaman MD
PSYCHIATRIST TESTIFIES TO YATES'S MOTIVES -- Andrea Yates drowned her
five children in their bathtub because she was overwhelmed and felt inadequate
as a mother, not because of any altruistic or religious motive, a forensic
psychiatrist testified Tuesday in her murder trial.
(Because of Yates drug-shifted circadian rhythms, she was in an alternate time
and space. She had no motives in this reality. In this case, the psychiatrist
has no clue about alternate realities.) OBESITY, DIABETES DRIVE
HIGH RATE OF KIDNEY FAILURE IN U.S -- Compared to Europeans, Americans with
chronic kidney disease (CKD) are more than twice as likely to progress to
end-stage kidney disease, researchers say, and higher rates of obesity and
diabetes may be to blame. (As with older pet dogs and
cats, the primary cause of kidney failure is too much protein in the diet. Since
hi-protein diets are promoted by the USDA, this disease is typical only among
Americans. See: story below.) MEASURING PROTEINS IN SPINAL FLUID
MAY PROVIDE EARLY CLUE TO ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE -- Early signs of the
development of Alzheimer's disease can be seen in the cerebrospinal fluid of
middle-aged adults who are genetically predisposed to the neurologic condition,
according to a report in the July issue of Archives of Neurology, one of the
JAMA/Archives journals. (Is this caused by too much animal
protein in the diet? See: story above.)
===================================
INVESTIGATING THE INVE$TIGATORS
TROPICAL DEPRESSION FORMS OFF N.C. COAST -- The second tropical
depression of the 2006 Atlantic hurricane season formed off the North Carolina
coast Tuesday, and a tropical storm watch was issued for the eastern part of the
state. (Last year at this time, there were already five
named hurricanes. So far this year, not one yet. What happened to "Global
Warming"?)
====================================
THE EDUCATIONAL-RESEARCH COMPLEX
AND THE EMPIRE OF ENERGY
CAUCUS GROUPS PRIVATELY SCHMOOZE LAWMAKERS -- One House lawmaker joined
98 of them. A senator joined one because sugar beet growers asked him to.
Members of the House and Senate belong to hundreds of informal clubs — usually
known as caucuses — that have sprung up to advocate for special interests, with
little public accountability.
====================================
//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
THE AMEN CORNERED
Wednesday July 19, 2006
HIT ME
WITH THAT ONE
MORE TIME ??? (Repeat:
March 25, 2001)
There was this young lady one
hears Once worked with the
Mousekateers She said, "Yes, They're for
real "And No, You can't
feel -- "I'm still a young virgin with
fears."
------------- BroJon
//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
Click here to find the live links to the rest of the full stories in the
Gazette
- http://www.brojon.com
]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]] ***
Tell A Friend You Read About It In The Brother Jonathan Gazette *** You can
forward a copy of this Digest to a friend to let them know what they can
find in the latest edition of the Brother Jonathan
Gazette. ================================================== The BROJON
DAILY DIGEST is published for readers and subscribers of the Brother Jonathan
Gazette. Copyright (c) 2006 TeddySpeaks Foundation Inc. Brother
Jonathan Gazette -- All rights
reserved. ==================================================
--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "MedicalConspiracies" group.
To post to this group, send email to:
MedicalConspiracies googlegroups.com
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to:
MedicalConspiracies-unsubscribe googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at:
http://groups.google.com/group/MedicalConspiracies
«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«
If Paranormal Research and Medical Conspiracies are of interest check out:
Paranormal_Research = Scientific Data & Health Conspiracies
To visit Paranormal_Research on the web, go to:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Paranormal_Research/
To subscribe to this group, send an email to:
Paranormal_Research-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
Any information here in is for educational purpose only, it may be news related, purely speculation or someone's opinion, If health related always consult with a qualified health practitioner before deciding on any course of treatment, especially for serious or life-threatening illnesses.
**COPYRIGHT NOTICE**
In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107,
any copyrighted work in this message is distributed under fair use without profit or payment to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for non-profit research and educational purposes only. http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---
|