| Bear Bile: Your New Medical Hope For Stroke (& Investment Opportunity) |  |
Did you know medical researchers at the University of
Minnesota have found that bile acid from black bear gallbladders
can reduce brain damage by more than 50 percent in stroke-
impaired laboratory rats?
This provocative news provides an excellent example of the
ridiculous assumptions built into medical science. But, it will
open the door to a terrific investment opportunity: Bear Farming.
First, let's cover the assumptions:
(1) Our human body is equivalent to that of a rat.
300 years ago all the sciences adopted the Cartesian model of
thinking:
The universe and all organisms were thought to be machines
made up of a multitude of separate objects. They could be
understood by reducing them down to their basic parts and by
looking for the mechanisms through which these parts interact.
Since that time every science except medical science has
accepted a series of conceptual revolutions that clearly revealed
the limitations of the mechanistic view.
The mechanistic, reductionist, biomedical model of health still
assumes our body functions like a machine. Furthermore, all
animals are machines, and human machine parts are no different
from the parts of a pig machine, rat machine, or bear machine.
Is this assumption useful? No!
Remember the great flap about the new drug that stopped the
flow of blood to cancer tumors in rodents? It was a total flop
when tested on human cancer tumors.
Humans are not rodents!
(2) A single variable will prevent or promote a disease, and
can be isolated from all other variables.
This comes from the initial success of penicillin, and has become
the foundation of the scientific method. As a result we have been
stuck with cultural belief in the Quick Technological Fix, where
magic bullets like bear bile are conjured up to treat our ills.
Is this assumption useful? No!
Health is not based on single variables working by themselves. In
humans, for example, dozens of minerals act interdependently to
determine our health.
Furthermore, this stupid assumption has resulted in our medical
researchers ignoring the origin of disease and how to prevent it,
and focusing on providing new and better ways to treat it.
New and better treatments: For the vested interests, that's where
the money is! Which gets us to the fantastic opportunity in Bear
Farming.
Not only will Bear Farming provide bear bile to treat stroke
damage in humans, there is an excellent market for bear meat. In
Montana I once tasted bear meat and it was exquisite. Of
course, that was range bear, not cage bear.
Companies developing bear bile for commercial use can provide
bears with a range diet by having clever medical researchers
forage for bear food as a condition of their employment.
Tasty bear meat will require bear exercise. So bear farms will be
designed somewhat like penitentiaries, but the entire rear of
each cage will open up to a bear exercise yard where the
researchers can chase the bears back and forth with electric
cattle prods.
As bears will not willingly be led to the slaughterhouse like
cattle, they will be darted, then humanely killed in their cages.
A forklift will enter through the cage rear and take the carcass
to the butcher's room for dismemberment, gallbladder removal
and bile extraction.
The TV reality shows will provide a market for by-products such
as bear eyes, ovaries, and testicles.
How will they get bear breeding stock? In the dead of winter,
these whiz-bang medical researchers will scour caves in the
Rocky Mountains, and kidnap hibernating bears and their cubs.
How are your bearing up under medical research idiocy like this,
where every day medical "scientists" fool around with limited and
approximate descriptions of reality which yield no insight as to
where health comes from?
Dr. Weston A. Price investigated distant groups that were
immune to stroke and did not get sick nor die like we do. He
found that their diets were exceptionally dense, containing four
times the minerals and ten times the fat-soluble vitamins found in
the American diet of the late 1930's and early 40's.
Folks who learn where health comes from and practice
prevention don't have strokes, and will not need the medical
community practicing upon them with bear bile, or any other
magic bullet.
Bill Quesnell, health educator and author of "Minerals: The
Essential Link to Health," helps people recover energy and
vitality. Subscribe to FREE monthly ezine, "Where Health
Comes From' at info@mineralsbuildhealth.com Phone:
619/222-2268 Toll free orders: 866/552-0622 For critical
reviews and a list of 15 harmful health myths visit
http://www.mineralsbuildhealth.com
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