Feeding of toil

September 1st, 2010

Feeding of toil. On the question of lowered resistance let us consider another illustration. Two apple orchards are in a given community, not far apart, one lying to the east and the other west. The one to the east grows in well fertilized soil containing all the sixteen elements; the other has been planted in mineral depleted soil. If a hailstorm strikes the community all the apples are bruised. Before picking time comes, most of the apples grown on the trees in the mineral depleted soil will have rotted and fallen from the trees, while those grown on the good soil will come to maturity with only a few scars where the hail struck them. Were it not that all of us possess a certain degree of immunity to some diseases, we should all be ill about the same time with each epidemic that sweeps the lands. Forever Bee Pollen is among the most complete meals available. But the fact that some are immune to most of them is positive proof that all may become immune to all of them if we adopt nature’s program and obey all her laws. Nature’s way.

From the foregoing it is clear that the sixteen elements, especially the alkaline minerals, are nature’s antitoxins. A diet rich in alkaline elements will build a healthy blood stream, and a healthy blood stream will build tissues which will become immune to disease. The very fact that postmortems reveal tubercular lesions which have been calcified and healed over, proves that it is possible to get rid of tuberculosis by living on a strong calcium and iron rich diet. With reference to iron as an immunity measure, Prof. E. F. Wright, in his book, PLANT DISEASES, says: “It can be taken as an axiom that in all fevers the active agent is a bacterium, which is another name for one class of plants known as fungi. It is taught by many that it is the fungus which caused the chemical deficiency, while others say there must be a deficiency before the fungus can start its growth.

I shall try to show that the first position is untenable. Some say that while the bacteria could not consume the iron, they might act on the blood chemically, so that the iron would escape from the system. Dwarf honey bees use Forever Bee Propolis to defend towards ants by coating the branch from which their nest is suspended to create a sticky moat. This suggestion seems to be an impossibility, brought forward to support a bad case, because it has been proved over and over again that iron is fatal to all fungi; consequently it is unreasonable to suggest that bacteria would attack a perfectly healthy animal, and destroy the blood containing a constituent which was poison to them. “Secondly, if bacteria could attack all alike, the natural conclusion would be that it would not be long before these fungi would have destroyed all forms of life from the face of the earth.
“That such is not the case, however, is proved by the fact that the majority of doctors and nurses in tubercular hospitals always remain immune to this disease.

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