Thursday, February 2, 2023

BOMBSHELL

These 5 countries are practically cancer free:

How’s that possible when cancer rates are so high here in the states?

It comes down to a controversial therapy.

I’ll give you a hint about it:

OxiClean.

Doctors have had their licenses stripped for curing people with it…

And Dr. Atkins went to jail for sharing this therapy with his patients.

It has the power to completely bankrupt Big Pharma, so watch this before it gets taken down:

Controversial “OxiClean” Therapy

Take care,

Natural Living Digest Research Team














Majuro is the world's busiest tuna transshipment port, with 704 transshipments totaling 444,393 tons in 2015.[99] Majuro is also a tuna processing center; the Pan Pacific Foods plant exports processed tuna to a number of countries, primarily the United States under the Bumble Bee brand.[100] Fishing license fees, primarily for tuna, provide noteworthy income for the government.[83] In 1999, a private company built a tuna loining plant with more than 400 employees, mostly women. But the plant closed in 2005 after a failed attempt to convert it to produce tuna steaks, a process that requires half as many employees. Operating costs exceeded revenue, and the plant's owners tried to partner with the government to prevent closure. But government officials personally interested in an economic stake in the plant refused to help. After the plant closed, it was taken over by the government, which had been the guarantor of a $2 million loan to the business.[citation needed] Energy On September 15, 2007, Witon Barry (of the Tobolar Copra processing plant in the Marshall Islands capital of Majuro) said power authorities, private companies, and entrepreneurs had been experimenting with coconut oil as alternative to diesel fuel for vehicles, power generators, and ships. Coconut trees abound in the Pacific's tropical islands. Copra, the meat of the coconut, yields coconut oil (1 liter for every 6 to 10 coconuts).[101] In 2009, a 57 kW solar power plant was installed, the largest in the Pacific at the time, including New Zealand.[102] It is estimated that 330 kW of solar and 450 kW of wind power would be required to make the College of the Marshall Islands energy self-sufficient.[103] Marshalls Energy Company (MEC), a government entity, provides the islands with electricity. In 2008, 420 solar home systems of 20




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