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Number 1 is heart disease, like I mentioned, heart disease will end up getting about 1 out of 2 of us. At the turn of the century, heart disease was 1 out of 7 of us, now heart disease is one in two. They say heart disease is a genetic predisposition but that would mean that those people with heart disease are multiplying much faster than the rest of the population, so obviously that is not the only cause for this increase in heart disease. Number two is cancer. Cancer - about one out of three of us will get cancer. With the billions of dollars our government has spent on cancer research we really haven't impacted the cancer statistics much, still about 80% of those with cancer will die. And with Cancer, they call a cure 5 years, if you're five years without a cancer recurrence that is considered a cure. And many times we will see people ten years later and the cancer will recur or they will get it in another site. And part of the reason is most of our cancer medicine is targeted at cutting out the tumor, giving medication to kill the rapidly dividing cells, and giving you radiation to burn out the tumor in the area. But what about what caused the cells to mutate? What caused the cancer to begin with? We have got to look at what caused the cancer, and a lot of what we are seeing is linked to toxic buildup. They are just now starting to become aware of it. Number 3 is a stroke. A stoke is the same basic disease as heart disease. What we are talking about is cardiovascular disease - it is the blood vessels. With a heart attack it is the blood vessels going to your heart muscles, with a stroke it is the blood vessels going to your brain. That is the number 1 and number 3 killer and both of those are very easily treated by lowering homocysteine levels with nutritional supplements. Number 4 is diabetes; diabetes has increased about 50% in the last decade - diabetes is very diet related. Number 5 is osteoporosis. A lot of us, especially women, will get hip fractures. Luckily a lot of people won't die from hip fractures like they use to, they are pretty good a cutting it out and replacing it - but wouldn't it be better if we could prevent that bone loss to begin with? If 93 - 97% of us aren't getting the nutrition we need, it is a given that we need to get on these things, we need to get on supplements to prevent that. Also osteoporosis is linked to soda pops; carbonated beverages help decline the calcium and lower fat so if you can, eliminate those as much as you can. Number 6 is arthritis and number 7 is Alzheimer's And what we are finding is that these all have common denominators. NEXT
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