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<p><b>How to change the 
		world by buying organic and supporting sustainable farming 
		By Mike Adams</b></p>
		<p>You have the power in your hands to change the world. This change 
		ripples 
		out from you in concentric circles, and it all starts with decisions you 
		make at the grocery store because what you choose to buy and consume 
		impacts 
		the world in many powerful ways that you may have never been aware of. 
		Every 
		purchasing decision you make changes the world, but that's a sort of 
		nebulous idea. It's kind of big idea to grasp, so let's start with 
		something 
		a little simpler. Let's start with how changing your decision at the 
		grocery 
		store changes you and your life, and then we'll move out from there.</p>
		<p><b>How foods affect your physical existence</b> 
		Let's start with talking about how you exist as a human being. You exist 
		at 
		many different levels and one of them ­ of course, the most obvious one 
		­ is 
		the physical level. In other words, you have physical matter, you have 
		mass 
		and you have substance. This makes up your body and your organs. For a 
		moment, we'll ignore the argument that all your physical matter is just 
		energy, which it is, and stick with the Newtonian view of reality here 
		and 
		talk about the physical you.</p>
		<p>This physical you has certain needs. You have to put a certain amount 
		of 
		food through your body. It has to physically move through your body in 
		order 
		to be digested and utilized, so you also have a physical need for 
		certain 
		types of food. These food decisions, the purchasing decisions you make 
		at 
		the grocery store, can alter your physical body. If you begin to avoid 
		purchasing foods and products that contain poisons or dangerous 
		ingredients 
		that I call metabolic disruptors, you can avoid the chronic diseases 
		that 
		most people are experiencing because those diseases are caused by those 
		ingredients.</p>
		<p>For example, we know that hydrogenated oils cause heart disease and 
		nervous 
		system disorders. We know that monosodium glutamate (see related ebook 
		on 
		monosodium glutamate) and excitotoxins promote obesity and migraines. We 
		know that sodium nitrate, a common preservative found in most meat 
		products, 
		causes pancreatic cancer and colon cancer. We know that artificial food 
		color ingredients promote attention deficit hyperactivity disorders, 
		learning disabilities and so on. There are many other ingredients that 
		cause 
		physical problems as well as problems that go beyond the physical you, 
		but 
		again, we're just talking about the physical, so that's the first level 
		of 
		impact.</p>
		<p>Imagine there is an outline of your body which represents the 
		physical 
		impact of the foods that you choose to buy. So, if you're at a grocery 
		store 
		and you're trying to decide between two different crackers -- one 
		cracker 
		product is made with hydrogenated oils and another cracker product 
		beside it 
		is made with zero trans fats, no hydrogenated oil and no MSG -- then by 
		changing your decision right there at the point of purchase, you're 
		changing 
		the physical impact on your body. Now, that physical impact may not be 
		experienced until a day or two later, and it may not really be obvious 
		unless you make this decision thousands of times over and over again 
		over a 
		period of years, but it does make a difference. It is choosing a 
		different 
		path in your life.</p>
		<p><b>How foods affect your chemical existence</b> 
		Now, that's just the first level, so what happens next? You also exist 
		at a 
		biochemical level, so you have all this physical matter, but what's 
		actually 
		making this physical matter work is chemistry. Inside your body, you 
		have 
		chemistry that breaks down the amino acids found in foods. You have 
		chemistry that moves water and sodium through the cells of your body. 
		You 
		have enzymes and various enzymatic reactions taking place throughout 
		your 
		body during every living moment. There is a lot of chemistry going on.</p>
		<p>Today, most chronic diseases are described in terms of chemistry, 
		even 
		though that's not necessarily the level at which they originate. 
		Cardiovascular disease can be described as a chemical disorder, as 
		something 
		wrong with the lipids in your blood, for example. Poor digestion might 
		be 
		said to be chemically caused because you're not making enough 
		hydrochloric 
		acid in your stomach, for example. Cancer is also often described in 
		terms 
		of its chemical nature, with the explanation that the chemical molecules 
		in 
		your body or your immune system aren't functioning correctly. 
&nbsp;</p>
		<p>You have all this chemistry that is taking place in your body, and 
		what you 
		choose to eat modifies your chemistry. If you choose to buy a grocery 
		store 
		product that contains a lot of white flour and refined sugars, that's 
		going 
		to alter the chemistry of your body when you consume and digest it. It 
		will 
		make your body more acidic and deplete it of certain nutrients -- like 
		vitamins, minerals and other nutrients -- that are necessary for 
		enzymatic 
		reactions. However, if you make good decisions at the grocery store and 
		choose, for example, to purchase healthy oils -- like macadamia nut oil, 
		olive oil, flax seed oil or even unprocessed coconut oil -- then your 
		chemistry is going to be much healthier. Your blood chemistry profile 
		will 
		be positive rather than negative. It will indicate health rather than 
		disease.</p>
		<p>All these biochemical effects take place and, of course, affect your 
		mental 
		function because the brain is an organ that depends on chemistry for its 
		function. When you have the right foods based on the right decisions you 
		make at the grocery store, you end up with the right chemistry. I think 
		my 
		own health statistics demonstrate that if you make the right decisions, 
		you 
		can create outstanding chemistry that's very easy to verify in a 
		laboratory 
		analysis. It's a direct cause and effect relationship. If you stop 
		eating 
		the foods that are heavily advertised and ignore the advice of 
		nutritionists, dietitians and doctors who are still pushing old-school 
		nutrition, and instead start eating natural and organic foods, healthy 
		oils 
		and plant-based fats, while avoiding toxic ingredients ­ including red 
		meat, 
		dairy products and excitotoxins ­ then you, too, can create healthy 
		blood 
		chemistry that you can verify with simple laboratory analysis. It's very 
		straightforward.</p>
		<p>To represent this chemical level around your body, Draw a larger 
		circle 
		around your body, a second outline; this is the biochemical layer of 
		effect 
		that you're creating by making new decisions at the grocery store.</p>
		<p><b>Bioenergetics: Homeopathic foods enhance your body's energy</b> 
		The third level is what I call bioenergetic. Just as you are a physical 
		and 
		chemical being, you are also an energetic being. In fact, everything 
		that is 
		chemistry is really just energy, and everything that is physical is 
		really 
		just energy, too. From a physics point of view, there's nothing really 
		there. There is no physical matter in your body; it's all just energy 
		vibrating at certain frequencies with certain interactions.</p>
		<p>However, I'm not talking about that type of energy here. I'm talking 
		about 
		the energy of foods, because foods have a homeopathic quality. Every 
		product 
		you choose to consume has an energy; you could call it a feeling. A food 
		that is grown in nature -- that has been born in the soil and grows up 
		under 
		the sun with clean air, clean water, clean soils and under the care of 
		small 
		organic family farmers who used care and honesty -- creates love, health 
		and 
		connection in your body. Just as homeopathic water has a scientifically 
		proven effect in living systems (including humans and animals), the 
		homeopathic quality of foods also has such an effect. This is not 
		something 
		that has been well studied. The information you're getting here is 
		probably 
		10 to 15 years ahead of science, but someday I have no doubt that the 
		homeopathic qualities of foods will someday be recognized and measured 
		and 
		will ultimately be found to be very important to the health effects of 
		those 
		foods.</p>
		<p>You can create positive energy in foods by praying over them or even 
		chanting over them in a mantra, the way Tibetan monks would do, for 
		example. 
		You can create positive energies in food by giving them clean, pure 
		water, 
		such as unpolluted rainwater. You can use organic soils that have 
		microorganisms in them, so that they're living in balance with the 
		natural 
		ecosystem. You can create positive energy by having the foods harvested 
		by 
		people who are happy to be doing this work, who are not slave workers 
		and 
		who are making a fair wage, either by farming or wild harvesting these 
		foods. This is how you create healthy foods, and when you purchase 
		something 
		at the grocery store, the closer you can get to that vibration of 
		happiness, 
		the healthier the energetic effect is going to be on your body. This is 
		one 
		reason to buy organic foods; not just because they don't have 
		pesticides, 
		but also because they are literally happier foods. They're healthier for 
		your mind, your body and your entire energy system.</p>
		<p>In contrast to that, most of the foods that are available in grocery 
		stores 
		(and certainly at restaurants) are really unhappy foods. They are foods 
		that 
		have been grown in unnatural environments. They've been bombarded with 
		pesticides or herbicides. They have not been given clean water and, more 
		importantly, have been planted and harvested under a system of greed, 
		exploitation and corporate farming. Then, they've been processed and had 
		their nutrients stripped away. They've been reformed and combined with 
		various chemicals, such as preservatives and taste enhancers, and have 
		been 
		packaged in pretty boxes and put on the shelf in the grocery store. 
		 
		That is a very unhappy food and, if it comes from unhappy animals, then 
		it's 
		even less happy. If it's from cows that have been fed the ground up 
		parts of 
		other animals, which are routinely fed to cows today, and if these cows 
		have 
		been slaughtered in an inhumane way -- which is the way virtually all 
		cows, 
		pigs and chickens are slaughtered today, cooped up in tiny compartments 
		and 
		not being given access to fresh air, sunlight and fresh water -- then 
		they 
		are not just unhappy animals; they are probably insane animals. They are 
		what I call mad chickens or insane cows. Even though this makes it 
		easier 
		for animal ranchers to make money, it creates a problem with the final 
		food 
		product: The problem is that that beef, chicken or pork has been 
		imprinted 
		with emotions like anger, greed and terror because of the slaughtering 
		process, and these traits of the food are passed on directly to the 
		consumer.</p>
		<p><b>It's not listed on the box and it hasn't been scientifically 
		proven yet --</b> 
		again, this is years ahead of the science -- but it is very much true 
		that 
		if you eat angry red meat, you're going to become an angry person. (You 
		are 
		what you eat, remember?) In fact, this part of it is not so difficult to 
		confirm. You can go out and question a thousand people, find out who's 
		more 
		peaceful versus who's more angry about anything in the world or in their 
		own 
		lives, and you'll find that the really angry people tend to eat a lot of 
		red 
		meat, while those who try to propose solutions, are all about helping 
		people 
		and who give more than they take, are people who don't eat red meat. 
		Vegetarians tend to be happier, more pleasant, less aggressive people 
		than 
		meat eaters, and for years, people have wondered why. Well, I think this 
		is 
		the answer: It's because of the energetic quality of the foods.</p>
		<p><b>The costs of buying non-organic go far beyond money</b> 
		Again, when you're making that purchasing decision at the grocery store, 
		what you're purchasing has an energetic effect. If you have two pieces 
		of 
		beef on the shelf in front of you, and one piece is $3 a pound and from 
		a 
		cow that has been raised in a terrible environment -- that has been fed 
		chicken litter, pumped up full of hormones, has had no access to the 
		outside 
		and has been abused in an inhumane way by corporate ranching operations 
		-- 
		then that's going to have a very destructive, negative effect on your 
		energetic health. But if beside that package you have a piece of beef 
		that 
		is $6 a pound and from a free-range, organic cow that has been fed fresh 
		grass, has been able to run freely in open fields and has been treated 
		with 
		a degree of respect by the rancher, then that piece of meat, even though 
		it 
		costs twice as much, delivers so much more in terms of its energetic 
		qualities to you. Yes, you're still eating red meat, and there are still 
		negative health effects from the overconsumption of red meat, but at 
		least 
		you're not poisoning your energetic system as you would be with the 
		conventionally raised meat that's only $3 a pound.</p>
		<p>So, that's the energetic effect of the foods you choose to purchase 
		from the 
		grocery store and consume. However, there's a much bigger ripple effect 
		from 
		all of this. Think about it: When you purchase a piece of meat and you 
		choose the organic, free-range cow over the conventionally raised cow, 
		you 
		actually create demand for organic free-range beef and reduce demand for 
		pesticide-laden, conventionally raised, abused red meat. You see, every 
		time 
		you purchase a hamburger that has not been raised organically and 
		ethically, 
		you are in effect partly responsible for the raising, slaughtering and 
		abuse 
		of a living, breathing mammal -- a cow.</p>
		<p>That beef didn't come out of the sky; it came from the flesh of a 
		living 
		animal. When you purchase that flesh, you create economic incentives for 
		people to keep raising those animals -- to give birth to another cow, 
		raise 
		it, slaughter it and put it on the shelf to replace the beef you just 
		bought; whereas, if you buy organic beef, you create demand on the 
		organic 
		side. You reward the organic farmer for treating the cattle in a better 
		way. 
		So, you vote with your dollars; you create demand curves that are then 
		met 
		by supply. Everything you purchase has a ripple effect that goes way 
		beyond 
		your physical, chemical or energetic self and goes into the community 
		and 
		planet at large.</p>
		<p><b>How your buying power influences your community</b> 
		If you haven't done so already, draw a third circle around yourself; 
		that's 
		the energetic level. Now, draw a fourth, much larger circle; this is the 
		community level. This is where you're affecting your local community and 
		the 
		demand curves for various foods and ingredients. By changing what you 
		buy, 
		you change what farmers will grow and how they will grow it. You change 
		what 
		ranchers do to their animals. You change it all, just by choosing what 
		you 
		buy. It can literally be a product right next to another product on the 
		shelf. They can be two inches apart, but they can make a world of 
		difference. If you move your hand six inches to the right and pick up 
		that 
		organic beef, you are making a huge difference in the lives of organic 
		farmers, in saving the planet from pesticides and reducing the revenues 
		for 
		companies that manufacture bovine growth hormones. You're also making 
		the 
		difference in the quality of life of the animal that has been sacrificed 
		to 
		provide you food. In my view, the only way to honor that animal is to 
		choose 
		the best possible existence for that animal. If you're going to consume 
		their flesh, you should at least honor them enough to grant them an 
		organic, 
		free-range existence. 
		 
		Your choices affect the sources of those foods as well. If you buy from 
		small, local organic growers, like you might find at a farmer's market 
		or 
		local co-op, then you are supporting sustainable farming and local 
		families 
		who have the knowledge and the determination to work close to the earth 
		in 
		an honorable profession. When you purchase from these local organic 
		farmers, 
		you are supporting a way of life that is truly sacred; a way of life 
		that, 
		frankly, more of us would do well to emulate. That way of life includes 
		farming organic produce from the earth in the local sustainable way that 
		honors nature. That's a miracle in action, and every time you purchase 
		those 
		foods, you support those local community miracles. 
		 
		If you want your community to be made up of farmers who know the land, 
		who 
		can deliver fresh organic produce and who honor the earth, then that's 
		what 
		you need to buy because you support whatever you buy. On the other hand, 
		if 
		you want an earth that is scorched with pesticides, with polluted 
		rivers, 
		increasingly unlivable oceans, polluted produce and heavy metals in your 
		soils, and if you want a system of corporate greed and exploitation, 
		then go 
		ahead and buy the non-organic fruits, vegetables and processed foods 
		because 
		that's what you're going to create by making that decision.</p>
		<p><b>Corporate farming isn't sustainable farming</b> 
		This brings us to one more level -- the corporate level, or the business 
		model level. Everything you choose at the grocery store is a vote for a 
		certain type of business model. If you choose small organic family 
		farms, 
		then that's what you create. If you choose mega-corporations who sell 
		food 
		only because it's something that makes money, just the same as drugs 
		make 
		money or cigarettes make money, that's what you choose to support, as 
		well. 
		In fact, Phillip Morris owns Kraft, a food company that makes thousands 
		and 
		thousands of processed food products. A cigarette company owns a food 
		company that sells you all those processed foods, and I think that's bad 
		for 
		the environment. I think it's bad for the world, and it's the bad 
		corporate 
		model for producing and delivering food products. I don't think it's a 
		sustainable model. 
		 
		You have so much influence by making these simple decisions at the 
		grocery 
		store. Just by choosing one box over another or one package over 
		another, or 
		picking apples from one bin instead of the bin next to that, you 
		literally 
		change the world because you shift the demand curve. You vote for a type 
		of 
		product. You vote for the way animals should be treated if there are 
		animal 
		products involved. You vote for a business model. You vote for the model 
		of 
		environmental protection that is practiced by these organizations. You 
		affect each and every one of these things just by making a simple 
		purchase 
		decision. 
		 
		You see, the world becomes what you consume. If you look at it 
		collectively, 
		the products that each of us purchases and consumes amount to the 
		corporate 
		world we have created. It's as if the consumers have created all of this 
		because they have been blind to the effects of what they are doing. The 
		mistake consumers make is that most of them shop based on price. There's 
		no 
		question that the mass-production, corporate-farming, pollution-creating 
		system of producing food is very efficient in terms of retail economics; 
		that is, if you only consider the direct costs. They can give you a slab 
		of 
		meat, a box of cookies or a bag of breakfast cereal more cheaply than 
		organic farmers or small family farms can ever do, and they can probably 
		have a prettier box and make it taste a little better with artificial 
		flavors and more visually appealing with artificial colors. They have a 
		bigger marketing budget because there's so much profit in those 
		nutritionally depleted foods that they can spend literally billions of 
		dollars a year on advertising to convince people to buy these foods, 
		making 
		sure that those people never learn the true implications of what their 
		purchasing decisions mean. 
&nbsp;</p>
		<p>Now, I got to thinking, &quot;What if products actually showed the effects 
		of 
		what they cause right there on the box, anytime you purchased them? What 
		if 
		every box of cereal, for example, had a little video screen on it, and 
		when 
		you purchased the box you would see a little video of what it causes?&quot; 
		You 
		might see really angry farmers plowing in the field, or if you purchase 
		some 
		canned soup with some meat in it, you might hear the scream of a dying 
		cow. 
&nbsp;</p>
		<p>You might see some dead fish floating through the surface of a 
		polluted 
		river, or you might see ocean life or coral reefs dying. You might see a 
		dark, polluted earth with polluted sky and water; that's what really 
		should 
		be on the fronts of these food boxes, because that's the effect. 
&nbsp;</p>
		<p>You might see exploited farmers in Mexico, Brazil or other countries 
		who are 
		essentially working under slave conditions to bring you these foods at 
		prices that generate profits for these corporations. You might see an 
		image 
		of Mother Nature herself, screaming, horrified at how her gifts to 
		humankind 
		are being exploited and stripped away of all their healing powers and 
		packaged into these pretty boxes so that you, the consumer, could buy 
		them. 
		If the product itself really told the truth about what it caused, people 
		would be horrified.</p>
		<p>Consumers are unaware of the consequences of buying non-organic 
		The only reason people continue to buy these things is because they 
		don't 
		know the indirect consequences of what they're doing. When they pick up 
		a 
		package of meat, they don't hear the scream of the terrified cow that 
		has 
		been slaughtered in inhumane conditions -- the cow who hardly ever saw 
		the 
		light of day, was separated from its mother at a young age, never given 
		any 
		sort of humane treatment and fed ground-up parts of other dead animals, 
		including dead dogs and cats, road kill and chickens. All of these 
		things 
		are fed to cows today (in fact, they are USDA approved). 
&nbsp;</p>
		<p>If you saw that on the package of meat, you'd throw it away in a 
		hurry. 
		You'd never buy that package. If you saw the greedy look in the eyes of 
		the 
		CEOs of corporations that were harvesting this meat and growing these 
		cows 
		for nothing but profit, with no sense of ethics and no sense of honor in 
		these animals, and you could see pictures of them stuffing dollars in 
		their 
		pockets and laughing while you consume products with detrimental health 
		effects, you'd never buy that product. You'd put it down in a hurry. 
&nbsp;</p>
		<p>If the packages really told the truth, you'd change your grocery 
		shopping 
		habits in an instant because when you bought fresh fruits, like organic 
		blueberries from a local, family-owned farm, you'd see an image of 
		Mother 
		Nature smiling. You'd see health sprouting out of this package and into 
		your 
		body, as blueberries help enhance your cardiovascular health, provide 
		antioxidants, fight cancer, protect your eyes from vision loss and offer 
		a 
		whole host of other benefits. You'd see happy farmers working with their 
		families, who have created a sustainable revenue model, who honor the 
		earth, 
		who love the soil and who are doing this because they feel passionate 
		about 
		farming and working close to Mother Nature. 
&nbsp;</p>
		<p>That's what you'd see on the package, and you'd say, &quot;Yes, this is 
		the kind 
		of food I want to feed myself, my family, my children and my community. 
		This 
		is what we need.&quot; You'd see images of clean running rivers and streams 
		because there are no pesticide runoffs. You'd see oceans thriving with 
		life 
		because there are no poisons coming from the land being used to grow 
		these 
		blueberries. 
&nbsp;</p>
		<p>If the packages really told the truth, you'd see the horrifying 
		images of 
		what the non-organic, corporate-created products do to you and the 
		world, 
		and in contrast to that, you'd see the beautiful, wondrous, creative, 
		positive effects of organic foods and organically-raised animals and how 
		these foods create a positive, healthy impact on you, your community and 
		your world. 
&nbsp;</p>
		<p>That's what I mean when I say you can change the world by making a 
		different 
		decision at the grocery store. When they first hear that, a lot of 
		people 
		think it couldn't possibly be true and that I'm just spending an extra 
		$2 on 
		an organic product. &quot;Why would you do that?&quot; They say. &quot;Why would you 
		spend 
		twice as much money just because it says 'organic' on it?&quot; Well, here's 
		the 
		reason: It's because of everything that it impacts. It's all those 
		concentric waves emanating out from your decision like ripples in a 
		pond. 
&nbsp;</p>
		<p>What you do in that moment of decision in a grocery store affects the 
		entire 
		world. You have the power within you to change the world, to vote with 
		your 
		dollars for the kind of world that you want to create -- the kind of 
		world 
		that treats animals ethically, that honors nature and its gifts to 
		mankind 
		and that has the kind of sustainable farming methods that don't make the 
		rivers, streams, soils, oceans and air toxic. You have the power to 
		create 
		the future based on what you consume right now. 
&nbsp;</p>
		<p>Do you see why price is the least important of these factors? What's 
		the 
		good of saving a dollar or two on the package of so-called 'foods' if 
		you're 
		poisoning the planet and supporting a corporate empire of exploitation 
		and 
		destruction that would bring you this food a couple dollars cheaper at 
		the 
		expense of the very planet that brought you that gift in the first 
		place? 
		When you buy non-organic, you're not really saving any money; you're 
		dooming 
		the planet. 
&nbsp;</p>
		<p>When you buy organic, on the other hand, you are saving everything 
		that 
		matters. You're saving the small family farms, sustainable farming 
		methods, 
		your own health and the rivers, streams and oceans; you're saving a 
		whole 
		system of honoring Mother Nature. So, the best savings at a grocery 
		store 
		can only be experienced if you're buying organic because, if you buy 
		non-organic, corporate food or processed foods, you're not only getting 
		ripped off yourself; you're ripping off the community and the planet, 
		and 
		you're ripping yourself off at every level -- physical, chemical and 
		energetic. However, when you buy organic, you're saving yourself at 
		every 
		level, and you're giving yourself these intangible benefits that are 
		priceless. 
		 
		Remember: You have the power to change the world inside you right now, 
		and I 
		urge you to exercise it the next time you are at a grocery store making 
		a 
		purchasing decision. The world and its oceans, animals and revenue 
		models 
		are all at stake. The responsibility for making the right decision rests 
		on 
		your shoulders, on my shoulders and on the shoulders of all consumers 
		everywhere, because the only way we are going to change this modern food 
		system is to shift the demand curves. We must force companies to stop 
		poisoning our planet by making it unprofitable for them to do so, and 
		the 
		only way we can do that is by changing our purchasing habits at the 
		grocery 
		store. Change what you buy, and you will change the world. Thanks for 
		reading. This is Mike Adams, the Health Ranger.</p>
		<p>Overview:</p>
		<p>* How to change the world by buying organic and supporting 
		sustainable farming</p>
		<p>Source: <a href="http://www.newstarget.com/012026.html">
		http://www.newstarget.com/012026.html</a>&nbsp;</td>
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