On Sunday: U.S. Evangelist raises the dead – is HE the New Messiah?

Hundreds of seemingly rock-solid middle and upper middle class Americans claim to have seen a Texas evangelist invoke the power of God Almighty to raise a 6-year-old child from a coffin two days after she fell off a backyard sliding board and snapped her neck, as one emergency room nurse put it, “like a twig.”

And not only did the preacher bring the child back to life, the little girl is said to be walking, talking and in perfect health. One of her doctors is on record as saying that she has seen the child’s most recent CAT and MRI scans “and can’t find evidence of any trauma whatsoever – it’s as if her neck had never been broken.”  This is the same doctor that pronounced the child dead at the hospital 46 hours before the evangelist brought her back to life.

Now people are hailing the evangelist as the New Messiah. Is he? Read our story at derekclontz.com on Sunday and decide for yourself.

Wax dummy buried in JFK’s tomb: Eyes-only CIA report rocks Bush administration

Copyright (c) 2008 Derek Clontz/4-Page Media, Inc. All rights reserved.

Millions of people think John F. Kennedy is dead and buried but nothing could be further from the truth. In fact, the former U.S. president faked his death in Dallas in 1963 and with the help of Kennedy family operatives and key government officials, arranged for a wax dummy to be buried in his place.

That’s the mind-blowing claim of author and Kennedy historian Dr. Philip-Michael Kent, who says that JFK not only masterminded “the most elaborate political hoax ever”, he might still be alive today, preparing to celebrate his 91st birthday on May 29.
 
“This isn’t fantasy, this is the fact – and I have the testimony and photograph to prove it,” the London- based expert told me exclusively. “JFK is no more dead than I am.
 
“He is alive and well at the age of 91, and the proof of it -  a wax … FULL STORY at derekclontz.com

Ask The Herb Guy: Echinacea – or goldenseal – for super immunity?

Help me win a bet with my husband – tell me how echinacea stacks up with goldenseal root

Dear Derek, My husband and I are arguing over the best herb for a chronically weakened immune system. I say echinacea root because my mother used it and my grandmother used it and I never recall ever seeing them get a cold or the flu. He says goldenseal root is farm more powerful – and really is an all natural antibiotic and good for immunity. What do  you think?

herb-guy-banner.jpg I know you have a lot of experience, so your opinion – my husband and I have agreed – is one we will accept as the gospel truth.

That’s important because (not to put any pressure on you!) there is a steak dinner and night on the town riding on this. So, who’s right? - M.M. in Newberry

Dear M.M., Echinacea is a terrific herb best taken when you feel yourself coming down with a cold or flu to help ward off one of the secondary infections, such as bronchitis, that can keep you under the weather for weeks or months instead of the few days it should take for a cold or flu to run its course.

There is disagreement, of course, but unless extraordinary circumstances are in play, echinacea should be taken in short spurts of seven to 10 days on and seven days off for optimal effect and safety, as heavy uninterrupted therapy can come back to “bite” you, causing reduced immunity and increased susceptibility to infection and a diminished immune state.

The same is true of Goldenseal (or it’s kissing cousins, Oregon Grape Root and Barberry, all three of which contain the alkaloid and active ingredient, berberine). 

Now, to finally address and answer your question, you guys are going to have to go “Dutch” on that dinner and date – because when it comes to herbs to strengthen a weakened immune system, astragalus, maitake mushroom, pau d’arco, panax ginseng, American ginseng and even eleuthero would be better choices, generally speaking and over the long haul, than echinacea or goldenseal. But even those powerhouse botanicals aren’t my top choice.

Cat’s claw - aka una de gato, botanical name uncaria tomentosa – is. My experience with over 20,000 users dating back to 1993 confirms that, for me, cat’s claw is the closest thing to a biblical panacea in nature.

I’ve taken it daily for 16 years. And I like and respect it so much that I even created a special blending of full-spectrum inner bark powder and a 3% guaranteed-potency extract to duplicate batch-to-batch and bottle-to-bottle (in the manufacturing process) the most potent, alkaloid-rich cat’s claw that nature produced on her own.

That cat’s claw was imported into the U.S. in 1996-97 after a once-in-a-lifetime growing season and averaged 1.1% alkaloid content compared to the average .3% to .5% alkaloid content. 

A peculiar extract of cat’s claw that contains only pentacyclic alkaloids as opposed the pentacyclic and tetracyclic alkaloids that appear in other cat’s claw products also is a popular choice. Both varieties are used effectively and happily by large numbers of people. Choose based on cost and convenience.

Questions about herbal therapies for Lyme? Feel free to ask. Since 2002, I’ve interviewed over 6,000 Lyme patients through my work with herbs and as the founder-by-default of an unofficial crisis line that is dialed by people from the four corners of the globe -every week (an my phone bill, it’s true, would blow you away!)

Indirectly, 8,000 more Lyme patients, that’s a total of 12,000, have come to me for information an advice. That means I’ve got lots of feedback and experience to share with anyone who needs it.

 Enjoy your week!

D