[10049] in linux-announce channel archive
1 weird food that KILLS blood pressure
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Blood Pressure Solution)
Thu Mar 6 11:04:37 2014
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From: "Blood Pressure Solution" <BloodPressureSolution@undiluvial.com>
Date: Thu, 6 Mar 2014 08:04:33 -0800
To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
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1 food that kills high blood pressure
http://www.undiluvial.com/l/lt33YRH4477CMEUA176PAEMMM/387IEHPKI1414UIKAI2962DVUIGM10JBVNP71675797AJPR1541076170
Unsub- http://www.undiluvial.com/l/lc18JVH4477YJRFS176HQCFBO/387FKRCFC1414KTNNR2962CDULSM10WPVVB71675797OCVV1541076170
A Syracuse man had his home seized after he paid back $9,877
in city taxes over a six-month period -- but came up $936
short."I tried so hard. I tried so hard to make these payments,"
Calvin James, who found out he lost the home when he walked
into City Hall on Dec. 6 with a $1,500 check, told The
Syracuse Post-Standard. The property had been seized Dec. 4.The paper reported
that the city launched an aggressive foreclosure campaign in 2012. The program
puts the troubled properties into the Syracuse-area land bank, which either
sells or demolishes them. James, who paid $8,500 in 2009 for the
property, is currently renting his old home for $500 a month, the
report said.The city told the paper it's sorry the way James' story
worked out."This guy was given all the proper notifications and just came
up short," Paul Driscoll, commissioner of neighborhood and business development,
told the paper. "It's not something that I think that were going
to request the land bank to return."James, 61, is originally from Guyana
and worked for years as a bus mechanic in Brooklyn, the report
said. He cashed out his retirement and made a few bad investments
in Syracuse, the report said.
In this Wednesday, Jan. 22, 2014, photo, job seekers line up to
meet a prospective employer at a career fair at a hotel in
Dallas. Payroll processor ADP reports on job growth at U.S. companies in
January on Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2014. (AP Photo/LM Otero)The Associated PressWASHINGTON
A private survey shows that businesses added jobs at a modest
pace in January, a sign that hiring may have rebounded after a
disappointing figure in December.Payroll processor ADP says companies added
175,000 jobs last month. That's down from 227,000 in December, which was
revised lower. But it was much better than the government's official figure
of just 74,000 new jobs in December.The ADP numbers cover only private
businesses and often diverge from the government's more comprehensive report.
In December its figure came in much higher than the official count.The
report comes amid rising fears of a slowdown in the U.S. and
global economies. Those fears have caused sharp falls in stock markets worldwide.
Turmoil in developing countries and signs of slower growth in the U.S.
have also raised uncertainty about the Federal Reserve's next steps.Mark
Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Analytics, which compiles ADP's report,
said that cold weather "continued to weigh on the job numbers."Many economists
said bad weather was partly to blame for the sharp fall-off in
December hiring. Job gains had averaged 214,000 a month from August through
November, nearly three times
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<p><em>"Mr. Burge, you're going to die.</p>
<p>Probably before you leave this building."</em></p>
<p>That's what the nurse told me when she took my blood pressure.</p>
<p>I was too terrified to speak. My wife was weeping.</p>
<p>I thought about my son Ken. He had recently turned his own blood<br>
pressure around and lost a lot of weight.</p>
<p>Whatever he was doing was working.</p>
<p>So I picked up the phone, hands shaking, and gave him a call.</p>
<p>Ken told me to drop whatever I was doing, drive to the nearest<br>
grocery store, and buy this one weird ingredient:</p>
<p><strong><a href="http://www.undiluvial.com/l/lt19DVN4477JGHNO176MAKAOD/387CRXPNM1414NDJLG2962XPCVKD10AHSLP71675797ABEM1541076170" target="_blank">1 food that kills high blood pressure</a></strong></p>
<p>You will not believe what happened next (click on the link above<br>
to learn the rest).</p>
<p>God bless,</p>
<p>Dennis Burge<br>
Pastor, Calvary Chapel Church<br>
Monet, Missouri</p>
<br><br>
<p><strong>Breaking Health Stories:</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.undiluvial.com/l/lt19BRN4477RURKU176IXHXDS/387LLSCNR1414OSTXL2962FOMIUB10JMQCJ71675797JOET1541076170" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.undiluvial.com/im/OORR4477HDDD176HSUW/387MOW1414AV2962LO10EHQPVJ71675797RGS1541076170/img017638743.jpg" /></a> <a href="http://www.undiluvial.com/l/lt19IMO4477WBGOL176MTOTPJ/387SEAQEV1414CTALM2962PKVKQR10SDGSF71675797NJSA1541076170" target="_blank">Drug companies HATE this anti-heart-disease superfood</a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.undiluvial.com/l/lt19GHV4477VSPAS176GGOKAQ/387WOGHLS1414ADOFL2962HMBSFD10YMAUF71675797PWXV1541076170" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.undiluvial.com/im/EOIG4477FFVO176OJHQ/387OXW1414AH2962JC10BRFAEF71675797VMW1541076170/img117638743.jpg" /></a> <a href="http://www.undiluvial.com/l/lt19UMU4477BCEIJ176LGXDPI/387TEGSGO1414FIPWQ2962RDXPPV10LFSMH71675797WWQL1541076170" target="_blank">#1 WORST food for weight gain</a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.undiluvial.com/l/lt19DRO4477UAIBI176EIYJSO/387GJJLKY1414CGKJB2962AQYWJM10DBBXD71675797LCOP1541076170" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.undiluvial.com/im/KNYD4477FHPO176TANX/387GBH1414JB2962AK10ALWFPX71675797GSK1541076170/img217638743.jpg" /></a> <a href="http://www.undiluvial.com/l/lt19IHA4477SXCXD176JNRFNH/387FVIMGL1414OQOBQ2962TQOALY10KVCDT71675797ECYP1541076170" target="_blank">66-year-old pastor lowers deadly BP with this 1 grocery store item</a></p>
<br><br>
<div align="center"><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="1"><br><a href="http://www.undiluvial.com/l/lc8RSX4477GADCL176SKWHEN/387KUIBJK1414NLVJP2962BFVFEL10XWLEY71675797PIKK1541076170"><font color="#666666">Update Preferences</font></a><br><br> Primal Health, L.P. | 321 N Central Expressway Suite 341 | McKinney, TX 75070 </font></td></td></tr></table>
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">Feb. 4, 2014: Creation Museum head Ken Ham, right, speaks during a
debate on evolution with TV's "Science Guy" Bill Nye, at the Creation
Museum in Petersburg, Ky.AP Photo/The Courier-Journal, Matt StoneFeb. 4,
2014: TV's "Science Guy" Bill Nye stand speaks during a debate on
evolution with Creation Museum head Ken Ham at the Petersburg, Ky. museum.AP
Photo/Dylan LovanFeb. 4, 2014: Creation Museum head Ken Ham speaks during
a debate on evolution with TV's "Science Guy" Bill Nye, not shown,
at the Creation Museum in Petersburg, Ky.AP Photo/The Courier-Journal, Matt
StonePETERSBURG, Ky. True to his passionate and animated TV persona, "Science
Guy" Bill Nye tapped on the podium, threw up his hands and
noted that science shows the Earth is "billions and billions" of years
old in a debate at a Kentucky museum known for teaching that
the planet's age is only 6,000.Nye was debating Creation Museum founder
Ken Ham and promoting science in the snappy way that made him
a pop culture staple as host of "Bill Nye The Science Guy"
in the 1990s.The event was meant to explore the age old question,
"How did we get here?" from the perspectives of faith and science.Ham,
an Australian native who has built a thriving ministry in Kentucky, said
he trusts the story of creation presented by the Bible."The Bible is
the word of God," Ham said. "I admit that's where I start
from."- Ken Ham, founder of the Creation MuseumNye delivered a passionate
speech on scie
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina Argentina's security secretary says seven first-responders
were killed battling a fire that destroyed an archive of bank documents.The
fire at the Iron Mountain warehouse took hours to control and the
sprawling building appears to be ruined despite the arrival of at least
10 squads of firefighters Wednesday.Security Secretary Sergio Berni says
the dead include five firefighters and two civil defense workers who were
killed when a wall of the building collapsed on top of them.National
civil defense director Alberto Crescienti says nine others were hospitalized
with serious injuries.Buenos Aires civil defense director Guillermo Montenegro
says the archives contained banking documents.The cause of the blaze isn't
immediately clear. Iron Mountain advertises that its facilities have multiple
protections against fire.
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