The Superior Human?

“The Superior human?” (March 2012) is the first documentary to systematically challenge the common human belief that humans are superior to other life forms. The documentary reveals the absurdity of this belief while exploding human bias.

Featuring Dr Bernard Rollin, Gary Yourofsky Dr Richard Ryder, Dr Steven Best. Narrated by Dr Nick Gylaw.

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Interview with the Calgary Herald

Andrea Kladar interview with the Calgary Herald

Andrea Kladar interview with the Calgary Herald

Andrea Kladar interview with the Calgary Herald

When Andrea Kladar sets out to run the Island Runner Ultra 100K race on Vancouver Island on May 11, she will be pushing her body to run more than twice as far as she’s ever run at one time before.

But this is the same woman who — when she committed to her first triathlon in 2009 — hated running, and had never been on a road bike or swam a lap in her life.

Since then, she has completed the famed Ironman twice.

“It’s all about taking on challenges. . . . But I do have a coach, thank goodness. Because I really have no idea what I’m doing,” Kladar says with a laugh.

The Calgary woman, whose day job is in the local banking sector, thrives on pushing her limits.

She is spurred on in part by memories of a traumatic youth. Kladar was born and raised in the former Yugoslavia, fled the war-torn country as a teenager, and lived five years as a refugee in Croatia before coming to Canada. She wants to make every moment count.

Kladar says her painful past is one of the reasons she runs for charity. In the lead-up to the Island Runner Ultra 100K, for example, the animal lover and vegetarian hopes to raise $10,000 for the Alberta Animal Rescue Crew Society as well as Rescue and Sanctuary for Threatened Animals.

She has raised money for other causes with previous athletic events.

“From a wealthy, comfortable life in the former Yugoslavia, boom, everything vanished. Everything was gone in a very short amount of time,” she says. “Canada definitely feels like home to me now, but sometimes it is surreal. Canada is an amazing place to live, it’s such a great country, and because of that I think we have a higher obligation to help those who are suffering.”

To be recorded as having officially completed the Island Runner 100K, Kladar must finish in under 12 hours. So every week, she laces up her shoes and puts in the distance — 20 km one day, 30 km the next, and so on. She is looking forward to checking the race off her bucket list, and handing over a healthy amount of money to the animal welfare charities she is racing for.

But as determined as she is, some things haven’t changed.

“I still can’t say I love running,” she says with a smile. “But I’ve learned to work with it, let’s put it that way.”

More information about Kladar’s campaign, “Running 100 km to Save 100 Animals,” is available at http://100for100.me

astephenson@calgaryherald.com
© Copyright (c) The Calgary Herald

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It will hurt

So you’ve decided to get in shape. Maybe you’re already exercising but would like to be more consistent. Or maybe you’re starting from scratch after a long break. Your problem seems to be motivation. When it comes down to it, you procrastinate and it just doesn’t happen.

The thing is, it’s not that you don’t want it enough. It’s a matter of planning. It will not just “happen” – there needs to be a clear plan in place, a way to measure it, and a way to execute it.
As I’m not an expert but only a regular person training for a 100 km run, all I can do is share what works for me and hopefully something will resonate with you.
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98 year old vegan cardiothoracic surgeon – Dr. Ellsworth Wareham

Vegan since his 50s, Dr. Ellsworth Wareham is a famous cardiothoracic surgeon who retired at the age of 95. He believes his healthful lifestyle contributes to his longevity, and he points to Loma Linda’s Adventist Health Studies as evidence.
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Number of vegans more than doubles since 2009

Vegan diets on the rise – Google trends

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Lulu, the hero pig, saves a woman’s life

Lulu, the hero pig

One of the most misunderstood animals in the world is the pig. Pot bellied pigs are clean, intelligent and devoted beings.
Lulu the pot bellied pig showed the world just how loving and heroic the unsung pigs of the world could be.
A woman named JoAnn was pig-sitting Lulu for her daughter and the two developed a friendship. Everything was going fine when suddenly JoAnn suffered a major heart attack and fell to the ground unable to move and unable to get help. Knowing that her life was in danger, JoAnn called for help but no one could hear her.
Lulu somehow also knew her friend’s life was in danger. She ran out of the house to find help. Unable to find anyone to help, Lulu ran into the middle of the street and laid down, stopping traffic. Passersby paid no attention to the frantic pig but Lulu refused to give up. She returned to the house several times to check on JoAnn but kept running out of the house to find help. Finally someone noticed something was wrong and followed Lulu back to the house and called 911 for JoAnn. The paramedics rushed JoAnn to the hospital and she survived. JoAnn enjoys life everyday thanks to the heroic acts of one loving pig.
Lulu was honored with the ASPCA‘s Trooper Award for bravery.
“I’m extremely lucky to be alive,” says Jo Ann. “Lulu saved my life”

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Revolution, award winning movie the world has been waiting to see!

Revolution, the incredible, award winning movie comes out April 12th!!

The world has been waiting for this movie!

Watch the exciting trailer here:

Watch Revolution, the movie trailer

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Dog climbs out of pen – smart pooch

Motivated pooch climbs out of his pen

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“The Lion Man” Shocking Real Story

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All kids love jumping on the bed

All kids like jumping on the bed. Watch to the end, you’ll laugh.

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Chicken milk is the latest health craze

Thousands of people in North America are starting to drink a brand new kind of milk for health reasons – Chicken Milk.

If you’re going to drink milk, drink Chicken Milk. It’s low in fat and full of goodness.

This is the only type of milk from an animal I’d recommend drinking.

My favorite brands include the North Dakota Chickapril Milk and the somewhat more exotic Scottish Gotchicked Milk.

(By the way, Happy April Fools day :mrgreen:)

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Have you seen this amazing movie yet?

Zeitgeist movement has spread all around the world in the past few years. Have you watched the Zeitgeist movie yet?

You can watch it for free here:

Zeitgeist, the movie

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What would you do to protect your life’s memories?

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Power Foods for the Brain – by Dr. Neal Barnard

Fighting the Alzheimer’s Epidemic with Food
By Dr. Neal Barnard

By the time my grandmother would have gotten to the end of this article, she would have forgotten the beginning, and most likely where she was, too.

Debilitating memory loss plagued my family, just as it has so many others.

My mother’s father, a physician in a small town in Iowa, suffered from the same fate. He experienced his first heart attack at around age sixty. And not long after that, his behavior started to change.

He became confused. Sometimes he set out for walks without seeming to know where he was going. Cars had to stop as he wandered across busy streets. Once in a while, a motorist knew him and brought him back home. With time, things got worse.

I watched my grandparents and then my father struggle with the frustrations of memory loss, eventually becoming expressionless and mute. The financial costs of Alzheimer’s disease are potentially backbreaking. But the personal costs are incalculable.

Alzheimer’s disease now affects 5 million Americans—nearly half of us by the time we reach 85. And rates are expected to triple within three decades.

Associated health care costs will soar from $200 billion to more than $1 trillion by 2050, increasing the cost of Medicaid and Medicare by 500 percent.

The answer will not be found in a pill or a brain scan. The answer is on our plates. Three findings have revolutionized our understanding of this disease:

First, recent large epidemiological studies have shown that people who avoid saturated fats—the kind found in meats and dairy products—cut their risk of Alzheimer’s by two-thirds.

People who skip trans fats—the kind in doughnuts and other snack foods—cut their risk even more. It appears that these “bad fats” tend to promote the formation of beta-amyloid plaques, which are the hallmarks of Alzheimer’s disease.

Now, Americans have a long way to go. Currently, an average American consumes close to 200 pounds of meat and 34 pounds of cheese each year. This load of fat creates the perfect storm for an Alzheimer’s epidemic.

Most people are surprised to learn that swapping a bacon-and-cheese-filled croissant for a big bowl of oatmeal, berries, and nuts, is not only good for your heart and your waistline, but also good for your brain.

Second, certain foods can work as a shield against memory loss. Leading Alzheimer’s researchers have found that people who eat three or four vegetable servings a day reduce their risk of cognitive decline by 40 percent, compared with those who eat just one serving.

Part of the reason is the micronutrients they hold. Folate, vitamin B6, vitamin B12 all help protect the memory.

Where do you find them? Leafy greens and beans are loaded with folate and B6. B12 is most absorbable from supplements and fortified cereals. Blueberries and grapes obtain their colors from anthocyanins, powerful antioxidants shown to improve learning and recall.

Vitamin E is another brain-boosting nutrient. It slashes the risk of Alzheimer’s by as much as 70 percent. The best sources include nuts and seeds, such as almonds, hazelnuts, and pecans.

Just a small handful each day is plenty. Sweet potatoes are another source and remain the dietary staple of Okinawans, the longest-lived people on Earth.

Third, we need to be cautious about metals. Iron has been identified in the brains of Alzheimer’s patients. Where did it come from? Meat, cast-iron pans, and iron supplements. Also found in diseased brains are traces of copper, which is abundant in liver and in shellfish.

Researchers with the Chicago Health and Aging Project find people who consume the highest amounts of “bad” fats and copper show a loss of mental function equivalent to an extra 19 years of aging.

It’s important to include copper, iron, and zinc in your diet, but it is also important to get them from healthful sources and to avoid excesses. Here are guidelines to avoid poisoning yourself with excess amounts:

Copper: Healthful sources include beans, green leafy vegetables, nuts, whole grains, and mushrooms.
Iron: Healthful sources include green leafy vegetables, beans, whole grains, and dried fruits. They contain non-heme iron, which is more absorbable if you need more and less absorbable when you have plenty of iron already. In contrast, meats contain a form of iron that barges into your bloodstream whether you need it or not.
Zinc: Healthful sources include oatmeal, whole-grain bread, brown rice, peanuts, beans, nuts, peas, and sesame seeds.
So, what do we do? To make it simple, think of four healthy food groups: fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and beans, and add a source of vitamin B12, such as fortified cereals or a supplement.

And steer clear of animal products and greasy foods. And don’t forget to get regular physical and mental exercise, and proper rest.

In the same way that exercise can build muscular strength and endurance, you can do the same thing for your brain.

Physical exercises increase blood flow to your brain and have been shown to reverse age-related brain shrinkage.

Cognitive exercises can strengthen synapses—the bridges that connect one brain cell to the next.

The more solid these connections, the better off you’ll be.

Think of all you would do to protect family photos and other mementos. Now we can also take steps to preserve the originals—our actual memories and our relationships with those we love.

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About Dr. Neal Barnard

Neal Barnard, M.D., is a nutrition researcher, adjunct associate professor at the George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences, author of the new book Power Foods for the Brain: An Effective 3-Step Plan to Protect Your Mind and Strengthen Your Memory, and president of the nonprofit Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine.

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Oscar the racoon playing dentist with beagle

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Squirrel adopted by cat learns to purr!

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Manly men. Which men have the highest testosterone?

NF-Feb12-Less-Cancer-in-Vegan-MenManly men. Which men have highest testosterone? Find out here. The study results may surprise you.

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Dog and deer share unusual lovestory

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Super Model at 70 – Longevity Secrets from Sunny Griffin

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Uprooting the Leading Causes of Death

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Breaking the food seduction

Fantastic education by Dr. Neal Barnard

 

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