Honey & Cinnamon (Full Version)

All Forums >> [Casual Banter] >> Off the Grid



Message


MasterRenegade77 -> Honey & Cinnamon (3/18/2008 11:01:00 AM)

I got an e-mail from a friend touting the Benefits of  Honey & Cinnamon so I decided to check it out ... I went to Google, here's just one of the web-sites I found... Figured I'd Share...

Honey & Cinnamon - Nature's Remedy & A Great Natural Cure




popeye1250 -> RE: Honey & Cinnamon (3/18/2008 11:03:17 AM)

You should check out the research on "Green Tea."
They're discovering amazing things about it.




domiguy -> RE: Honey & Cinnamon (3/18/2008 11:09:07 AM)

Don't forget penicillin.




MasterRenegade77 -> RE: Honey & Cinnamon (3/22/2008 2:46:31 PM)

I was just reading something online about it... I need to lose weight so I'm open to anything... well Almost LOL




DesFIP -> RE: Honey & Cinnamon (3/22/2008 6:34:38 PM)

Hardly a reputable website with double blind experiments to prove their claims.




FatDomDaddy -> RE: Honey & Cinnamon (3/22/2008 9:23:11 PM)

Most of what is called "Cinnamon" in the United States is really Cassia.

I wonder if that means anything?????

I mean,,,, which is the REAL health product???




KMsAngel -> RE: Honey & Cinnamon (3/22/2008 9:28:04 PM)

oh lordy, a weal and twue fight over cinnamon?

i'd go for the one called "cassia" (such a short leap to cassius) in a twue 'bunfight'

*wonders off to check out what the hot cross buns use*




LuckyAlbatross -> RE: Honey & Cinnamon (3/22/2008 9:29:51 PM)

That's so funny, we just bought a jar of whipped honey with cinnamon.




KMsAngel -> RE: Honey & Cinnamon (3/22/2008 9:32:14 PM)

*drool - extends several buns to LA for application of whipped honey*




MasterRenegade77 -> RE: Honey & Cinnamon (3/23/2008 12:22:12 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: DesFIP

Hardly a reputable website with double blind experiments to prove their claims.


OK so go to Google & Do a search yourself...
Was That Simple or What???




DesFIP -> RE: Honey & Cinnamon (3/23/2008 12:23:38 PM)

I did and there have been no double blind objective scientific research done. Besides, honey is toxic to infants so the info you provide, claiming it could never harm anyone is known to be wrong.




MasterRenegade77 -> RE: Honey & Cinnamon (3/24/2008 1:06:18 PM)

I'm not saying you're wrong but this is the first time I've ever heard that Honey was toxic to anyone...




Aylee -> RE: Honey & Cinnamon (3/24/2008 1:20:03 PM)

Honey can contain botulism.  Which can be fatal to infants, the infirm, and the elderly. 




MasterRenegade77 -> RE: Honey & Cinnamon (3/24/2008 2:17:10 PM)

Ya learn something new everyday... I heard it was the only food that wouldn't spoil...




Aylee -> RE: Honey & Cinnamon (3/24/2008 2:33:10 PM)

From Wiki. . .


Due to the natural presence of botulinum endospores in honey, children under one year of age should not be given honey. The more developed digestive systems of older children and adults generally destroy the spores. Infants, however, can contract botulism from honey.[48]
Honey produced from the flowers of rhododendrons, mountain laurels, sheep laurel and azaleas may cause honey intoxication. Symptoms include dizziness, weakness, excessive perspiration, nausea and vomiting. Less commonly, low blood pressure, shock, heart rhythm irregularities and convulsions may occur, with rare cases resulting in death. Honey intoxication is more likely when using "natural" unprocessed honey and honey from farmers who may have a small number of hives. Commercial processing, with pooling of honey from numerous sources generally dilutes any toxins.[49]
Toxic honey may also result when bees are in close proximity to tutu bushes (Coriaria arborea) and the vine hopper insect (Scolypopa australis). Both are found throughout New Zealand. Bees gather honeydew produced by the vine hopper insects feeding on the tutu plant. This introduces the poison tutin into honey [50]. Only a few areas in New Zealand (Coromandel Peninsula, Eastern Bay of Plenty and the Marlborough Sound) frequently produce toxic honey. Symptoms of tutin poisoning include vomiting, delirium, giddiness, increased excitability, stupor, coma and violent convulsions. As little as one teaspoon of toxic honey may produce severe effects in humans.[citation needed] In order to reduce the risk of tutin poisoning, humans should not eat honey taken from feral hives in the risk areas of New Zealand. Since December 2001, New Zealand beekeepers have been required to reduce the risk of producing toxic honey by closely monitoring tutu, vine hopper, and foraging conditions within 3 km of their apiary.




AquaticSub -> RE: Honey & Cinnamon (3/24/2008 2:44:40 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: LuckyAlbatross

That's so funny, we just bought a jar of whipped honey with cinnamon.


Now that is some yummy stuff.




FatDomDaddy -> RE: Honey & Cinnamon (3/24/2008 7:35:54 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: DesFIP

I did and there have been no double blind objective scientific research done. Besides, honey is toxic to infants so the info you provide, claiming it could never harm anyone is known to be wrong.


Of course.... 10,000 years of the human experience with the vast medical uses of honey mean nothing without double blind studies.




Celeste43 -> RE: Honey & Cinnamon (3/24/2008 8:27:34 PM)

Honey can carry botulism spores. No pediatrician would condone feeding it to infants under one year because of this. 10,000 years ago it was rare to make 30 years old. You may want to go back to the days of stone ground grain with bits of the stone abrading your teeth so you can't get sufficient nourishment to stay alive. Or dying of a bad cold that causes lung infection.

Personally I'm glad to know if I get a cough, I won't have to resign myself to a slow death. I'll take a ten day course of antibiotics anytime.




MasterRenegade77 -> RE: Honey & Cinnamon (3/25/2008 11:21:24 AM)

LMFKAO Lady you're getting ten days worth of Antibiotics everytime you eat meat from the grocery store...
Read up on factory farming Hmmm...
One day they're going to have viruses that antibiotics can't kill then you'll see haw fast they revert to the old methods like Colloidal Silver, Ozonation, Blood Electrification & Magnetic Pulsing...
Check out this link it outlines the Bob Beck Protocols...
http://video.google.ca/videoplay?docid=3451198977216830251
or this one...
Suppressed Medical Discovery: Dr. Robert C. Beck ( Cancer,AIDS, anything viral)




sub4hire -> RE: Honey & Cinnamon (3/25/2008 11:37:21 AM)

Hey did you see the newest guy to turn blue from colloidal silver?

http://www.boingboing.net/2007/12/20/another-person-turns.html

Yes, cinnamon and honey have long been proven for their health benefits.
Though for some you need to use the disclaimer..use at your own risk.






Page: [1] 2   next >   >>

Valid CSS!




Collarchat.com © 2025
Terms of Service Privacy Policy Spam Policy
0.265625