Maahantuomme ravintolisiä USA: sta, FDA: n tiukasti valvomilta markkinoilta.
Visionamme on tuottaa oikeaa tietoa terveyden uhkatekijöistä.
Suurimpana ongelmana länsimaissa on jatkuva, yksipuolisesti liian hapan ruokavalio, jota elimistö ei kykene riittävästi puskuroimaan, vaan koko aineenvaihdunta -järjestelmä joutuu tekemään työtä happamuutta vastaan.
Lopulta elimistö alkaa tulehtua ja saavuttaa potilaan huomaamatta, jatkuvan tulehduksellisen tilan.
FBI Director Kash Patel testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee that he didn't know how many agents had resigned over the Epstein investigation.
Senator Cory Booker had the FBI's own Human Resources report sitting in front of him, marked "PRIORITY: URGENT" and sent to Patel's personal email just five days earlier. - The report documented a catastrophic institutional collapse:
340 FBI agents had resigned—not retired, not transferred, but quit in protest over how the bureau handled the Epstein case.
These weren't rookies. 89 had over ten years of experience. 34 were senior agents. 12 were division chiefs.
Every resignation letter said the same thing: evidence was being suppressed to protect powerful people connected to Epstein.
And Patel sat there under oath claiming he had no idea this mass exodus had happened.
In today’s hearing, Rep. Thomas Massie presses FBI Director Kash Patel on the Epstein files — and the exchange gets tense fast. Massie lays out claims about FD-302 interview reports, “powerful names,” and why the public keeps getting vague answers instead of clarity. Patel leans on “credibility,” prior reviews, and procedural limits… but the dodging leaves a lot of people with the same question: why is this still so hard to answer on the record?
We break down the key moments, the contradictions, and the language that keeps everything stuck in “if” and “maybe” territory — while the public gets PR stunts, binders, and influencer spectacle.
👇 What do you think — is Patel being cautious and responsible, or is he protecting someone?
#EpsteinFiles#KashPatel#ThomasMassie#CongressHearing#USPolitics
10.9.2025#Trump#Politics#KashPatel A new federal lawsuit alleges FBI Director Kash Patel knowingly broke the law when firing top officials at the bureau. The complaint, which was filed by fired executives, also claims Patel said his job depended on removing agents who worked on cases involving President Trump. MSNBC correspondents Ken Dilanian and Carol Leonnig join Chris Jansing with the latest details.
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Maria Farmer, one of the earliest known Epstein accusers, says she alerted the FBI as early as 1996—and again in 2006—about Jeffrey Epstein, Ghislaine Maxwell, and Donald Trump. She alleges Trump ogled her at Epstein’s office, commenting she “looked 16,” though she witnessed no direct misconduct beyond that.
Farmer now questions the FBI’s handling of her reports and criticizes the Trump administration’s refusal to release the Epstein files, despite previous promises. Her sister, Annie Farmer, also a survivor, has echoed the demand for transparency—calling secrecy a betrayal to victims.
With Virginia Giuffre’s suicide and the silence around Maureen Comey’s firing, Farmer says the push for truth and accountability is more urgent than ever.
#EpsteinFiles#MariaFarmer#TrumpEpstein#FBIInvestigation#GhislaineMaxwell#AnnieFarmer#VirginiaGiuffre#EpsteinCoverUp#SurvivorVoices#donaldtrump#trumpnews#usnews#news18
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12. “Their houses shall be turned over to others, Their fields and their wives together; For I will stretch out My hand Against the inhabitants of the land,” says the LORD. 13. “For from the least of them to the greatest, all are greedy for gain; from prophet to priest, all practice deceit. 14. They dress the wound of My people with very little care, saying, ‘Peace, peace,’ when there is no peace at all. 15. Are they ashamed of the abomination they have committed? No, they have no shame at all; they do not even know how to blush. So they will fall among the fallen; when I punish them, they will collapse,” says the LORD. - https://biblehub.com/jeremiah/6-14.htm
Gringos, when you take your kids to school and the sheriff stops you, you will be handcuffed and charged with driving on stolen gas. You will go to jail and your kids will be placed in a better, more honest home.
When you are released in a few years, will you explain to your grown children that "I didn't know that the gas supplied by the anointed false messiah Drumpf was stolen stuff."
Throw out that troublemaker who poses as a peacemaker and business guru but wrecks the country's economy and lies as easily as you breathe air.
Abducted Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro told a packed New York City courtroom on Monday that he was “innocent”, a “decent man”, and that he had been “kidnapped”, in his first public comments since the brazen US attack on his country on Saturday.
Maduro, who was abducted along with his wife by US special forces from his home in Caracas in an operation widely condemned as illegal under international law, appeared in federal court for a hearing on alleged “narcoterrorism” and other charges.
Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, were brought before US District Judge Alvin K Hellerstein at 12pm (17:00 GMT) on Monday for a brief proceeding that kicks off a long legal battle over whether they can face trial in the US.
Handcuffed and wearing blue jail uniforms, Maduro and his wife were led into the court by officers, and both put on headsets to hear the English-language proceeding as it was translated into Spanish.
Maduro pleaded not guilty, telling the judge, “I was kidnapped. I am innocent and a decent man, the president of my country.”
Across the street from the court, the police separated a small but growing group of protesters from about a dozen pro-intervention demonstrators, including one man who pulled a Venezuelan flag away from those protesting against the US abduction.
The left-wing leader, his wife, son and three others could face life in prison if convicted of working with drug cartels to facilitate the shipment of thousands of tonnes of cocaine into the country. Some observers say there is no evidence linking Maduro to cartels.
Maduro’s lawyers said they will contest the legality of his arrest, arguing he is immune from prosecution as a sovereign head of a foreign state, though he is not recognised as Venezuela’s legitimate leader by the US and other nations.
Flores also pleaded not guilty to US charges against her during the arraignment. Hellerstein ordered the Venezuelan leader to appear in court for a hearing on March 17.
‘Attacks’ against US people
Near the end of the hearing, Maduro’s lawyer, Barry J Pollack, said his client “is head of a sovereign state and entitled to the privilege” that the status ensures.
Pollack said there were “questions about the legality of his military abduction”, and there will be “voluminous” pretrial filings to address those legal challenges.
Earlier, images showed the pair being led handcuffed and under heavy guard from a helicopter en route from a detention facility to the court, two days after they were forcibly removed from Caracas in a brazen US special forces operation.
At an emergency session of the United Nations Security Council earlier on Monday, Secretary-General Antonio Guterres expressed concern that Washington’s capture of Maduro violated international law.
“I remain deeply concerned that rules of international law have not been respected with regard to the 3 January military action. The Charter enshrines the prohibition of the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state,” Guterres said, referring to the UN’s founding document.
“The maintenance of international peace and security depends on the continued commitment of all member states to adhere to all the provisions of the Charter.”
Samuel Moncada, Venezuela’s ambassador to the UN, accused the US of carrying out an illegal armed attack against his country.
Venezuela was subjected to bombing, destruction of civilian infrastructure, the loss of civilian and military lives, and the “kidnapping” of Maduro and his wife, Moncada said.
The abduction of a sitting head of state breached a core norm of international law, the personal immunity of leaders in office, he added, warning that such actions set a dangerous precedent for all countries.
Russia and China, Venezuela’s most powerful allies, strongly condemned Maduro’s abduction and called for his release.
US allies France and Colombia also notably voiced concern, saying Washington’s military operation had undermined international law.
The US ambassador to the UN, Mike Waltz, defended Maduro’s abduction, describing it as a “law enforcement operation”.
“The United States arrested a narcotrafficker who is now going to stand trial in the United States,” Waltz said.
Waltz accused Maduro of being “responsible for attacks against the people of the United States, for destabilising the Western Hemisphere, and illegitimately repressing the people of Venezuela”.
Vast oil wealth
All eyes are on Venezuela’s response to the swiftly moving events after US President Donald Trump said late on Sunday that the US is “in charge” of the South American nation, which has the world’s largest oil reserves.
Vice President Delcy Rodriguez, meanwhile, was officially sworn in as interim president on Monday.
Rodriguez, a 56-year-old labour lawyer known for close connections to the private sector and her devotion to the governing party, was sworn in by her brother, Jorge, who is the head of the National Assembly legislature.
Delcy Rodriguez initially took a defiant stand against the seizure of the president, in what some observers labelled a return to “US gunboat diplomacy”. But she has now offered “to collaborate” with Washington.
One analyst said that Venezuela’s opposition appreciates the US intervention to remove Maduro from power, but is alarmed by Trump’s comments about US plans to “run” Venezuela, apparently with members of his government.
“Trump doesn’t recognise the decision of the Venezuelan people. We are not a colony of the US. We are an independent country,” Jose Manuel Puente, a professor at the Instituto de Estudios Superiores de Administracion, a private university in Caracas, told Al Jazeera.
“We want to initiate a transition to democracy, to rebuild the institutions, to rebuild the economy, to rebuild the oil sector. And we don’t see that from Trump until now.”
Trump cannot ‘run’ Venezuela without ruling elite: Analysis
On an Al Jazeera interview, Javier Farje, journalist and historian on Latin America, said that the US aims to oversee Venezuela until a “proper transition,” though details remain unclear.
He explained that Trump and Secretary of State Rubio reportedly held talks with Delcy Rodriguez, now named interim president by Venezuela’s Supreme Court.
Farje noted that Rodriguez keeps Maduro as president for three months, creating political uncertainty and requiring National Assembly approval for extensions.
He highlighted that Venezuela’s army, police, militias, and institutions remain under pro-Chavista control, essential for any cooperation with the US.
Farje stressed that Maria Corina Machado, despite her Nobel Peace Prize, has no real influence in Venezuela’s power dynamics.
He said questions remain over elections or Edmundo Gonzalez taking power, alongside potential negotiations with Rodriguez’s government.
Farje concluded that Latin America is deeply divided over the US attack on Venezuela and the capturing of Maduro and his wife, leaving regional politics uncertain.
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Maduro Indicted - will face Narco Terrorist charges. MUGSHOT to be released
MADURO INDICTMENT
MARIA MACHADO reaction
There was no negotiated removal of Maduro, American Special Forces dragged Maduro out of his bed while he was sleeping also they had cutting edge tech to cut through a metalic steel door just incase Maduro decides to run to his fortified bunker.