[Swlugevents] 1 weird food that KILLS blood pressure

Blood Pressure Solution BloodPressureSolution at slurssakebaku.us
Mon Nov 11 20:58:57 UTC 2013


1 food that kills high blood pressure

http://www.slurssakebaku.us/3007/176/387/1414/2962.10tt74103107AAF17.php






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t take that at all to mean that we're 
constructing reality," he told LiveScience.All in the mindAs members of 
society, people create a form of collective reality. "We are all part 
of a community of minds," Freeman says in the show.For example, money, 
in reality, consists of pieces of paper, yet those papers represent something 
much more valuable. The pieces of paper have the power of life 
and death, Freeman says but they wouldn't be worth anything if people 
didn't believe in their power.Money is fiction, but it's useful fiction.Another 
fiction humans collectively engage in is optimism. Neuroscientist Tali Sharot 
of University College London studies "the optimism bias": people's tendency 
to generally overestimate the likelihood of positive events in their lives 
and underestimate the likelihood of negative ones.In the show, Sharot does 
an experiment in which she puts a man in a brain scanner, 
and asks him to rate the likelihood that negative events, such as 
lung cancer, will happen to him. Then, he is given the true 
likelihood.When the actual risks differ from the man's estimates, his frontal 
lobes light up. But the brain area does a better job of 
reacting to the discrepancy when the reality is more positive than what 
he guessed, Sharot said.This shows how humans are somewhat hardwired to 
be optimistic. That may be because optimism "tends to have a lot 
of positive outcomes," Sharot told LiveScience. Optimistic people tend to 
live longer
dness over the not-guilty verdict in the Trayvon 
Martin-George Zimmerman murder. The lack of justice for a dead teenager 
and the Martin family is sad, it is tragic.Yes, the prosecution failed, 
in my opinion, to make the case beyond reasonable doubt that Zimmerman 
acted with the malice necessary for a conviction on second-degree murder.Yes, 
the jury failed to see the need for justice for all.And, yes, 
the media failed to be fair.These failures began before the trial when 
the special prosecutor in the case, Florida State Attorney Angela Corey, 
did not convene a grand jury. After the local police failed to 
arrest or charge Zimmerman the prosecutors were in a rush to satisfy 
racial activists, the media and political pressure for immediate action.That 
was a big mistake. A grand jury might have told them they 
did not have evidence to support a charge of second-degree murder. And 
a grand jury might have opened the door to prosecutors considering a 
range of lesser charges for Zimmerman -- from manslaughter to assault and 
weapons violations.With those charges a jury, feeling confined by the technical 
limits of the law, could still have produced some justice for murder 
victim and his family.But the prosecutions missteps left this jury unable 
to get beyond the specifics of the second-degree murder charge.The president 
of the American Society of Trial Consultants told the Washington Post this 
week that since the beginning of our nation Americans ha

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