Today on TBYIL Radio - Dr. Ken O'Neal and The Misconception of Iodine
by Tony Isaacs and Luella May
(The Best Years in Life) Come join us for this week's show when we welcome back our longtime friend and mentor, Naturopathic PhD and MD Ken "Doctor Ken" O'Neal, who will be discussing "The Misconception of Iodine."
In the first half hour segment, Tony will talk about new and featured additions to our website and then in the second half hour Luella May will talk about "Your pets - Vaccines and dog foods".
Doctor Ken will join us for the last hour of the show for what promises to be an enlightening interview.
As usual, we will also feature classic rock and/or classic country songs between segments of the show.
Our show starts at 6:00 pm Central Time every Wednesday. Check your time zones.
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/tbyil/
Note: If you miss any of our shows, you can still listen to them in their entirety by going to the link above and catching the archived copy
To learn more about Doctor Ken, see this article by natural health author and advocate Paul Fassa:
"Dr. Ken O’Neal and His Heroic Fight Against the Medical Establishment"
(I had to switch user names to post this - dang CZ spam filter!)
I think that the interview with Doctor Ken was simply outstanding, one of the best I have ever had. Perhaps part of that is due to me listening more than talking. Seriously, though, Doctor Ken was a fount of information. If you missed the show, here is the podcast link where you can listen in at your convenience:
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/tbyil/2017/01/19/this-weeks-guest-is-naturopathic-doctor-ken-oneal
Doctor Ken comes on mid-way though the show, right after I played the classic rock song "I Don't Need No Doctor".
Check it our and let me know what you think.
Hey, if you get a chance I also invite you to take a look at our website, which I am slowly modernizing. Not to worry though - it is still old school. I guess one of these days this old dinosaur will finally be drug screaming and kicking into the 21st century . . .
Tony
P.S. - By the way, where is V? I can't find him on FB any more and wanted to let him know about the interview to get his input.
I used high-fat diet.
There is no one standard for all. So forget about the RDA standards, EAR etc. Use a simple principle, when you are hungry, eat.
Potassium: potatoes, buttermilk, groats, some/little meat, vegetables and fruit. That's what you mean? I do not know whether I understand you. : D
Slim healthy people at high carbohydrate diet should eat 1g: 2,5-5g: 0,5-0,6g Protein-mostly animal, carbohydrates, fats - mostly animal. ;)
100: 250-500: 50-60
Use translation https://drive.google.com/file/d/0BwNA69NLtqSXTlJNWGZLLThFRlE/view?usp=drivesdk
i mean that unless you are growing some kind of super potatoes and tomatoes then there is not enough potassium in them. supplementing is a must here, even eating the most expensive organic food.
they dont call it pot-ash for nothing.
Potash /ˈpɒtæʃ/ is any of various mined and manufactured salts that contain potassium in water-soluble form. The name derives from pot ash, which refers to plant ashes soaked in water in a pot, the primary means of manufacturing the product before the industrial era. The word potassium is derived from potash.
Exaggerating with these supplements ;)
https://www.uwm.edu.pl/jold/poj1422009/jurnal-18.pdf
http://yadda.icm.edu.pl/yadda/element/bwmeta1.element.dl-catalog-12d732ce-f7c9-48f5-bab0-7ca09cc0212b
Red pepper, black currant further contain >150mg vit. C ;)
Apr 12, 2016 - Surprise, surprise: A single medium baked potato has 941 mg (20% DV) of potassium. Let your potato cool before you eat it and you'll get a ...