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By Ken Ham Do you love Southern Gospel music? Join us at the Ark Encounter during Memorial Day weekend for two concerts featuring the music of Legacy Five and many of their friends on May 22–23, 2020. These two concerts are taking place at the Ark Encounter, in our brand-new 2,500-seat auditorium, Answers Center, south of Cincinnati. What a wonderful way to spend the Memorial Day weekend—enjoying some great music and touring the full-size Noah’s Ark and the Creation Museum 45 minutes away by interstate. Enjoy two special concerts featuring music from two-time Dove award nominees, Legacy Five, along …read [More]
By Dr. Mercola Medical experts and health leaders share insights on important issues affecting your health and well-being. …read more Source: mercola     
It will make your skin look dewy and fresh, your bones and nails strong, and your joints pain-free. These are the claims made by the countless manufacturers of collagen supplements that come in the form of powders, pills and creams. For that reason, it’s no surprise that collagen has become a widely sought-after ingredient in the wellness and beauty communities. But collagen’s efficacy is still pretty up in the air. Frustrated? Here’s what we know. What is collagen? Collagen is one of the most abundant proteins in the body. In fact, collagen is “the main structural protein that forms the [More]
By Michael By Heidi Seage, Cardiff Metropolitan University An estimated 6% of people in the US and UK suffer from vitamin B12 deficiency. The condition is recognised by the World Health Organisation as a global… …read more Source: Natural Blaze     
By Sarah Chaffee On this episode of ID the Future from the vault, David Klinghoffer shares about Tom Wolfe’s new book, which critiques evolutionary explanations for the origin of language. Your browser does not support playing Audio, please upgrade your browser or find our podcast on podOmatic Download Episode …read more Source: id the future     
As winter approaches, we find ourselves cooped up indoors more enjoying those hot cups of coffee or cocoa, and dismissing the idea of venturing out in the cold. However, our bodies need sunlight and vitamin D, especially in the winter when the days shorten. It’s difficult to get enough vitamin D in the winter. The days are shorter and the weather is cold and gloomy and the dreaded cold and flu season is in full swing. But you definitely should venture outside some, because so many studies show that vitamin D helps reduce the risk of colds and flu, giving [More]
By Tom Hennigan From floods and volcanoes to insect swarms, ice storms, and clear-cutting, a devastating variety of environmental disasters threaten forests all over the world. …read more Source: AIG Daily     
Melatonin, a hormone produced naturally by your body’s pineal gland, is a popular supplement used by an estimated 3.1 million Americans.1 One of its primary roles is regulating your body’s circadian rhythm, and melatonin supplements are often used as sleep aids or to help sleep problems related to shift work, jet lag and sleep disorders. From 2007 to 2012, use of melatonin among U.S. adults more than doubled,2 perhaps because sleep troubles are so widespread. A Consumer Reports survey found 80% of U.S. adults struggle with sleep, and 20% tried a natural remedy to help. Of those, melatonin was the [More]
Former University of California law professor Phillip E. Johnson passed away on November 2, 2019. His significant contribution to his many law students, plus his faithfulness to his church and family were not his only legacies. As a legal scholar, he applied his unique legal logic and persuasive argumentation to origins issues. He exposed the poor logic that underlies Darwinism. His odyssey into the crux of evolutionary bio… More… …read more Source: icr.org     
If one has a heart, for humanity, one would choose a list of affordable medicines that are safe and easy to administer so that even the poor could afford them. It is highly insensitive for modern medicine to promote medicines that most people cannot afford. The worst examples of this are the new medicines oncologists are beginning to use, instead of chemotherapy, that stimulate the immune system. It does not help the competition between modern pharmacology and the natural medicines we are presenting here that most pharmaceuticals are mitochondria poisons that do not cure people of anything. The key factors [More]
By Thomas Perry Source: Flying Saucer Chicken Coop For more content like this visit REALfarmacy.com. These girls love their starship Follow us Share this article Source: Flying Saucer Chicken Coop Learn more at REALfarmacy.com. …read more Source: realfarmacy.com     
By Ken Ham We just wrapped up another successful Creation College Expo. This time it was held in the massive Answers Center at the Ark Encounter. This event saw dozens of Christian colleges from across the United States—all of which take a stand on a literal Genesis, a young earth, and a global flood, as AiG does—gathered in one place, so students could speak to representatives and learn about the various schools and their programs. It was a great event! As the Expo …read more Source: Ken Ham AIG     
By Michael By Elias Marat Infections at hospitals claim nearly 100,000 people in the U.S. per year while sickening about 2 million. However, a new study has found that hospital beds in the Intensive Care Unit… …read more Source: Natural Blaze     
New research has linked air pollution nanoparticles to brain cancer for the first time. The ultra-fine particles (UFPs) are produced by fuel burning, particularly in diesel vehicles, and higher exposures significantly increase people’s chances of getting the deadly cancer. Previous work has shown that nanoparticles can get into the brain and that they can carry carcinogenic chemicals. Brain cancers are rare, and the scientists have calculated that an increase in pollution exposure roughly equivalent to moving from a quiet city street to a busy one leads to one extra case of brain cancer for every 100,000 people exposed. “Environmental risks [More]
Sneak peek of a powerful article from the latest Creation magazine. How does the origin of languages fit with the account of the tower of Babel? …read more Source: creation.com     
By Thomas Perry Source: Children Should Be Outside for 4-6 Hours Every Day For more content like this visit REALfarmacy.com. Let me begin by saying we are not outside for 4-6 hours everyday. We aim for 4-6 hours outside at least three to four times a week (a little more in the nicer months and a little less in the worse ones). I first came across this time recommendation in the works of Charlotte Mason, a […] Source: Children Should Be Outside for 4-6 Hours Every Day Learn more at REALfarmacy.com. …read more Source: realfarmacy.com     
By Ralph Flores (Natural News) Hawthorn berries are tiny fruits …read more Source: Natural News     
Groundbreaking research shows that neurological health depends as much on signals sent by the body’s large, leg muscles to the brain as it does on directives from the brain to the muscles. Published today in Frontiers in Neuroscience, the study fundamentally alters brain and nervous system medicine — giving doctors new clues as to why patients with motor neuron disease, multiple sclerosis, spinal muscular atrophy and other neurological diseases often rapidly decline when their movement becomes limited. “Our study supports the notion that people who are unable to do load-bearing exercises — such as patients who are bed-ridden, or even [More]
How God’s sovereign freedom undergirds the scientific enterprise. …read more Source: creation.com     
Resilient “superbug” pathogens are seeing a boom in the United States, with lethal infections on the rise even as health officials take “aggressive” steps to rein them in, the Center for Disease Control (CDC) said in a new report. In its latest “Antibiotic Resistance Threats” assessment, the CDC found an alarming rise in drug-resilient infections, surging from 2 to nearly 3 million per year since its last report in 2013. Those infections now kill 35,000 people each year, adding 12,000 annual fatalities to the CDC’s previous assessment. “Germs continue to spread and develop new types of resistance, and progress may [More]
By Ken Ham Christmas is right around the corner—are you looking for a unique gift for a family member or friend? Consider giving them “a gift of experience.” These gifts are becoming increasingly popular, as individuals and families experience the joy of doing something together and making lasting memories. And we have some unique gifts of experience that will not only create wonderful memories but also will help you build a more biblical worldview and equip you with answers to today’s questions. Ark Encounter and Creation Museum gift cards. The perfect way to inspire and help family members or friends [More]
By Joy Jensen, staff writer (NaturalHealth365) Ideally, the entire human body ought to work together, as a harmonious system, keeping us safe from harm and pain-free – all the days of our life. Naturally, if one part of the body doesn’t work well, it will affect other areas of the body. Having said that, oddly enough, most people have no idea how a simple vitamin D deficiency can be influenced by poor liver and kidney function. Whether deriving vitamin D from food or the skin, both your liver and kidneys must be working correctly. In other words, poor …read more [More]
By S.D. Wells (Natural News) Did you know that mercury …read more Source: Natural News     
On Saturday, guests will see a museum that has upgraded the first third of its 75,000-square-foot space with striking new exhibits and videos. …read more Source: AIG Daily     
By Tracey Watson (Natural News) City slickers the world over …read more Source: Natural News     
By Michael J. Behe On this episode of ID the Future, Darwin Devolves author and Lehigh University biochemist Michael Behe sits down with host Rob Crowther to discuss Behe’s recent speaking trip to Brazil, and on where he sees the Darwinism/design debate heading in the next few years. In their conversation, Behe enthuses about Brazilian food and hospitality, and says the students at the schools he spoke at were refreshingly open to considering the evidence for intelligent design. It was typical of what he finds elsewhere, he says. While the old guard tends to dig in its heels, younger researchers [More]