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The Complete Home Guide to Herbs, Natural Healing, and Nutrition  
We often think we’re steps ahead, only to find we’re steps behind. A  
classic example was the law passed in the 1980s insisting that all chopping  
boards in catering kitchens must be made of plastic. Years later it was  
discovered that plastic chopping boards harbored unchallenged germs in  
tiny cutting grooves, whereas the natural essential oils, resins, and gums  
within wooden ones were natural and ongoing germ destroyers,  
constantly being released when chopped upon. It appears that wood is a  
living organism, rooted or unrooted.  
Human beings, like other large species, evolve slowly. Microbes do not.  
They adapt and mutate incredibly quickly, and even if the world’s  
wealthier countries eventually find some way to control them, they will  
still go on killing the inhabitants of poorer regions until those people  
finally become immune. The 1.7 billion people who were infected with  
tuberculosis bacillus in 1993, but who nevertheless didn’t develop the  
disease, illustrate this process. Every year, 100 million people contract  
malaria. Two children die of it every minute, thanks to the collapse of a  
number of programs set up to eradicate it. The standard drugs being used  
are simply not as effective as they once were.  
Many “old” diseases or diseases prevalent in the third-world countries  
have returned to and are spreading in the developed worlddengue  
fever, diphtheria, salmonellosis, pneumococcus, and listeriosis have all  
become more and more resistant to antibiotics. In fact, the U.S. National  
Institutes of Health has called it an epidemic of microbial resistance.  
Infectious diseases are still the world’s leading cause of death, killing at  
least 17 million people each year. According to the World Health  
Organization, up to half the 5.72 billion people on earth are at risk of  
endemic disease.  
Tuberculosis has made a big comeback, killing 3.1 million people a  
year with a more lethal strain of the disease that some say is potentially  
more dangerous than AIDS. The number of cases of hepatitis B has risen  
dramatically; in fact, viruses in general are on the increase, including viral  
meningitis, dengue fever, and so on. It is now thought that viruses that are  
able to hibernate for years may be the cause of many seemingly unrelated  
problems, from cancer to other chronic illnesses. Plants are able to disarm  
viruses and therefore we must learn more about them. Acute and chronic  
respiratory infections have risen to 4.4 million new cases a year. These  
alarming increases may be due to a combination of pollution and the  
overuse of antibioticssending out a clear message that we need to learn  
how to take care of ourselves.  
American professor Paul Ewald has published a book called Evolution  
of Infectious Diseases, in which he strongly suggests that diseases long  
ascribed to genetic or environmental factors are actually caused by  


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116 117 118 119 120

Quick Jump
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