Today with more toxins in the environment, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, pesticides and toxins being
found in our water supply, our food, our air, our soil, household cleaners and
body care products.Food may contain food additives, monosodium
glutamate
and aspartame, which are toxic and addictive.
The World Cancer Report states that cancer rates could
increase by 50%, to 15 million new cases, by the year 2020. Poor health is caused by toxic exposure from the environment, and toxins and chemicals in our food,
water supply, personal hygiene products, and household.
Toxins and the FDA
The
FDA Handbook is the standard for regulations in the US regarding the
manufacture of food and drugs, including cosmetic and skin care products. It is
interesting to learn that this handbook actually allows the use of known
harmful ingredients in the creation of cosmetic and skin care products.
In fact, almost any ingredient is permissible in cosmetics and body care
products, as evidenced by these quotes from the FDA Handbook:
"With the exception of color additives and a few prohibited ingredients, a
cosmetic manufacturer may, on his own responsibility, use essentially any raw
material as a cosmetic ingredient and market the product without
approval."
"Although not prohibited by law or regulation, in addition, the
manufacturers of cosmetic fragrance products have voluntarily agreed to not use
or to limit maximum use levels of certain selected ingredients which have been
found to cause depigmentation, irritant, neurotoxic, or phototoxic or other
allergic reactions."
Mercury is permissible in cosmetics and other products, even though mercury is easily absorbed
through the skin and will accumulate in the body. Mercury in any form is
extremely toxic. Mercury poisoning can result from inhalation, ingestion,
injection, or absorption through the skin.
"The use of mercury compounds as cosmetic ingredients is limited to eye
area cosmetics at concentrations not exceeding 65 parts per million of mercury
calculated as the metal (about 100 ppm or 0.01% phenylmercuric acetate or
nitrate) and provided no other effective and safe preservative is available for
use."
Nitrosamines are known carcinogens.
Nevertheless, the FDA
permits their use. Dioxane is also permissible in products by the FDA. Dioxane irritates the eyes
and mucous membranes. Prolonged exposure is considered toxic to the liver and
kidneys.
Toxins in Cosmetics and Body Care Products
"Cosmetics containing ingredients known as amines or amino
derivatives, particularly di- or triethanolamine, may form nitrosamines if they
also contain an ingredient which acts as a nitrosating agent as, for example,
2-bromo-2-nitropropane-1,3-diol (Bronopol, Onyxide 500),
5-bromo-5-nitro-1,3-dioxane (Bronidox C) or tris(hydroxymethyl)nitromethane
(Tris Nitro), or if they are contaminated with anitrosating agent, e.g., sodium
nitrite."
Amines and their derivatives are typically present in
creams, lotions, shampoos and hair conditioners. The nitrosation may occur
during manufacture or during product storage.
"Cosmetics containing ingredients ethoxylated surface active agents, i.e.,
detergents, foaming agents, emulsifiers and certain solvents identifiable by
the prefix, word or syllable 'PEG', 'Polyethylene', 'Polyethylene glycol',
'Polyoxyethylene', '- eth-', or '-oxynol-', may be contaminated with
1,4-dioxane. It may be removed from ethoxylated compounds by means of vacuum
stripping at the end of the polymerization process without an unreasonable
increase in raw material cost. In rodent feeding studies conducted for the
National Cancer Institute, 1,4-dioxane was found to produce cancer of the liver and the
nasal turbinates. Skin
absorption studies demonstrated that dioxane readily penetrates animal and
human skin from various types of vehicles and causes systmatic cancer."
Many products analyzed have
been found to contain dioxane. Some products contain as much as 100 ppm. A small percentage is absorbed into the skin. Toxic metal molecules, such as aluminum and barium within the sprayed
chemtrails, invade various cells and perform a "molecular mimicry."
This mimicry involves displacing important mineral molecules in human cells and
binding toxic molecules to those host cells. Eventually, a destructive process
occurs on cellular and DNA levels. Because of that binding, a chelating agent
is needed to remove those mimicking molecules.