Do You Know What You Are Drinking When You Get Water From the Tap?

Do You Know What You Are Drinking When You Get Water From the Tap?
By [http://ezinearticles.com/?expert=Gordon_P_Hall]Gordon P Hall

What do you get when you drink water from a tap? If you don’t have an effective home purifier, you get lead, chlorine, THMs, cysts and any number of chemicals that damage your body. But, if you don’t shop carefully, you may end up with a filter that is not really a purifier.

There are some good products on the market and others that are not so good. Several of the cheaper brands, those costing less than $50 are simply designed to remove chlorine. Chlorine is a problem, but it’s not the biggest threat to your health.

When you drink chlorinated water from a tap, you are also consuming THMs, known carcinogens. The amount that is present at the treatment facility is measured and must be within reasonable limits, but because chlorine remains active as it travels through the waterlines, there is no way to tell how much is actually present when you turn on a faucet.

You see, THMs are created when chlorine reacts with bacteria, algae and other water-dwelling life forms. They are even created when chlorine reacts with the bacteria that are naturally present on your body. That’s one reason that it’s risky to shower in chlorinated water.

Researchers estimate that people who are exposed to THMs are twice as likely to develop bladder cancer in their lifetime. Bladder cancer is the fourth most common form and can be painfully difficult to treat.

You can reduce your risk by reducing your exposure to chlorine and by drinking more purified water. Drinking more water helps to wash away the toxins that get trapped in the bladder and cause cancerous tumors to form.

When you drink purified water from a tap, you are making a safer, less costly and more environmentally friendly choice than buying bottled. You’re safer, because those bottles may still contain chemicals. Even if the company uses a good purification method, there are always chemicals in the bottle, due to the chemicals used to make the plastic.

It’s less costly, because the best purifier on the market only cost 9.6 cents per gallon. Can you buy a gallon of water for a dime? You’ll save anywhere from $1000 to $5000 per year, depending on your family size and the brand that you usually buy.

Drinking purified water from a tap is more environmentally friendly, because most people don’t recycle and 80% of the bottles end up in a landfill. Manufacturers use up our natural resources, including oil and groundwater. Production and shipping causes the release of tons of green house gases, every year.

In areas where the bottling plants are located, people have had their private wells go dry. Ponds have dried up. Small towns have run completely out of water. As you can probably see, I’m not a fan of the bottling industry.

There is no way to completely cover all of the health problems that are caused or aggravated by showering and drinking water from a tap in an article of this length. If you’re not convinced, learn more about the subject, today.

Gordon Hall is fervent about enabling you and everyone to live a healthy lifestyle, and is an ardent reviewer of Water Purification Systems. Visit his website now at: http://www.water-safe-and-pure.com to discover which Water Purification Systems Gordon recommends after far ranging comparisons.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Gordon_P_Hall http://EzineArticles.com/?Do-You-Know-What-You-Are-Drinking-When-You-Get-Water-From-the-Tap?&id=1584253

Unique Now…or Never: The Brand is the Company Driver in the New Value Economy

Unique Now…or Never: The Brand is the Company Driver in the New Value Economy

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The Brand is the Company Driver in the New Value Economy


        Unique Now…or Never: The Brand is the Company Driver in the New Value EconomyLearn how to create unique and high value in a global brand, then build a unique brand system that secures the brand and its values. Author reviews every aspect of the enterprise and its relationships, showing how to align all your efforts in support of your brand and the core values behind it.

  • amazon.com Sales Rank: #470221 in Book
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Best Brands | En iyi Markalar | 1/3

Best Brands | En iyi Markalar | 1/3

by skyworkmedia (Category: Education)

Continued/DevamI: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zACb7vqX45oWhich Alternative Advertising Mediums Do Best Global Brands Use? En iyi Kuresel Markalar Hangi Alternatif Reklam MecralarInI KullanIyorlar? Alternative Advertising Mediums | Alternatif Reklam MecralarISKYWORK MEDIA - Istanbul / TR | Alternative ADVERTISING | WORLD |WWW.SKYWORK-MEDIA.com

brand advertising ’s photo by _nickd

morton salt factory (2/3)

typographic tour of chicago part 2: morton salt factory (2/3)

more of _nickd’s photos

Published in: on September 14, 2009 at 10:22 am Comments (0)

Power Brands: Measuring, Making and Managing Brand Success

Power Brands: Measuring, Making and Managing Brand Success

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Measuring, Making and Managing Brand Success


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        Power Brands: Measuring, Making and Managing Brand SuccessContrary to the belief that brand management is mostly a matter of art and luck, the teams at McKinsey teams found out how brands can be measured, built, and managed systematically. Power Brands reveals the secret of strong brands, presenting a holistic approach to brand management, which combines precise science with target-oriented craft and inspiring art. Using concepts developed from a university study, the book introduces McKinsey BrandMatics, which combines systematic, qualitative concepts and indicators (e.g., brand image) with quantitative ones (e.g., revenue potential), resulting in a comprehensive and transparent framework for successful brand management.

  • amazon.com Sales Rank: #622754 in Book
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It’s good but expected more of McKinsey by Agnieszka Gornicka
Well, this is an interesting book on measuring and analysing brand equity, with several good case studies. But all this knowledge is not new - as for analytical tools, everything can be found, for example, in Keller’s Strategic Brand Management. I did not find anything helpful on measuring brand value, for example - which is an important issue these days. Survey methods are essentially the same as the research industry has been using for two decades at least. For me, the most valuable part is the way the data is presented - but not actual contents.

I recommend this book for students or other entry-level readers who want to learn how to analyse brand strength. As a reference, this is an excellent source.


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Band-Aid Brand Commercial

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by Runehakker (Category: Entertainment)

Band-Aid Brand commercial

Published in: on September 10, 2009 at 8:18 pm Comments (0)

Begin Your Own Raw-Volution With These Must Haves

Begin Your Own Raw-Volution With These Must Haves
By [http://ezinearticles.com/?expert=Kevin_Gianni]Kevin Gianni

Kevin: This is a good question. I’ve had the Big Matt at Rawvolution. Why do you replicate cooked food? What’s the reason for that?

Matt: I think it’s just that anything else would just sort of be arbitrary. There’s certain things that have become popular in cooked food because they work. While they may not be made of the best ingredients, you can’t deny that a sandwich is popular. There’s something great about a sandwich, right? Let’s face it. Those textures and flavors work together. That’s a recipe that’s stood the test of time. So I say why try to reinvent the wheel completely when you can take all the best parts of cooked food and say, “OK, sandwiches are good, let’s just make a raw sandwich.” Essentially it’s the same thing - lettuce, tomato, onions, mustard and things like that. Switch out the patty and switch out the bread and just make all of the ingredients of a higher quality. No reason to throw the baby out with the bathwater. It’s kind of a fun thing.

I worked at McDonald’s at one time and so it’s a little bit of fun. No one’s going to think that they’re eating a Big Mac when they’re having a Big Matt, but it has some of the same elements. For some reason when you have pickles and onions and mustard together people like that. That’s proven by the fact that billions and billions of people have eaten those combinations on McDonald’s hamburgers. So it’s like a shortcut. We already know what people like so let’s give it to them in a healthier way.

It’s also a trick for coming up with recipes. It’s a little bit of a challenge. It would seem harder for me to put four or five ingredients together and then come up with some new name for it that I just made up. People have a framework for what you’re trying to go for when you do the replication.

Kevin: Yeah, it’s not, “What is that?”

Matt: Right.

Kevin: Probably recognition as well. Anyone in this movement wants to get other
people involved. Do you think that’s one of the main…? It’s probably a main contributing factor to creating things like that.

Matt: Absolutely. If you offer somebody something and they say, “What is it?” If you tell them it’s a sandwich or it’s couscous or whatever, they have a framework for what that is. They’re not immediately scared off. If you come up with some new name and you tell them that made up name that’s not going to give them any information that they’re looking for. So it’s kind of meeting people on their level of building report and saying, “OK, well this is our version of a burger.” So that they’re not completely shocked by what they’re getting and they have some framework for, “OK, this is some sort of sandwich. Now I’m not so afraid of it. Let me try it.”

Kevin: It does taste like a Big Mac, by the way.

Matt: Oh, good, thank you.

Kevin: One question: Raw mustard, how do you make raw mustard?

Matt: We don’t make it but there are companies that do and we get it from them.
Stone-ground mustard made with sea salt and apple cider vinegar, horseradish and things like that. Most of the things we have to make. You were talking about raw restaurants before, it’s really such a different animal. Any restaurant in the country they get their hamburger buns and their tomato sauce and all of these things pre-packaged and that’s just something they order. Where everything in a raw restaurant, all the breads are homemade and everything right down to the tomato sauce. Mustard is that one exception. It’s kind of nice to get a raw product that you didn’t have to invent.

Kevin: Do they sell that retail? Is there a retail brand?

Matt: Yeah. Eden is one and True Natural Taste is another brand that I’m sure health food stores or whole food stores will have.

Kevin: I love mustard.

Matt: Yeah, mustard is a fantastic invention.

Kevin: Thank goodness. What about food combining? Do you adhere to any particular rules or do you say hey, just do what your body says?

Matt: Well I think for any raw food chef to be a hardcore food-combining advocate is tough because the whole idea is sort of going for taste. But you’ll find the things that taste best…If you look at my book, I wouldn’t say that everything is ultimate in food combining compatibility, but there’s nothing that’s a horrible combination. The biggest no-no’s we usually keep away from like mixing melon with other things. It’s sort of about towing the line between doing the best possible thing health-wise and what’s going to keep you eating raw. The best combining of food is not to combine at all and eat everything individually, but most people wouldn’t be able to stick with that for very long.

My recipes, I have a goal of trying to make it taste the best with the fewest ingredients. If you open my book there’s never a list of ingredients as long as your arm. I’m kind of a minimalist, even as far as raw food preparation goes so I try to keep the ingredients to a minimum, like five or six things tops. Sometimes that’s including salt and lemon and oil. So the combinations aren’t so bad at all.

Kevin: Do you use a lot of Nama Shoyu?

Matt: We’ve actually been transitioning away from using so much. We’ve been creating our own replacement by using miso, blending miso paste with water. We found that in a lot of the recipes it’s a reasonable, or often very good, substitute. It’s a good quality product. It’s made with care, certainly. It’s a good product but it’s probably not something you want to have tons of everyday. There’s people that are sensitive to wheat and they don’t like that about it.

Kevin: What other salt substitutes are there? Miso mixed with water. Is sea salt comparable? I don’t see many people saying, “Just add sea salt instead of Nama Shoyu.” What’s the thought here?

Matt: The reason is not just taste or health benefits. Sea salt is fantastic and I think it’s not only OK but it’s actually health promoting when used the right way. I think sometimes the liquid aspect of Nama Shoyu creates nice textures. A good example is the taco meat in my book just simply wouldn’t work if we switched the Nama Shoyu with sea salt. So sometimes it’s using the fact that it’s a liquid as an asset to creating a certain texture.

Kevin: Gotcha. That makes a lot of sense. That’s the first time I’ve ever heard it that way. I’ve asked that question before and no one really knows.

Matt: I was actually talking about that earlier today. Every ingredient combination is a combination that has a consequence of taste and of texture. So while you can achieve the same taste with salt instead of Nama Shoyu, you can’t always get the same texture. So both of those things have to be considered when you come up with a good recipe.

Kevin:. We have a question from your number one fan, who is Bunny, and the question is: Hey Matt, if you’re stranded on an island with only two ingredients, what would they be and why?

Matt: Two ingredients, wow. At that point I don’t think you could call them ingredients. They’d just be food.

Kevin: Yeah, they’re food. [laughs]

Matt: You’re not going to have many combinations. I think it would be silly not to say coconut, because there are a lot of people stranded on islands that live on coconuts. That would have to be one. If you look at all the indigenous island tribes you’d almost, exclusively coconuts in some cases are a percentage of their diet. I would say that would be a good one. Coconut is an amazing food and there’s no other ingredient or other food in the raw food pantheon that results in so many other foods or products like coconut oil, coconut butter, shredded coconut, coconut slush that can be eaten fresh or dehydrated. It’s so healthy. It’s gotten a bad rap over the years from the canola farmers and people like that trying to vilify tropical oils, as they deem them. But coconut is great for the joints and the hair and digestion and brain and it’s anti-parasitic and anti-bacterial and anti-fungal, anti-mold. It’s really a fantastic food. So I would have to say coconut.

And then some kind of greens. You’ll see if you look at actual islands they’ll always have some type of coconut and some type of wild, edible green that’s a protein source and source for most of their minerals.

Kevin Gianni the host of [http://www.renegadehealth.com]Renegade Health Show - a fun and informative daily health show that is changing the perception of health across the world. His is an internationally known health advocate, author, and film consultant. He has helped thousands and thousands of people in over 21 countries though online health teleseminars about [http://www.renegadehealth.com/inner-circle.php]abundance, optimum health and longevity. He is also the creator and co-author of “The Busy Person’s Fitness Solution.”

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Kevin_Gianni http://EzineArticles.com/?Begin-Your-Own-Raw-Volution-With-These-Must-Haves&id=1583905

Creating Corporate Reputations: Identity, Image, and Performance

Creating Corporate Reputations: Identity, Image, and Performance

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Identity, Image, and Performance


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        Creating Corporate Reputations: Identity, Image, and PerformanceRecent research suggests that corporate reputations are a valuable strategic asset for every company. This book outlines how high-status companies become corporate super brands and it presents managers with a framework to proactively enhance their corporation’s desired reputation. Drawing on more than fifteen years of research, executive seminars, and consulting experience, Dowling emphasizes the roles that customer value and organizational culture play in the reputation-building process and exposes the limitations of corporate advertising, sponsorships, and minor corporate identity change.

  • amazon.com Sales Rank: #51666 in eBooks
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Good to read by
This book is full the latest case like in the IBM, Exxon, Johnsons and Johnsons with a lot of models!That’s great.


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Published in: on September 7, 2009 at 6:14 am Comments (0)
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brand new ambx hard were system

brand new ambx hard were system

by martins2009 (Category: Entertainment)

from gamer tv brand new hard were system for pc gamers

Published in: on September 5, 2009 at 11:12 am Comments (0)

Max Brand Film 2008 (60 sec)

Max Brand Film 2008 (60 sec)

by aroontbwa (Category: Entertainment)

Max Brand Film 2008 (60 sec)