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Dr. Mindy Boxer – Acupuncture for Inflammation

For many of the afflictions Acupuncture can treat – Allergies, Back Pain, Headaches, the list goes on – reducing Inflammation in the body is a primary reason Acupuncture is successful. For decades now, doctors and medical researchers have been trying to learn what the biological mechanism is that allows Acupuncture to reduce Inflammation in the body.

In a study published in August of last year, it seems scientists got a little closer to the answer. Through inducing a system-wide Inflammatory response in mice, the scientists found Acupuncture signaling pathways could either reduce or increase the Inflammation.

While they weren’t able to pinpoint the exact neurological or chemical pathways that allowed Acupuncture to decrease Inflammation in the body, they did pinpoint three important factors that influence the success of an Acupuncture treatment. The findings move researchers closer to defining how exactly Acupuncture works in the body and offer suggestions to medical professionals treating patients with systemic Inflammation.

Through the study, researchers identified location, intensity and timing to be important factors in the efficacy of Acupuncture treatments. So, where on the mice they administered Acupuncture, how strong it was and when it was administered had significant effects on their health.

The researchers focused on two different types of cells to start mapping the Neuroanatomy of Acupuncture.

Their findings suggest Acupuncture could be further integrated into Western medical settings, moving beyond Nausea treatment for Chemotherapy patients to sepsis treatment for patients in the intensive care unit or targeted therapy for Gastrointestinal issues.

Sepsis is an extreme response to an infection, which causes intense inflammation throughout the body. It has gained more mainstream attention in the past year, because it can be a side effect of severe cases of COVID-19.

Acupuncture has been shown to reduce Inflammation for a variety of conditions, including seasonal Allergies and chronic Pain. We don’t have to wait for neuroscientists to tease out the exact biological mechanisms before we take advantage of this life-improving medicine. If you or a loved one are suffering and you think Acupuncture might be able to help, reach out to me today. I bet it can.   info@drmindyboxer.com

310. 450. 9711.          info@drmindyboxer.com

Dr. Mindy Boxer is a holistic practitioner who has grown into her specialties in an organic way. Understanding a range of disciplines allows her to integrate the wisdom of Ancient healing in combination with the most recent innovations in Scientific research. This dynamic blend has enabled Dr. Boxer to help patients in the prevention and treatment of disease for over 25 years.
At age 15, Dr. Boxer began her lifelong practice of Yoga & Meditation, read many Nutrition books, began Juicing her Vegetables, and explored and all Raw Diet.  Recognizing the importance of Nutrition in overall health, she earned her Ph.D. in 1986 in Nutrition and Human Behavior, providing her with a solid foundation to counsel and educate patients on how to attain health and vitality.
Her informative Lectures and appetizing Cooking Classes were the perfect forum to educate the community about the effects of food on Mood and Behavior, as well as in innovative ways to balance Body Chemistry in order to achieve overall well being.
Sensing a need to expand her training and understanding of the human body as a whole system, Dr. Boxer continued her studies in Acupuncture & Chinese Herbal Medicine,  and in 1993 earned a Masters Degree in Traditional Oriental Medicine. She is licensed by the Medical Board of the State of California in Acupuncture and Herbal Medicine and is also licensed by the National Certification Commission for Acupuncture & Oriental Medicine.
These diverse disciplines give Dr. Boxer a unique view of the human body and how to keep it functioning in an optimal manner. Her practice of Acupuncture, Chinese Herbs and Functional Nutrition have a profound effect on Hormonal balance, Rejuvenation, and Immune system enhancement.

Dr. Boxer has a particularly keen understanding of Women’s Health issues including Gynecological irregularity, PMS, Fertility, IUI & UVF support, Healthy Pregnancy & Delivery, and Menopausal issues. Her interest in the human body as a dynamic system has given her the understanding to deal with such problems as improper Digestion and elimination, Cancer Support, Allergies, back pain, tight neck and shoulders, carpal tunnel syndrome, respiratory distress, chronic fatigue, Insomnia, Stress, Anxiety and Depression.
She has also studied the art and science of Homeopathy, earning her Diplomate in Homeopathy from the Hahnemann College of Homeopathy in 1995. This allows her to treat the whole person — physically, mentally, emotionally.
Proper Nutrition, Herbs, Acupuncture, and Homeopathic remedies are the tools Dr. Boxer utilizes to allow the body to heal itself and find its way back to balance. She is dedicated to helping her patients find “Radiant Health and Well-Being.”

 

Phyllis Shallman – How Can Graduates Start Building Wealth?

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If you’re a recent graduate, congratulations! You made it.

Your degree is in your hands and the world is now your oyster. If there’s one thing you should know, it’s that life after graduation isn’t all about partying with friends and family until next summer rolls around again. No, it’s time to start building wealth!

That’s because you have a secret weapon at your disposal—time.

Your money has the potential to grow via the power of compound interest. The longer your savings accrue interest, the more potential they have to grow.

Let’s say you’re 22 and fresh out of college. You’re able to save just $160 monthly in an account earning 9% interest. After 45 years, you would have grown over $1 million!

And, as your income rises, you can increase your savings rate and level up your goals.

But how can you save $160 per month?

It’s pretty straightforward—you should at least implement a budget ASAP, and maybe even start up a side gig. These are simple ways to decrease unnecessary spending and earn more money that can go towards wealth building.

If you want to learn more about building wealth reach out to financial professional you trust and schedule an appointment! They may have the knowledge and expertise to help you start on the path towards financial independence.

Giant Container Ship That Blocked Suez Canal Is Finally Free

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Salvage teams on Monday finally freed a colossal container ship stuck for nearly a week in the Suez Canal, ending a crisis that had clogged one of the world’s most vital waterways and halted billions of dollars a day in maritime commerce.

A flotilla of tugboats, helped by the tides, wrenched the bulbous bow of the skyscraper-sized Ever Given from the canal’s sandy bank, where it had been firmly lodged since March 23.

The tugs blared their horns in jubilation as they guided the Ever Given through the water after days of futility that had captivated the world, drawing scrutiny and social media ridicule.

“We pulled it off!” said Peter Berdowski, CEO of Boskalis, the salvage firm hired to extract the Ever Given. “I am excited to announce that our team of experts, working in close collaboration with the Suez Canal Authority, successfully refloated the Ever Given … thereby making free passage through the Suez Canal possible again.”

Navigation in the canal resumed at 6 p.m. local time (1600 GMT, noon EDT) said Lt. Gen. Osama Rabei, the head of the Suez Canal Authority, adding that the first ships that were moving carried livestock. From the city of Suez, ships stacked with containers could be seen exiting the canal into the Red Sea.

At least 113 of over 420 vessels that had waited for Ever Given to be freed are expected to cross the canal by Tuesday morning, Rabei added at a news conference.

The Ever Given sailed to the Great Bitter Lake, a wide stretch of water halfway between the north and south ends of the canal, for inspection, said Evergreen Marine Corp., a Taiwan-based shipping company that operates the ship.

Buffeted by a sandstorm, the Ever Given had crashed into a bank of a single-lane stretch of the canal about 6 kilometers (3.7 miles) north of the southern entrance, near the city of Suez. That created a massive traffic jam that held up $9 billion a day in global trade and strained supply chains already burdened by the coronavirus pandemic.

At least 367 vessels, carrying everything from crude oil to cattle, are backed up as they wait to traverse the canal. Dozens of others have taken the long, alternate route around the Cape of Good Hope at Africa’s southern tip — a 5,000-kilometer (3,100-mile) detour that costs ships hundreds of thousands of dollars in fuel and other costs.

Egypt, which considers the canal a source of national pride and crucial revenue, has lost over $95 million in tolls, according to the data firm Refinitiv. President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi, who for days was silent about the crisis, praised Monday’s events.

“Egyptians have succeeded in ending the crisis,” he wrote on Facebook, “despite the massive technical complexity.”

In the village of Amer, which overlooks the canal, residents cheered as the vessel moved along. Many scrambled to get a closer look while others mockingly waved goodbye to the departing ship from their fields of clover

“Mission accomplished,” villager Abdalla Ramadan said. “The whole world is relieved.”

The U.S. Embassy in Cairo tweeted its congratulations to Egypt.

While the canal is now unblocked, it is unclear when traffic would return to normal. Analysts expect it could take at least another 10 days to clear the backlog on either end.

The breakthrough came after days of immense effort with an elite salvage team from the Netherlands. Tugboats pushed and pulled to budge the behemoth from the shore, their work buoyed by high tide at dawn Monday that led to the vessel’s partial refloating. Specialized dredgers dug out the stern and vacuumed sand and mud from beneath the bow.

Full Coverage: Suez Canal
The operation was extremely delicate. While the Ever Given was stuck, the rising and falling tides put stress on the vessel, which is 400 meters (a quarter mile) long, raising concerns it could crack or break.

Berdowski told Dutch radio station NPO 1 the company had always believed it would be the two powerful tugboats it sent that would free the ship. Monday’s strong tide “helped push the ship at the top while we pulled at the bottom and luckily it shot free,” he said.

“We were helped enormously by the strong falling tide we had this afternoon. In effect, you have the forces of nature pushing hard with you and they pushed harder than the two sea tugs could pull,” Berdowski added.

The crew on the tugs was “euphoric,“ but there also was a tense moment when the huge ship was floating free ”so then you have to get it under control very quickly with the tugs around it so that it doesn’t push itself back into the other side” of the canal, he said.

Jubilant workers on a tugboat sailing with the Ever Given chanted, “Mashhour, No. 1,” referring to the dredger that worked around the vessel. The dredger is named for Mashhour Ahmed Mashhour, assigned to run the canal with others when it was nationalized in 1956 by President Gamal Abdel-Nasser.

Once the Ever Given is inspected in Great Bitter Lake, officials will decide whether the Panama-flagged, Japanese-owned ship hauling goods from Asia to Europe would continue to its original destination of Rotterdam, or if it would need to enter another port for repairs.

Canal officials also will do a detailed inspection of the area where the Ever Given was grounded, especially the bank “to see how much of that rock has been displaced and might have impacted the deep water of the canal,” said Capt. Nicolas Sloane, vice president of the International Salvage Union who was involved in salvaging the Costa Concordia, the cruise ship that tipped over off Italy in 2012.

If all goes well, the canal authority could open up the waterway to a northbound convoy by Tuesday morning, he told The Associated Press.

The crisis cast a spotlight on the vital trade route that carries over 10% of global trade, including 7% of the world’s oil. Over 19,000 ships ferrying Chinese-made consumer goods and millions of barrels of oil and liquified natural gas flow through the artery from the Middle East and Asia to Europe and North America.

The unprecedented shutdown, which raised fears of extended delays, goods shortages and rising costs for consumers, has prompted new questions about the shipping industry, an on-demand supplier for a world now under pressure from the coronavirus pandemic.

“We’ve gone to this fragile, just-in-time shipping that we saw absolutely break down in the beginning of COVID,” said Capt. John Konrad, the founder and CEO of the shipping news website gcaptain.com. “We used to have big, fat warehouses in all the countries where the factories pulled supplies. … Now these floating ships are the warehouse.”

International trade expert Jeffrey Bergstrand predicted “only a minor and transitory effect” on prices of U.S. imports.

“Since most of the imports blocked over the last week are heading to Europe, U.S. consumers will likely see little effect on prices of U.S. imports, except to the extent that intermediate products of U.S. final goods are made in Europe,” said Bergstrand, professor of finance at the University of Notre Dame’s Mendoza College of Business.

(AP)

Top IDF general: Israel has ability to ‘completely destroy’ Iran’s nuclear program

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In an interview with Israel Hayom, the top IDF general dealing with Iran issues a severe public warning to the Islamic Republic.

The IDF general in charge of planning military preparedness against Iran warned Monday that Israel has the capability to “completely destroy” Iran’s nuclear weapons program.

Maj. Gen. Tal Kalman, who heads the IDF’s Iran Directorate, said in an extensive interview with Israel Hayom that the nuclear threat from the Islamic Republic poses a delicate and complex challenge that the IDF is more than capable of handling.

The pubic interview with Kalman, described as “one of the most cautious generals in the General Staff,” shows the IDF wants the Iranians to know how Israel is confronting the strategic threat.

Kalman told Israel Hayom that 2020 saw “major changes” in the confrontation with Iran, beginning with the assassination of top Iranian general Qassem Suleimani by the U.S. in January and other steps he could not reveal.

“Iran … is a threat for our national security doctrine,” Kalman said. “I really think this is about dealing with a country with the potential to become a regional power, headed by an extreme regime with a real goal of destroying Israel.”

The general called the Iranian challenge to Israel “unprecedented” because it is a large country of 80 million people, located 1,000 miles away.

“This is a long-term strategic competition that calls on us to deploy a different kind of thinking than the one used for tackling a country on our border,” Kalman said.

The long-term strategy has to take into account Iran’s military and “also diplomatic, economic, conscientious [issues] and more. That’s how big the challenge is.”

According to Kalman, the strategy over the last 30 years has been successful, as Iran has failed to realize its nuclear ambitions and a regional nuclear arms race has been avoided.

“The Iranian people pay a very heavy price for the regime’s interest in nuclear capability. But I believe this is not an Israeli problem, but one for the whole international community,” Kalman said, emphasizing that the issue of Iran’s nuclear weapons must be dealt with separately from other issues.

“The nuclear issue is the number one threat, and we have to achieve the maximum on that one. With all the rest, we’ll know how to deal,” he said, adding that Iran’s long-range missiles, including cruise missiles, are a threat to Israel because they find their way to Iran’s proxies, like Hezbollah in Lebanon.

‘The military option is always there’

Kalman believes Israel can influence the Biden administration through dialogue, which is already happening.

“The first stage is to be aligned with them [the U.S.] on the intelligence picture. The Iranian nuclear program in 2021 is not the same program that existed when the deal was signed in 2015,” he said, adding that he thinks the Americans “see the situation as we do…

“So far, this administration is keeping its promises. It has come to listen, not rush to a new deal. So, I think there’s a space of a few months to try and influence the administration’s policy.”

When it comes down to the military option, Kalman was very clear: It is an option.

“I’ve been dealing with this for 25 years. I know the plans from the tactical level to the systemic and strategic level where I am today,” Kalman said.

Asked by Israel Hayom if Israel has the ability to destroy Iran’s nuclear program like it did Iraq’s in 1981 and Syria’s in 2007, Kalman responded in the affirmative.

“The answer is yes. When we build these capabilities, we build them to be operational. It’s not that there aren’t many strategic dilemmas, since the day after, Iran can go back to the plan, but the ability exists. Definitely,” he said.

However, the veteran army officer said, such a drastic move is a last resort as part of a wider strategy.

“We don’t want to use it. Maybe when I was young I did, but today I understand it must be the final resort,” Kalman said. “We need to reach a solution in other ways, diplomatically, and I think there’s a chance for that, but this tool is also important.”

“The Iranian regime is looking at this long-term, strategically, and is cautious and calculated. We already said that for them the nuclear bomb is an insurance policy, so if they understand it could endanger them – they’ll think again.”

(World Israel News).

 

Israeli Matzah Tower Breaks Guinness World Record

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The nearly 18-foot tower, made of unleavened bread and chocolate spread, was built by senior citizens in Modi’in.

Residents of the Azrieli Palace assisted-living facility in Modi’in broke a world record this week by building a matzah and chocolate spread tower 5.4 meters (17.7 feet) high.

Two hundred residents took turns to build the tower, using matzah and the HaShachar Ha’ole chocolate spread, a classic Israeli Passover treat.

The tower consisted of 950 matzahs and weighed 10 kilos (22 pounds).

“We love the present and miss the past,” resident Perla Fleischman said. “We used to eat the matzah with the chocolate spread as children.”

After the record was confirmed by Guinness World Records, Gili, the local chef, turned the tower into chocolate balls.

(United with Israel / JNS / Israel Hayom).

Report: Biden to offer Iran some sanctions relief

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Sources say Biden will ask Iran to halt some of its nuclear activities
in exchange for some relief from US economic sanctions.

US President Joe Biden’s Administration is planning to put forth a new proposal to jump-start talks with Iran as soon as this week, two people familiar with the situation told Politico on Monday.

According to the report, the proposal asks Iran to halt some of its nuclear activities, such as work on advanced centrifuges and the enrichment of uranium to 20 percent purity, in exchange for some relief from US economic sanctions.

The details of the proposal are still being worked out, one of the sources told Politico.

It is not at all certain that Iran will accept the terms. Earlier this year, Tehran rejected a US proposal it deemed unacceptable, then offered its own idea that Biden’s team declared a non-starter, two people familiar with the situation said.

According to Politico, officials in both countries are aware that if no breakthrough takes place over the next few weeks, little is likely to happen until September at the earliest.

One reason for a sense of urgency among some US officials as well as those outside American government is that Iran holds presidential elections in June, with campaign season kicking off in May. The politics surrounding the 2015 nuclear agreement are very sensitive in Iran, so the regime there is unlikely to allow any major moves on it amid a campaign.

Separately, an important temporary agreement that Iran reached with the International Atomic Energy Agency will expire in late May. That temporary agreement paused Iran’s effort to curtail the IAEA’s access to Iran’s nuclear facilities.

The American proposal slated to be set forth this week is, “more than anything, about trying to get the conversation started” between the United States and Iran, one of the people familiar with the situation said.

Asked for comment, a senior Biden administration official declined to discuss details of diplomatic conversations.

“We have been clear that we are ready to pursue a mutual return to the [Iran deal],” the official added. “We have also been open that we are talking with our [international] partners … about the best way to achieve this, including through a series of initial, mutual steps. We have been looking at options for doing so, including with indirect conversations through our European partners.”

Iran has gradually scaled back its compliance with the 2015 deal in response to former US President Donald Trump’s withdrawal from the agreement in May of 2018.

Biden has expressed a desire to return to the deal but has stressed that Iran must resume compliance with it before any negotiations on a US return to the agreement.

The US recently accepted Europe’s offer to mediate conversations with Iran regarding the 2015 nuclear deal.

Iran, however, rejected the proposal, claiming that the “time was not right” to hold such talks.

Last week, 43 US senators from both parties sent Biden a letter in which they wrote that an international agreement with Iran should address issues beyond just Tehran’s nuclear program.

(Arutz 7).

 

US honors late Lubavitcher Rebbe in annual event to inspire new leaders

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In 1994, just months after his death, Rabbi Schneerson was awarded the Congressional Gold Medal for his “outstanding and enduring contributions toward world education, morality and acts of charity.”

On what would have been Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson’s 119th birthday, America is honoring the life and legacy of the late Lubavitcher Rebbe.

Education and Sharing Day, celebrated annually on the 11th day of the Hebrew month of Nissan, the Rebbe’s birthday, recognizes and pays tribute to the great spiritual leader’s efforts for a better education for all American citizens. The date falls each year between March 21 and April 21 on the Gregorian calendar, and this year it coincided with Wednesday, March 24.

“Today, we mark the legacy of Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, the Lubavitcher Rebbe, a guiding light of the international Chabad-Lubavitch movement and a testament
to the power and resilience of the human spirit,” the White House said in a statement on Wednesday.

“A witness to some of the 20th century’s darkest events and greatest tragedies, he devoted his life to bringing healing by advancing justice, compassion, inclusivity, and fellowship worldwide. A tireless advocate for students of all ages, he sought to foster exchange, understanding, and unity among all people,” the statement read.

In 1994, just months after his death, Rabbi Schneerson was awarded with the Congressional Gold Medal for his “outstanding and enduring contributions toward world education, morality and acts of charity.”

President Jimmy Carter was the first to honor Education and Sharing Day in 1978.

“Thankfully, this initiative has transcended partisanship for decades, and allowed leaders from across the political spectrum to help further the Rebbe’s passionate vision and hope for the betterment of society,” Rabbi Levi Shemtov, executive vice president of American Friends of Lubavitch (Chabad) Washington, D.C., said.

The Rebbe was born on April 18, 1902, in Nikolayev, a town in the southern Ukraine.

In the 44 years of the Rebbe’s leadership, which began in 1950, Chabad-Lubavitch grew from a small movement nearly devastated by the Holocaust to a worldwide community of 200,000 members.

In 1992, at the age of 90, the Rebbe suffered a stroke. He passed away two years later, on June 12, 1994.

(World Israel News).

Stunning Israeli Discovery About Reducing Cancer Mortality

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Israeli researchers studied the entire US population and made a stunning discovery about what reduces cancer mortality.

Israeli researchers looked at radiation and cancer data for the entire United States and reaching a stunning conclusion that people living in areas with higher background radiation actually have lower incidents of some key cancers, Ben-Gurion University (BGU) reported this week.

The earth always has a low level of normal background radiation that comes from the sun and cosmic rays as well as from terrestrial sources. The BGU research team took massive amounts of data for radiation levels in the United States and how it affects the entire American population and cancer rates.

The scientists noted that since the 1960s, the general thinking has been that any radiation is bad, and as a result, hundreds of billions of dollars are spent around the world to reduce radiation levels as much as possible.

“We examined whether background radiation impacts human longevity and cancer mortality. Our data covered the entire US population of the 3139 US counties, encompassing over 320 million people,” said the report, written by BGU professors Vadim Fraifeld and Marina Wolfson and Dr. Elroei David of the Nuclear Research Center.

Their findings were stunning and showed that the traditional thinking about background radiation appears to have been completely wrong.

“Exposure to a high background radiation displays clear beneficial health effects in humans,” the scientists reported in their study that was published in the medical journal Bioge??rontology.

They found that higher background radiation levels lead to lower levels of lung, pancreatic and colon cancers in men and women as well as lower rates of brain and bladder cancers in men.

With higher radiation levels, life expectancy increased.

The team used the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s radiation dose calculator, retrieved data about background radiation from the entire country, and compared it with cancer rate data and life expectancy.

At the same time, they noted that the higher background radiation levels produced no decrease in leukemia or cervical, breast or prostate cancer.

“All in all, it is reasonable to suggest that a radiation threshold does exist, yet it is higher than the upper limit of the natural background radiation levels in the U.S.,” the researchers wrote, concluding that it is time to revise the apparently outdated thinking that all radiation is bad.

(United with Israel).

President Trump Launches Website To Advance ‘America First’ Agenda

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President Trump and First Lady Melania Trump launched a new website to further push their “America First” agenda. On Monday, the 45th President and First Lady introduced the new site which they called  “45Office.com.”

 

The couple said the website is an outlet for supporters to reach out to them directly with thoughts, requests and greetings. The site went on to highlight the President’s accomplishments and his plans to continue putting America first.

 

Meanwhile, President Trump has hinted at the release of a new social media platform in the coming months.

(OANN).

Israel: Infection drop continues, with a mere 229 new cases reported

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The morbidity has nosedived since the start of Israel’s record-setting vaccination drive.

The rate of new coronavirus infections in Israel hit a nine-month low on Sunday, with the Health Ministry reporting a mere 229 new cases, amid a positivity rate of 1.4 percent.

With over half of its population fully inoculated, Israel continues its world-beating campaign that sent infection rates plummeting and allowed for loosening of restrictions.

The number of seriously ill patients was at 459 as of Sunday. There were 26 patients in a critical condition and the death toll increased by four to 6,194.

The Health Ministry’s preliminary findings showed that there are currently no coronavirus mutations resistant to the Pfizer / BioNTech vaccine circulating in Israel.

However, earlier in the day Israel’s Director General of the Health Ministry Prof Hezi Levi voiced his concern over future purchases of vaccines due to Europe’s recent tightening of vaccine export regulations.

(i24 News)

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