We have come a long way since this robot smoked its first cigarette. It is no wonder our parents and grandparents used tobacco, the encyclopedia of the day encouraged it! What will future generations say about what we consider safe today?
We have come a long way since this robot smoked its first cigarette. It is no wonder our parents and grandparents used tobacco, the encyclopedia of the day encouraged it! What will future generations say about what we consider safe today?
Unnecessary printing not only means unnecessary cost of paper and inks, but also avoidable environmental impact on producing and shipping these supplies. Reducing printing can make a small but a significant impact.
Instead use the PDF download option, provided on the page you tried to print.
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My newest worry about technology is the danger of using a microwave oven. Recent studies have shown that cooking food in the microwave destroys almost all of its nutritional value and may also be a cause for memory loss and colon cancer. Scary stuff…
Still on the microwave theme, Piers’ mum sent us an article (I can’t find it now), but basically, they took two identical young houseplants, and watered one with regular tap water, and the other one with tap water that had been microwaved and left to cool. The microwave watered plant died in three weeks, while the other flourished.
I read that article too and it really brought my concern about microwave cooking into the light. Now that I’ve reached “middle age” my worries about getting healthier are strong, yet I find myself clueless about where to begin….especially since there is so much conflicting information about what is good for us and what is not. Which “scientific study” do we believe?