Monday, September 5, 2016

How to Lose Weight Fast natural supplement (Call Mr.Wijitha -0702149458)

  How to Lose Weight Fast  natural supplement 




Protein for Weight Loss
Supplementing higher quantities of protein for meals will encourage the body to burn more body fat for energy supplementation. Obesity is found in approximately 55% of patients diagnosed with Type II diabetes. According to the 2007 statistics from the World Health Organization (WHO), there are over 1.6 billion overweight adults in the world. That number is projected to grow by 40% over the next 10 years!

Protein to Build Muscles
Body builders must supplement larger quantities of protein to meet the demand of their growing muscle tissues or the body will “cannibalize” protein tissues from other areas in the body.

Protein to Help Balance Blood Sugar
Protein can also be instrumental in balancing our blood sugar and metabolism when used in combination with Chromium Picolinate. It has been used to better regulate Type II diabetes. According to the American Diabetes Association, approximately 18.3% (8.6 million) Americans age 60 and older have diabetes. 

Did you know that proteins, which are made of amino acids, are the building blocks of all tissue in the human body? After water, protein makes up the bulk of our body weight. Our bodies need 20 amino acids to make all our necessary proteins. Nine out of the twenty amino acids must come from a food source or supplement.

Protein deficiency in adults and children has been associated with hair loss, brittle hair, dermatitis, muscle weakness, cardiac disorders, and delayed wound healing. A balance of quality protein is essential to maintain health in adults and proper growth in children. However, not all protein supplements are a like. The source of a protein and its’ refined purity will help determine its quality.

FKC’s Response:
Scientists at FKC developed a protein supplement called Wonder Meal that is synergistically combined with other essential, natural ingredients. Wonder Meal is a high quality (plant and whey) protein supplement because it contains all of the 20 amino acids needed by the body. 

The many diverse uses of Wonder Meal make it unique. It is used as a protein supplement for adults, children, vegetarians and body builders needing more protein in their diets. It’s also used by individuals needing a weight loss supplement and even diabetics seeking to reduce their use of insulin by better balancing their blood sugar naturally (*under medical supervision). 

In addition to protein the FKC scientists added Chromium Picolinate. Chromium Picolinate has shown to increase insulin sensitivity (requiring less), control blood glucose levels, and reduce weight gain and fat accumulation in the human body.

Protein for Weight Loss
Supplementing higher quantities of protein for meals will encourage the body to burn more body fat for energy supplementation. Obesity is found in approximately 55% of patients diagnosed with Type II diabetes. According to the 2007 statistics from the World Health Organization (WHO), there are over 1.6 billion overweight adults in the world. That number is projected to grow by 40% over the next 10 years!

Protein to Build Muscles
Body builders must supplement larger quantities of protein to meet the demand of their growing muscle tissues or the body will “cannibalize” protein tissues from other areas in the body.

Protein to Help Balance Blood Sugar
Protein can also be instrumental in balancing our blood sugar and metabolism when used in combination with Chromium Picolinate. It has been used to better regulate Type II diabetes. According to the American Diabetes Association, approximately 18.3% (8.6 million) Americans age 60 and older have diabetes. 

Please click on the ingredients below for a more detailed description of each ingredient. Some essential background information is provided for each ingredient.

Protein Supplement Recipes
Fruit Smoothie
1 scoop Wonder Meal
1 cup Milk (soy, almond, etc)
1 cup frozen peach
1 teaspoon honey
Blend and serve cold.

Orange Dream Cream
1 scoop Wonder Meal
1 cup vanilla ice-cream
1/2 cup orange juice
Blend and serve cold.

Strawberry Smoothie Recipe
2 cup vanilla soy milk
1 Scoop of Wonder Meal
1 1/2 cup frozen or fresh strawberries
1 teaspoon honey
1 teaspoon vanilla
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
Blend and serve cold.

Quality
FKC uses the highest quality products and manufacturing. All FKChealth supplements are developed in the US and are manufactured in the US in accordance with the strictest FDA GMP regulations.

Complimentary FKC Products:
FKC’s “JointAgain” and “CalciMagD” are excellent compliments to “Wonder Meal”. “CalciMagD” helps support bones and “Joint Again” helps support the joints connecting the  bones.

Call Mr.Wijitha -0702149458


North Korea 'fires three ballistic missiles into sea'

North Korea 'fires three ballistic missiles into sea'




North Korea has fired three ballistic missiles into the waters off its east coast, say South Korean officials.
The missiles were launched from the Hwangju region, South Korea's Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) said on Monday, according to the Yonhap news agency.
There was no information on the types of missile fired or how far they flew.
North Korea is barred from testing nuclear or ballistic missile technology, but recent months have seen it carry out a string of missile tests.
It last fired a ballistic missile just two weeks ago from a submarine off its eastern coast, as South Korea and the US began annual military drills which routinely anger the North. On that occasion the KN-11 rocket that was fired flew for about 500km (300 miles) before falling into the Sea of Japan.


This latest test takes place as world leaders meet at the annual G20 economic summit, being hosted for the first time in China.

The August rocket launch was considered its most successful test of a submarine-launched ballistic missile. A test of mid-range missiles in June was also considered successful.
Tensions have soared since the North carried out its fourth nuclear test in January. In July the US and South Korea said they would deploy an anti-missile system to counter the North's threats, but this has been met with anger from Pyongyang and opposition from China.

What is the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense System (THAAD)?

  • Shoots down short- and medium-range ballistic missiles in the terminal phase of their flight
  • Uses hit-to-kill technology - where kinetic energy destroys the incoming warhead
  • Has a range of 200km and can reach an altitude of 150km
  • US has previously deployed it in Guam and Hawaii as a measure against potential attacks from North Korea
1. The enemy launches a missile
2. The Thaad radar system detects the launch, which is relayed to command and control
3. Thaad command and control instructs the launch of an interceptor missile
4. The interceptor missile is fired at the enemy projectile
5. The enemy projectile is destroyed in the terminal phase of flight

The launcher trucks can hold up to eight interceptor missiles.

Sunday, September 4, 2016

Hong Kong counts votes from first post-protests poll

Votes are being counted after Hong Kong held its first major elections since the pro-democracy protests in 2014.
Turnout has been the highest since the territory was handed over to China in 1997, leading to a delay in the announcement of results.
Some 58% of Hong Kong's 3.8 million registered voters turned out, compared with 45.2% in 2008.
The main parties competing are divided by their stances on the territory's relationship with Beijing.
Huge queues snaked outside polling stations and some people were unable to vote until nearly four hours after the polls had officially closed.
Speaking to the South China Morning Post, several people said they believed voting had been poorly planned.

Friday, September 2, 2016

AMMAWARUNE


What happened to Mother Teresa's sceptics?

                             What happened to Mother Teresa's sceptics?


When Mother Teresa, the Roman Catholic nun who worked with the poor in the city of Kolkata (Calcutta), is declared a saint on Sunday, her critics will be insisting that faith has triumphed over reason and science.
The Nobel laureate nun, who died in 1997, aged 87, founded in 1950 the Missionaries of Charity, a sisterhood which has more than 3,000 nuns worldwide. She set up hospices, soup kitchens, schools, leper colonies and homes for abandoned children and was called the Saint of the Gutters, for her work in the city's heaving slums.
She has also her fair share of critics.
Maverick British-born author Christopher Hitchens described her as a "religious fundamentalist, a political operative, a primitive sermoniser, and an accomplice of worldly secular powers".
In the much-talked about pamphlet The Missionary Position, Hitchens criticised the nun's "cult of suffering" and said she had painted her adopted city as a "hell hole" and hobnobbed with dictators. Hitchens also presented Hell's Angel, a sceptical documentary on the nun.
Much later, in 2003, London-based physician Aroup Chatterjee published a blistering critique of the nun, after conducting some 100 interviews with people associated with the nun's sisterhood. He flayed what he called the appalling lack of hygiene - reuse of hypodermic needles, for example - and shambolic care facilities at their homes, among other things.
There are others like Miami-based Hemley Gonzalez, who worked as a volunteer in one of Teresa's homes for the poor in Kolkata for two months in 2008, and was "shocked to discover the horrifically negligent manner in which this charity operates and the direct contradiction of the public's general understanding of their work".

Questioning miracles

"Standing firm against planned parenthood, modernisation of equipment, and a myriad of other solution-based initiatives, Mother Teresa was not a friend of the poor but rather a promoter of poverty," Mr Gonzalez told me. Today, he runs a Facebook page criticising the nun and to educate "unsuspecting donors" to the sisterhood.
In recent years, Indian rationalists like Sanal Edamaruku have questioned the miracles that have led to the nun's sainthood.
To become a saint in the eyes of the Vatican, a miracle needs to be attributed to prayers made to the individual after their death. Incidents need to be "verified" by evidence before they are accepted as miracles. Often they are cures and recoveries from illnesses which have no logical medical explanation.
Five years after the nun's death, Pope John Paul II accepted a first miracle - the curing of Bengali tribal woman Monica Besra from an abdominal tumour - and judged it was the result of her supernatural intervention. This cleared the way for her beatification in 2003. Pope Francis recognised a second miracle in 2015, which involved the healing of a Brazilian man with brain tumours in 2008.

'Tawdry'

Mr Edamaruku has debunked the first finding, wondering how a woman could be cured by a photo of the nun placed on her stomach, when there was evidence to suggest that medicines treated her. Today, he says, "most people don't want to challenge the nun any more because of her image as somebody who worked for the poor".
"If you question Mother Teresa you are seen as anti-poor. I have nothing against her, but miracle-mongering is not scientific."
And an evidently exasperated Chatterjee told me that the "so-called miracles are too tawdry and puerile to challenge even".
The latest challenge has come from a group of academicians and social workers who have petitioned Indian Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj to reconsider her decision to visit the Vatican to attend Sunday's sainthood ceremony.
"It boggles the mind that the foreign minister of a country whose constitution exhorts its citizens to have scientific temper would approve of a canonisation based on 'miracles'," the petition said.
But, in the end, as sociologist Shiv Visvanathan says, proof and faith are different things. "Lots of questions are still open. Many of us have a poor sense of the history and philosophy of science. Christianity also has a long history of battles with science. Rationalists also can sometimes end up overdoing things by demanding evidence all the time," he says. Clearly, the jury is still out on the Saint of the Gutters.

Website hackers released on bail




      Website hackers released on bail









The two suspects who were remanded on charges of hacking President Maithripala Sirisena’s official website were released on bail by Colombo Chief Magistrate Gihan Pilapitiya today. The 17-year-old student was released on two sureties of Rs. one million each while the 27-year-old suspect was released on cash bail of Rs. 25,000 with four sureties of Rs. one million each by the magistrate. - See more at: http://www.dailymirror.lk/115162/Website-hackers-released-on-bail#sthash.tK1rDT7A.dpuf

Islam Karimov: Turkey announces Uzbek leader's death


Islam Karimov: Turkey announces Uzbek leader's death


zbek President Islam Karimov, one of Asia's most authoritarian leaders, has died, Turkey says - despite no official Uzbek confirmation.
Mr Karimov, 78 and in power since 1989, was taken to hospital last week after a brain haemorrhage but the government has only said he is critically ill.
Uzbek state TV channels have dropped light entertainment programmes.
Unnamed diplomatic sources in several countries have confirmed the death, and even funeral plans, to news agencies.
Reuters quoted three such sources while Associated Press cited an unnamed Afghan official as saying President Ashraf Ghani planned to attend Mr Karimov's funeral on Saturday.
An unnamed Kyrgyz diplomat told AP the country's prime minister had also been invited to the funeral.
Mr Karimov has no clear successor. There is no legal political opposition and the media are tightly controlled by the state.
A UN report has described the use of torture as "systematic". Mr Karimov often justified his strong-arm tactics by highlighting the danger from Islamist militancy in the mainly Muslim country, which borders Afghanistan.
On Friday, Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim told a televised meeting Mr Karimov had died.
"Uzbek President Islam Karimov has passed away," Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim said in a cabinet meeting broadcast live.
"May God's mercy be upon him, as the Turkish Republic we are sharing the pain and sorrow of Uzbek people."

Thursday, September 1, 2016

Hurricane Hermine makes landfall on Florida coast

                      Hurricane Hermine makes landfall on Florida coast





Hurricane Hermine has made landfall in northern Florida, becoming the first hurricane to hit the state since 2005.
Hermine hit the Florida Gulf Coast early on Friday as a category one hurricane, bringing with it a heavy storm surge.
Governor Rick Scott declared a state of emergency for 51 counties as residents were braced for the dangerous storm.
Wind gusts reached 80mph (130km/h) on Thursday, the National Hurricane Center (NHC) said.
City officials in the state capital Tallahassee, which is in the path of the storm, said at least 32,000 homes were now without power.
Weather officials in Tallahassee warned of the risk of a flash floods and urged people in the city to move to higher ground.
South of Tallahassee, the town of Cedar Key has seen a 10ft (3m) storm surge. Images from Cedar Key posted on social media showed significant flooding in the town.

"This is life threatening. We have not had a hurricane in years," Governor Scott said.
He added that 8,000 members of the Florida National Guard were prepared to be deployed in the wake of the storm.
Mr Scott ordered evacuations in five counties in Florida's north-west and called for voluntary evacuations in three other coastal counties.
The city of St Petersburg near Tampa was littered with downed palm fronds and tree branches, and low-lying streets were flooded.
Weather officials predict Hermine will also hit Georgia and the Carolinas, and could bring heavy rains along the East Coast in the coming days.
Georgia Governor Nathan Deal has declared a state of emergency for 56 counties.
The last hurricane to strike Florida was Wilma in 2005, which made landfall in the US the same year as Katrina and caused five deaths and an estimated $23bn (£17bn) of damage.

Australian senator compared to an 'angry prostitute'

                     Australian senator compared to an 'angry prostitute'




An outspoken Australian senator has compared her conservative counterpart to an "angry prostitute" before apologising to sex workers.
Independent Jacqui Lambie has a history of clashing with government senator Cory Bernadi.
Senator Bernardi was this week critical of Labor Senator Sam Dastyari, who had a travel bill paid by a Chinese donor.
Senator Lambie compared Mr Bernardi's outrage to a "prostitute lecturing us about the benefits of celibacy".
"Before I receive unfair criticism from the sex workers, I apologise to them profusely for comparing them to Senator Bernardi - I know that is a really terrible low-down thing to do," she told parliament.
"Prostitutes are far more honest, sincere, humane, compassionate and better bang-for-buck than Senator Bernardi will ever be able to deliver."

'Different universe'

Senator Bernardi, one of the ruling Liberal Party's most vocal right-wingers, laughed off her colourful comments.
"God love her," he said.
"She operates in a different universe to the rest of us. But I'm pleased Senator Lambie has acknowledged that I'm not for sale."
The conservative politician also said that Senator Dastyari's position as manager of opposition business in the parliament was "entirely untenable".
Attorney-General George Brandis has called on Senator Dastyari to explain a string of payments by Chinese interests, suggesting he may have been "compromised".
Senator Dastyari insists the payment was properly declared and has since donated the amount to charity.
This is not the first time Ms Lambie has attracted attention for her colourful comments.
She once described on talkback radio her ideal man as well-off and "well hung".

SpaceX rocket: Explosion at Cape Canaveral ahead of launch



SpaceX rocket: Explosion at Cape Canaveral ahead of launch












SpaceX rocket: Explosion at Kennedy Space Center ahead of launch

SpaceX rocket: Explosion at Kennedy Space Center ahead of launch


There has been an explosion on the launch pad at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, where the aerospace company SpaceX was readying an unmanned rocket for launch.
The cause of the blast is not clear and it is not known if anyone was hurt.
Nasa said SpaceX was test-firing a rocket which was due to take a satellite into space this weekend.
Pictures from the scene show a huge plume of smoke rising above the Cape Canaveral complex.
The force of the blast shook buildings several miles away.
Local emergency officials described the incident as a "catastrophic abort during a static test fire".
In a tweet, the Brevard County Emergency Management Office said there was no threat to the public.
SpaceX is seeking to create a new era of reusable rockets and affordable private space travel and has used its Falcon-9 rocket to take supplies to the International Space Station (ISS).