sábado, 29 de diciembre de 2018

Rare 'super-nutrient' could end obesity by 2019



 
 

Dear,

What if you could lose 6-14lbs in a week without even thinking about it?

How about 62lbs in just a few short months without strict dieting or vigorous exercise?

Well, that's exactly what a group of women and men were recently able to do in a groundbreaking Italian diet study.

The lucky volunteers were granted exclusive access to test this new weight loss nutrient.

And here's the crazy thing...

The study participants ate normally, keeping foods they loved and not having to diet.

They worked out lightly...with brisk walks or other moderate exercise just 3 times a week, and were never in the gym.

In the end, their transformations were staggering.

  • They reported results like...

  • 14lbs of weight loss in 8 days

  • 62lbs of weight loss in a matter of months

  • 30.1 pounds of AVERAGE fat loss across 50 participants (some lost much more!)

  • 10-14% average fat percentage reduction

  • Lower blood pressure and blood sugar readings

  • Dramatically increased energy levels

  • Over 94% success rate (almost everyone in the study group lost weight)

And the only real change they made was adding this one nutrient that blasts away fat better than anything I've ever seen...

Rare 'super-nutrient' could end obesity by 2019


Barton Rogers
Weight Management Teambr

PS: If you find you’re losing more than a pound a day for over 2 weeks, it might be time to taper back the dose a bit.

This super-nutrient is meant to bring your life into balance rather than only being for weight loss purposes.


















 

The 1886 Berne Convention first established recognition of copyrights among sovereign nations, rather than merely bilaterally. Under the Berne Convention, copyrights for creative works do not have to be asserted or declared, as they are automatically in force at creation: an author need not "register" or "apply for" a copyright in countries adhering to the Berne Convention. As soon as a work is "fixed", that is, written or recorded on some physical medium, its author is automatically entitled to all copyrights in the work, and to any derivative works unless and until the author explicitly diss them, or until the copyright expires. The Berne Convention also resulted in foreign authors being treated equivalently to domestic authors, in any country signed onto the Convention. The UK signed the Berne Convention in 1887 but did not implement large parts of it until 100 years later with the passage of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. Specially, for educational and scientific research purposes, the Berne Convention provides the developing countries issue compulsory licenses for the translation or reproduction of copyrighted works within the limits prescribed by the Convention. This was a special provision that had been added at the time of 1971 revision of the Convention, because of the strong demands of the developing countries. The United States did not sign the Berne Convention until 1989. The United States and most Latin American countries instead entered into the Buenos Aires Convention in 1910, which required a copyright notice on the work (such as all rights reserved), and permitted signatory nations to limit the duration of copyrights to shorter and renewable terms. The Universal Copyright Convention was drafted in 1952 as another less demanding alternative to the Berne Convention, and ratified by nations such as the Soviet Union and developing nations. The regulations of the Berne Convention are incorporated into the World Trade Organization's TRIPS agreement (1995), thus giving the Berne Convention effectively near-global application.
In 1961, the United International Bureaux for the Protection of Intellectual Property signed the Rome Convention for the Protection of Performers, Producers of Phonograms and Broadcasting Organizations. In 1996, this organization was succeeded by the founding of the World Intellectual Property Organization, which launched the 1996 WIPO Performances and Phonograms Treaty and the 2002 WIPO Copyright Treaty, which enacted greater restrictions on the use of technology to copy works in the nations that ratified it. The Trans-Pacific Partnership includes intellectual Property Provisions relating to copyright. Copyright laws are standardized somewhat through these international conventions such as the Berne Convention and Universal Copyright Convention. These multilateral treaties have been ratified by nearly all countries, and international organizations such as the European Union or World Trade Organization require their member states to comply with them.

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