
23 Jan We Want to Live
Aajonus brought himself back from the grips of death at the hands of the American Medical Association. He dedicated his life to researching and teaching others to live a life without disease through nutrition and natural living. Others came before him, like Antoine BeChamp, Gaston Naessens, Weston A. Price, Francis Pottenger, Vilhjalhmur Stefansson, Edward Howell, Judith DeCava, Theodore Strecker, Robert Mendelsohn, Ronald Schmid, Samuel Epstein, Annie Riley Hale and many more not to mention entire cultures of humans across the globe for the last 100,000 years who recognized that the keys to health are 1) eating raw animal products with live bacteria and active enzymes 2) avoiding manufactured non-foods like sugar, salt, white flour, coffee, and sodas and 3) avoiding toxic chemicals either added to our food, the food chain, or direct exposure from herbicides, pesticides, chemtrails, EMFs, vaccines, drugs prescribed or recreational, radiation, automobile and heating and cooling exhaust, etc.
Aajonus put it all together more concisely and proved through empirical experimentation, unbiased and altered, unlikePharma-funded pseudo-science, that the Primal Diet by Aajonus Vonderplanitz works to reverse disease. Nobody else has done this and nobody else has succeeded in doing this against the control and power of the Medical Church of America.
The first half of We Want to Live contains Aajonus’ life story embedded in the story of saving his son’s life by swapping the IV medication in intensive care with raw butter and raw honey. In the second half, Aajonus explains the fundamentals of the raw animal foods diet to include raw meats, raw fats, raw dairy, raw honey, raw bland fruits, raw citrus, and raw vegetable juices. He also gives explanations to what actually causes disease and gives detailed raw food recipes as remedies to just about every disease you can imagine. The last section of the book is a review of the pros and cons of other alternative healing practices, most all of which he gives a thumbs down, except for hot baths, chiropractics, light massage, Hatha yoga, breathing exercises, positive thinking, pursuing creative outlets, fresh air, and sunshine.