Check this out.

It’s a bowl of pink sea salt.

Yet one of America’s top hormone experts recently discovered something incredible about this salt:

It’s one of the richest sources of iodine on the planet…

And iodine is the fuel that powers both your thyroid and your metabolism.

As a result…

Just one scoop per day of this rare form of pink sea salt can have your metabolism burning fat for over 24 hours STRAIGHT…

Plus the iodine in this salt gives it thyroid and hormone-repairing properties NOT seen in normal, chemically treated salt.

>>Click here to see the full story now.

Mary Andrews Executive Director, Center For Natural Healing Research

P.S…Inside the link, you’ll discover the latest cutting-edge way to speed up your metabolism.

It’s now been confirmed in studies published in both the Journal of Endocrine Practice and the Journal Clinical Endocrinology…

The world’s TOP TWO scientific journals for Metabolic and Thyroid health.

All you need for this incredible new metabolism boosting process is a special type of pink sea salt, some store brought seaweed, and a rolling pin…

And you can TRANSFORM this pink sea salt into a metabolism boosting, thyroid-fixing miracle.

>> Click here to see the full story now.

































thur Seaforth Blackburn, VC, CMG, CBE, ED, JP (25 November 1892 – 24 November 1960) was a soldier, lawyer, politician, and Australian recipient of the Victoria Cross (VC), the highest award for valour in battle that could be awarded to a member of the Australian armed forces at the time. A lawyer and part-time soldier prior to the outbreak of World War I, Blackburn enlisted in the Australian Imperial Force in August 1914, and was assigned to the 10th Battalion. His unit landed at Anzac Cove, Gallipoli, on 25 April 1915 and he and another scout were credited with advancing the furthest inland on the day of the landing. Blackburn was later commissioned and, along with his battalion, spent the rest of the Gallipoli campaign fighting Ottoman forces. The 10th Battalion was withdrawn from Gallipoli in November 1915, and after re-organising and training in Egypt, sailed for the Western Front in late March 1916. It saw its first real fighting in France on 23 July during the Battle of Pozières, part of the Battle of the Somme. It was during this battle that Blackburn's actions resulted in a recommendation for his award of the VC. Commanding 50 men, he led four separate sorties to drive the Germans from a strong point using hand grenades, capturing 370 yards (340 m) of trench. He was the first member of his battal