2025 is the date stamped on the CAM cancer therapies piece, and 2010 is when the food-first superfood blueprint research dive began.
A food-first “superfood blueprint” built from plants, fruit, algae, sea vegetables, and a marine oil companion
The pitch here is simple: if a multivitamin can’t, maybe a whole-food system can. The article says the author has followed an annual ritual for more than 15 years, after finding it hard to eat enough variety of whole foods, vegetables, and fruits to reliably cover all the body’s vitamins, minerals, and micronutrients. That led to a 2010 deep dive through nutrition papers, agricultural literature, nutrition and health books, and food-composition databases, resulting in the Outlier Superfood Blueprint. It’s presented as a coherent, food-first system meant to raise the nutritional floor for a not-perfect diet.
Gobble's Take: A multivitamin gets a side-eye; the pantry gets promoted to the main character.
Source: Perplexity Search (community news)
CAM cancer therapies, reframed as “a good idea”
This piece is blunt in its framing: “Why Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM) cancer therapies are a good idea.” It’s credited to JP Saleeby, MD, and Kristina Carman, ND, and the excerpt says alternative therapies for cancer were contentious in the world of Western conventional medicine for decades. The post is marked Sep 27, 2025, and the snippet points to a discussion of how public opinion has changed on the matter.
Gobble's Take: When a headline leans that hard into CAM, you know the debate is not exactly shy.
Source: Perplexity Search (community: Reddit/HN)
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