Thanks to the FDA's ridiculous crackdown on truthful scientific information about the health benefits of nutritional products, I can't even tell you much about RNA and why people value it so much as an element in their food. But if you search around for the work of Dr Benjamin S. Frank and his research on RNA, you may find a rather interesting collection of information about why and how RNA is a crucial element for cellular health*.
To deliver RNA, this Rejuvenate Plus superfood relies on chlorella, chlorella growth factor (CGF), nutritional yeast and evenRNA extracts of nutritional yeast; all combined with other supporting ingredients such as chia seeds (omega-3s), rice bran solubles (much like tocotrienols) and some veryhigh-end configurations of nutrientssuch as magnesium malate (not some cheap magnesium oxide) and methylcobalamin (the premium, expensive version of vitamin B12).
It also delivers organic dulse (a seaweed) and organic kelp, both of which are rich innaturally-occurring ocean minerals.
The upshot of all this is thatRejuvenate is so nutrient dense and so richly greenthat it's just too much nutrition for most people to handle, frankly. This is not a "mainstream consumer" superfood. Your typical Joe Schmo off the street probably wouldn't touch it (he's drinking Diet Pepsi anyway, and he thinks that's good for him!).
To deliver RNA, this Rejuvenate Plus superfood relies on chlorella, chlorella growth factor (CGF), nutritional yeast and evenRNA extracts of nutritional yeast; all combined with other supporting ingredients such as chia seeds (omega-3s), rice bran solubles (much like tocotrienols) and some veryhigh-end configurations of nutrientssuch as magnesium malate (not some cheap magnesium oxide) and methylcobalamin (the premium, expensive version of vitamin B12).
It also delivers organic dulse (a seaweed) and organic kelp, both of which are rich innaturally-occurring ocean minerals.
The upshot of all this is thatRejuvenate is so nutrient dense and so richly greenthat it's just too much nutrition for most people to handle, frankly. This is not a "mainstream consumer" superfood. Your typical Joe Schmo off the street probably wouldn't touch it (he's drinking Diet Pepsi anyway, and he thinks that's good for him!).
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