The Mission is not primarily an ask for money. It is an invitation to become part of the solution.
Begin with one action
The Mission is deliberately practical. Read one chapter. Share one page. Give one book. Talk to one school. Support one bakery testing healthier food. Teach one child about traditional foods. Plant one garden. Drink water instead of a sugary drink. These actions are small enough to begin and meaningful enough to repeat.
Different people can join in different ways
Parents can teach at home. Teachers can create lessons. Clinicians can review handouts or speak at events. Bakers and market owners can make healthier choices visible. Translators can help knowledge travel. Civic groups can convene people who would not otherwise meet.
This is an educational mission
Internets Press is a publisher. The invitation is broad and clean: help reliable education move into the world through books, translations, handouts, website content, school education, and community teaching.
Hope is a strategy
People are more likely to act when they feel capable. The Mission should leave visitors with the sense that metabolic disease is not inevitable, that traditional food knowledge still matters, and that communities can help children grow up with better choices.
What a community can do now
- Read and share the books.
- Teach one lesson in a school, clinic, church, Rotary club, or community group.
- Translate or review one resource.
- Start one visible local action and tell the story.
Mission CTA
Supporting pages for this Mission goal
Science and Mission work together
Mission pages focus on prevention, education, food culture, and community action. Clinical pages focus on diagnosis, biomarkers, professional education, and disease management.
Looking for physician-level evidence, diagnostic tools, or clinical references? Visit Clinical Resources.
Want the mechanisms? Visit Metabolic Science for fructose metabolism, liver pathways, uric acid, insulin resistance, and disease biology.
Educational note: This page is for public education and community planning. It does not diagnose or treat disease. People with medical questions should work with qualified healthcare professionals.