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Restoring Ancestral Health

Internets Press on the web at WWW.INTERNETS.COM, was founded to confront a growing crisis in the Western Pacific: the rapid rise of obesity, diabetes, fatty liver disease, and metabolic illness driven by high fructose corn syrup in modern foods.   Within just two generations, the world’s healthiest island populations have become the world’s sickest.

Any observer based in the once pristine islands of the Western Pacific can see the singular cause of these illnesses every day by simply going to the main port of every island and seeing container ships unload modern sugar-laden food and drinks.
 

Our Mission

At Internets Press, our mission is simple and urgent:
To spread evidence-based knowledge about diet, genes, fructose, and ancestral health—and to support community-driven solutions that bring traditional foods back into markets, homes and schools.

We produce clear, accessible content that empowers families, teachers, and policymakers to make informed choices rooted in their own heritage.

What We Do

1. Books, Videos & Public Education

We create educational materials that explain how toxic doses of fructose exposure in ultra-processed foods fuel today’s metabolic diseases—and how a return to ancestral eating patterns can restore health.

Our publications bring together lived experience across the Pacific and around the world, combining science with storytelling to make complex topics understandable for everyone. 


2. Partnerships With NGOs

Internets Press works closely with NGOs, local organizations, educational institutions, and community leaders to promote real change on the ground.

Our approach has two key components:

     A. Education on Ancestral Foods

Helping ethnic communities rediscover the traditional foods their genes recognize—taro, yam, cassava, breadfruit, ocean proteins, and other staples that protected the health of their ancestors for thousands of generations.

On the island of Saipan, in the past year, increasing knowledge of genes and ancestral foods has created a micro-economics marketplace surge in demand for ancestral ube bread and taro bread.  

People who choose to return to the ancestral foods of their grandparents are losing weight, and their biomarkers of fructose toxicity such as uric acid, glucose and HbA1C levels are dropping back towards normal.

     B. Supporting Access & Affordability

Advocating for subsidies that allow ancestral breads (taro bread, ube  bread, cassava bread) to be priced to compete with cheap, fructose-laden white bread.  This is a micro-economics model that can be replicated in all of the islands of the Pacific.

We also support efforts to bring local produce back into schools and marketplaces, strengthening both children’s health and local agriculture.  

Our Dedication

Internets Press is dedicated to the children of the Pacific and all communities, affected by modern metabolic disease caused by addedd fructose.  

We believe that health can be reclaimed by honoring ancestral knowledge, applying modern science, and restoring the ancient foods on which all humans thrive.

Our commitment is to help every community reconnect with the foods their genes understand—one loaf of bread, one book, one video, and one partnership at a time.