In other words,
> everything I read in any media report is taken as BS, unless what I read
> satisfies MY requirements!
>
> N.
>
> ----------
> Date: Sun, 2 Nov 2014 13:34:42 -0500
> From: mdud...@king-cart.com
> To: silver-list@eskimo.com
> Subject: Re:
establishment set requirements prior to publication! In other words,
everything I read in any media report is taken as BS, unless what I read
satisfies MY requirements!
N.
Date: Sun, 2 Nov 2014 13:34:42 -0500
From: mdud...@king-cart.com
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: Re: CS>Silver Mak
I don't think so. That would be ionic silver compounds, such as silver
nitrate.
Marshall
On 11/2/2014 2:28 PM, Ron wrote:
On the other hand they did not actually say colloidal but said :
"Collins and his team found that silver — in the form of dissolved
ions". Is that subject to interpretati
On the other hand they did not actually say colloidal but said :
"Collins and his team found that silver — in the form of dissolved
ions". Is that subject to interpretation?
Ron
On 11/2/2014 2:36 AM, Victor Cozzetto wrote:
Yea, that article is definitely propaganda backed by pharmaceutical
com
I read that article. Too much emphasis on the "toxicity" of silver, while there
is no warning about antibiotics side effects. I think that the toxicity of
antibiotics is terrible compared to silver colloids. Note that the article has
hedged by saying "silver ions". silver salts (usually toxic) a
It really does not appear that way to me. It says that some forms of
silver are toxic (which they are, like silver nitrate), and that one
should research and find the non-toxic forms that work well (like
colloidal silver). At last that is what I got out of it. I am amazed
that they published
I read this article as being pro silver! dee
Sent from my iPad
> On 2 Nov 2014, at 10:36, Victor Cozzetto wrote:
>
> Yea, that article is definitely propaganda backed by pharmaceutical
> companies. Trying to highlight antibiotics while spreading false fears about
> silver toxicity and CS tur
Just brilliant! dee
Sent from my iPad
> On 2 Nov 2014, at 09:36, TJ Garland wrote:
>
>
> http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/silver-makes-antibiotics-thousands-of-times-more-effective/
>
>
> When small men begin to cast big shadows, it means that the sun is about to
> set. -- Lin Yuta
Yea, that article is definitely propaganda backed by pharmaceutical
companies. Trying to highlight antibiotics while spreading false fears
about silver toxicity and CS turning you blue. Well, I am still alive and I
am not blue ;-)
Victor
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/silver-makes-anti
I've questioned this before. I'd be more inclined to say it was the EIS that
worked alone, besides, how could they possibly determine or distinguish between
the EIS and the antibiotic to result in the EIS making the antibiotic more
effective?
I'm sticking to my inclination anyway .
N.
From: ir
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