Note that Oxyclean" commercials always show how it instantly removes *juice* stains, before they set in as stains.
It doesn't work nearly as well on real ...not juice...stains.

Maybe we could drink dilute Oxyclean solution and call it stabilized oxygen?
[ Which isn't MMS / SCD ]

Google:
The ingredients listed on the OxyClean container are: Sodium Percarbonate and Sodium Carbonate "Environmentally friendly, sodium percarbonate will react with water to form hydrogen peroxide, which acts as both cleaner and slightly acidic bleach/brightener. A great benefit is that the hydrogen peroxide will evaporate and leave behind no pockets of acidic solids."

Ode


At 11:48 AM 9/4/2007 -0400, you wrote:

Dee wrote:
Well, I know that my product (stabilised oxygen) is not the same thing as
MMS but it is supposed to be similar, and when I saw the way it bleached the
blackberry/raspberry juice, I would never use that again for ingestion.  I
may use it to cure mold or something, behind the sink!  Very expensive that,
considering a bottle of bleach is about 62p and that cost me £16.99!
So you are saying you would not use anything that bleaches? What about hydrogen peroxide, a really good bleach, they even use it to bleach hair. Ozone is also a very good bleach, if it does not destroy the substance first. The chlorine they put in the municipal water, and swimming pools and hot tubs is a heck of a bleach. Are you going to avoid all these as well? If something bleaches, it simply means that it is a strong oxidizer. The most powerful natural germicides are the oxidizers, so you may want to rethink your position. Bleaching fruit juices is very easy, and even the weakest bleaching agents around should have no problem with them.

Marshall
Dee

-------Original Message-------


From: Ode Coyote
Date: 09/02/07 14:10:31
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: CS>Re: MLM, MMS, and ........ The Chase


Chlorine Dioxide , like Ozone is not exactly an "Oxygenator" it's an
Oxidizer , as in "burn"
It's a little more selective than Ozone about the range of organic
Molecules it destroys.




A few more clues:
http://www.lenntech.com/water-disinfection/disinfectants-chlorine-dioxide
htm


Regardless of how whatever works and how dangerous it may or may not be,
The real question is:
DOES it "work" and how much damage does Chlorine gas, oxidation of
Non-target organic molecules and the byproducts of all that do in the process?

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