Have you heard of "magic water"  ???
http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-magicwater23-2009feb23,0,2307567.story

That's as good a name as any for a substance that scientists say is powerful enough to kill anthrax spores without harming people or the environment.

Used as a sanitizer for decades in Russia and Japan, it's slowly winning acceptance in the United States. A New York poultry processor uses it to kill salmonella on chicken carcasses. Minnesota grocery clerks spray sticky conveyors in the checkout lanes. Michigan jailers mop with electrolyzed water to keep potentially lethal cleaners out of the hands of inmates.

Actually, it's chemistry. For more than two centuries, scientists have tinkered with electrolysis, the use of an electric current to bring about a chemical reaction (not the hair-removal technique of the same name that's popular in Beverly Hills). That's how we got metal electroplating and large-scale production of chlorine, used to bleach and sanitize.

It turns out that zapping salt water with low-voltage electricity creates a couple of powerful yet nontoxic cleaning agents. Sodium ions are converted into sodium hydroxide, an alkaline liquid that cleans and degreases like detergent, but without the scrubbing bubbles. Chloride ions become hypochlorous acid, a potent disinfectant known as acid water.

[ Mr Godzilla!! .....and what is in the blood stream but a lot of salt and water? This is sounding something like "Miracle Mineral Supplement" [MMS], only with some "Draino" for the fatty deposits in the ole pipes tossed in. Remember that electrons [ aka electricity ] don't run though a liquid like they do a metal, they use an electro-chemical system of acid and base ionic solutions for transporters....like EIS uses AG+ ions and OH- anions when there is only pure water around]

"It's 10 times more effective than bleach in killing bacteria," said Yen-Con Hung, a professor of food science at the University of Georgia-Griffin, who has been researching electrolyzed water for more than a decade. "And it's safe."

[ For house cleaning, a draw back.  For "temple" cleaning, a plus...]

Electrolyzed [salt] water loses its potency fairly quickly

## You suppose that Clark was off base on "how" a Zapper kills germs and parasites ? Even using a very small amount of voltage and current, the "ruddy itch" slowly creeps from one electrode toward the other electrode ...possibly...as Sodium Hydroxide builds up under the skin. IOW the "burn" is not an electrical deal, it's chemical. It stands to reason that swapping polarity or using pulses would give an area a break and time for that chemical to dilute itself. I would think that if this is the actual mechanism, a slow frequency would do better than a fast one as it takes a bit of time for reactions to get going at low voltages.

The "nerve twitch" could be like chemically disrupting or over stimulating the synappers and the very short lived chemical that does that, killing viri and bacterium hiding under the insulation of the ole wiring where the immune system can't get to it.
..a little bit of on site "chemotherapy" ya suppose?
Now, nerves are *supposed* to transmit electrical signals and all those electro-chemical compounds would be quite natural..but jack up the concentrations and what happens to that which can tolerate the lower concentrations?

Ode


At 08:55 AM 4/1/2009 -0400, you wrote:

How much is the godzilla?  Also is it the same as using the Sota Lite which
makes silver and does micropulsing? Thanks, Jess


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