We have to go through this every year or so.
1. CS must have mobility to come in contact with pathogens and kill
them. If there is no contact, there is no action.
2. CS will therefore have very limited killing power in any medium which
is solid, or semisolid. This includes such things as gelatin and a
healthy stool.
3. CS kills both aerobic and anaerobic microorganisms, there generally
are no Good vs Bad microorganisms, only misplaced organisms. IE. yeast
in your bread or beer is good, in your intestines, vagina or blood
stream is bad. Likewise E coli is good in your intestines, but bad in
your blood or vagina. When people say that CS does not kill good
bacteria because it generally does not wipe out the good flora in the
intestines, they are mistaken, it is not because the bacteria are good
and CS somehow has this magical capability to tell if the bacteria is
good or bad in that environment, but rather the medium is semisolid so
the CS has no mobility.
4. If the contents of the intestines are liquid, IE with diarrhea then
CS has mobility and will kill everything there quite well. If you take
CS to kill something in the intestines due to diarrhea, then once it is
killed, you need to take probiotics, since it will kill both the
beneficial flora as well as the organism causing the problem. Once the
contents become semisolid again, the CS has limited if any effect at all.
Marshall
Dorothy Fitzpatrick wrote:
what is broths please? and if CS doesn't kill anything in the
intestines, how come it helps with dogs with sickness and diarrhoea
(and people)? dee
On 27 Jul 2009, at 16:51, Marshall Dudley wrote:
Dorothy Fitzpatrick wrote:
t
Those tests were run by me back in 1999, and reported to this list 10
years ago. The tests are correct, CS will not kill anything on agar
plates. This is a known fact, and is how we realized WHY CS has
little or no effect on bacteria in the intestines. We ran tests on
broths, and agar plates. There was 100% kills on the broths and 0%
kill on the agar. The reason is simple, colloidal silver has to be
mobile to find and kill pathogens, on the agar plates it becomes
fixed and immobile, and thus is unable to contact or kill anything.
This is not new news, but simply confirmation of what we already know.
Marshall
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