I love sardines and most other seafoods, but the oceans are polluted with so
many toxins I'd be afraid to eat them more than once a month. Sad really.
----- Original Message -----
From: "bodhisattva" <bodhisat...@mutemail.com>
To: <silver-list@eskimo.com>
Sent: Wednesday, April 21, 2010 11:52 AM
Subject: Re: CS>Nasal spray (UNCLASSIFIED)
Small quantities is the operative word, but science apparently will never
understand natural law, and continues to break it with recklessness and
bad results. I don't believe for a second the D the sun makes in our skin
is the same as the synthetic hormone from Merck.
However, if you must take D, then do some research on what buffers the
residual amounts in your body. Perhaps supplement D+K, so the rest is
buffered off. Most people are told to avoid things with K in it (Grassfed
Cows, and the meat/milk/butter from them, free range hen eggs, etc), and
since K2 is probably vastly more important than D this isn't a good thing.
If you drink a can of soda, take a tums along with it. The calcium will
bind and flush much of the excess Fluoride. Same principle really. It'd
probably say a D+K+Magnesium+Calcium combined supplement might be a better
idea than just gobs and gobs of D.
Sunlight and Sardines!
Dan Nave wrote:
Right, vitamin D is a hormone, to be taken in small quantities if
supplemented. People working
with many pounds of the compound would have to be careful to not
ingest more than the extremely small amounts
required for healthy living. Getting this much vitamin D from
sunlight would be like staying out naked in the
full sun in the desert for 300 years.
You would be sure to be burned to a crisp.
Dan
On Wed, Apr 21, 2010 at 12:38 PM, Marshall Dudley <mdud...@king-cart.com>
wrote:
Yes, D3 makes a good rat poison, especially when combined with
anticoagulants. It kills rats for the same reason it help people, it
mobilizes calcium. But too much of it and it becomes toxic, mobilizing
too
much calcium. Everything is toxic if too much is consumed, even water.
Salt
is very toxic to things as well, fresh water fish, slugs and microbes,
but
is also an essential nutrient. But if you eat too much salt it will
kill
you too. D3 is safe for adult humans up to 10,000 IU a day long term.
400 IU is 40 micrograms. Rat LD50 is 42 mg/kg. If you weight 100 kg,
then
the LD50 would likely be around 4.2 grams. You could reach this level
by
taking approximately 90,000 400 UI pills at once, but most likely you
would
succumb to the huge amount of oil in 90,000 or the stomach would burst
from
the volume of these pills first.
Marshall
bodhisattva wrote:
I'm not mixing up the D's, look at the MHDS yourself, it's for D3. D3
is
a STRONG acidic, oxidising agent. It's D3 that makes the most effective
Rat
Poison, along with ZyclonB and Fluoride of course.
http://ull.chemistry.uakron.edu/erd/Chemicals/8000/7235.html
Chronic ingestion may cause effects similar to those of acute
ingestion.
Ingestion May be fatal if swallowed. May cause irritation of the
digestive
tract. *May cause kidney damage*. May cause *cardiac disturbances*.
*Ingestion may lead to mental retardation*.
Hazard class 6.1
Dorothy Fitzpatrick wrote:
Yes but some articles have said more or less the same of
colloidal silver. Are you sure you are not mixing up your
D's--because
I
believe D2 is harder to assimilate. dee
On 21 Apr 2010, at 02:52, bodhisattva wrote:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rodenticide
Remember, Fluoride, ZyclonB and VitaminD are potent rodent killers,
and
as a
consequence, the first two were used to great effect to gas humans
in
mass
quantities. Look at the other fun Rodenticides, and discover where
those are
added to the things in your life. Some contrail tests claim they
always
find a lot of barium, which of course is another rat poison. Seems
to
be a
trend these days, you know?
http://ull.chemistr y.uakron. edu/erd/Chemical s/8000/7235. html
VITAMIN D - EC Class very toxic
RTECS class Reproductive Effector; Human Data
Poison_Class 2
Exposure effects
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