OK, now you guy's are scaring me, I have been told by by a holistic doctor and 
it was also recommended by a Pediatrician who also is a geneticist and 
specialist on children with Down syndrome to give vitamin D to my son. One 
said to increase vitamin D supplements to 1000 IU  and the other said to give 
him up to 5000 IU because we don't get near enough here in Alaska especially 
when there's only a few hours of daylight in winter.
Does anyone think Red LED light would be a suitable substitute? 
Tina
 
--- On Wed, 4/21/10, Bob Banever <bbane...@earthlink.net> wrote:


From: Bob Banever <bbane...@earthlink.net>
Subject: Re: CS>Nasal spray (UNCLASSIFIED)
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Date: Wednesday, April 21, 2010, 12:47 PM


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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