so does sodium chlorite do the same job as ASC Tom? and if so, why do we use ASC? thanks. dee
On 18 Sep 2010, at 03:01, Tom Poast wrote: > Hello Renee, > > When I think of MMS, I think of the whole MMS protocol. > > When I think of sodium chlorite, only one part of the thinking process goes > to thinking about MMS. The rest go to the various other uses of sodium > chlorite. > > The confusion can be eliminated simply by referring to the chemical name and > leaving the “commercial” name out of the discussion… > > Sodium chlorite is referred to as “Stabilized Chlorine Dioxide.” The early > alternative people changed that to “Stabilized Oxygen” when they reviewed the > breakdown process of chlorine dioxide in air. The wrongly assumed that the > process would be the same inside the body. In air in the presence of UV > light ClO2 breaks down to chlorine and oxygen. The chlorine attaches to > hydrogen in the air forming HCl. Under high humidity conditions, acid rain > forms. The concentration of sodium chlorite is directly related to the > available chlorine dioxide in the solution. 22.4% sodium chlorite has 224000 > PPM available chlorine dioxide. 2% sodium chlorite has 20000 PPM available > chlorine dioxide. > -- The Silver List is a moderated forum for discussing Colloidal Silver. Rules and Instructions: http://www.silverlist.org Unsubscribe: <mailto:silver-list-requ...@eskimo.com?subject=unsubscribe> Archives: http://www.mail-archive.com/silver-list@eskimo.com/maillist.html Off-Topic discussions: <mailto:silver-off-topic-l...@eskimo.com> List Owner: Mike Devour <mailto:mdev...@eskimo.com>