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.
> 


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