Talking about...Controversial Illness...anyone heard of a  disease that 
feels like bugs crawling under ones skin...is this mold  related?   Someone 
suggested Lyme disease....how mush cs do you take  for it?
 
 
In a message dated 3/8/2011 9:23:21 A.M. Central Standard Time,  
ja...@eytonsearth.org writes:

Greetings, everyone:
 
This subject always produces great confusion, and  there really is no need 
for it.
 
I ask that those interested in understanding how  antimicrobial substances 
work in the gut read pages  249 - 259 of my  book, most of which has been 
made available for free on Google  books:
 
_http://books.google.com/books?id=juKFJZ2OP3UC&lpg=PA
249&dq=dr%20lind%20clay&pg=PA249#v=onepage&q=dr%20lind%20clay&f=false_ 
(http://books.google.com/books?id=juKFJZ2OP3UC&lpg=PA249&dq=dr%20lind%20clay&pg=PA249#v=onepage&q=dr%20l
ind%20clay&f=false) 
 
The confusion is easily solved  when contrasting the desireable population 
counts of good bacteria vs.  the population counts of bad bacteria, and how 
quickly good bacteria  repopulates in the large intestines, provided that 
the biological terrain has  been restored.
 
If one desires to hammer the large intestines in  order to eradicate 
pathogenic organisms overgrowth, then colloidal silver,  olive leaf extract 
(East 
Park Research), and a high quality healing clay can  be used.  In situations 
where there is a severe imbalance in the colon, a  high quality probiotic 
can be used.  Howver, one needs to use the  probiotic not because these 
antimicrobial substances have wiped out the good  organisms, but because there 
is 
a good chance that the imbalance in the  digestive system has already 
depleted them.  Those with fantastically  functioning digestive systems 
experience no problems, due to the fact that  repopulation of the good 
organisms 
occurs very quickly; and even more quickly  as the undesireable organisms 
perish.
 
If one wishes to ensure the delivery of active  silver into the intestines, 
then mixing colloidal silver with clay is the best  way to accomplish this.
 
For those using CS for other conditions, as long  as the digestive system 
is relatively healthy, there is no real reason to be  concerned about the 
over-killing of good bacteria in the gut.
 
Kind Regards,
 
Jason
 
----- Original Message ----- 

From:  _Alan  Jones_ (mailto:alanmjo...@gmail.com)  
To: _silver-list@eskimo.com_ (mailto:silver-list@eskimo.com)  
Sent: Tuesday, March 08, 2011  06:44
Subject: Re: CS>c/s and Bee  Mites


My understanding is, the CS would kill the gut flora if it  got in contact 
with it.  


But I believe the CS is absorbed before it gets that far in the  digestive 
tract.


On Mon, Mar 7, 2011 at 5:33 PM, Scotty <_scottie592002@yahoo.com_ 
(mailto:scottie592...@yahoo.com) >  wrote:


 

So  does this mean that CS kills good bacteria in humans too? This seems to 
be  a controversial subject. 





--  
Alan Jones

"The powers not delegated to the United States by the  Constitution, nor 
prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States  respectively, or 
to the people."  (Tenth Amendment to the US  Constitution)