I haven't called the man a liar, or claimed there is a conspiracy afoot. I noted the dramatic differences between Jones in the debate video and in the CNN/Fox photos. In my view we've got to deal with the info we have, and the differences are part of what we have.
I agree this is just what the FDA needs to further restrict CS. Laura In a message dated 10/4/02 8:11:09 AM Central Daylight Time, miss...@prodigy.net.mx writes: > Speaking as a former daily newspaper editor, I think all the conspiracy > theories about faking the candidate's argyria are nonsense. Most media > organizations have far too much integrity to engage in such practices. > > Such a patently phony conspiracy would and could easily be exposed, leading > to huge embarassment and professional disgrace for whatever news > organization promoted it. And for what gain? > > The man obviously has, or thinks he has, argyria. He says he got it from > drinking his own homemade CS. Do you think he's inventing this claim and > putting on blue makeup before each public appearance? Nonsense. > > The only way this could have been faked is if he had a pre-existing case of > argyria, and was induced to run for public office to give negative exposure > to CS, and that's about as far-fetched as the other conspiracy theories. > > I think the gentleman is honest, and is telling the truth, and it's not > going to further the CS cause at all. This is all the FDA needs for further > restrictions on CS. > > Rosemary Jacobs must be celebrating this turn of events. -- The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of colloidal silver. Instructions for unsubscribing may be found at: http://silverlist.org To post, address your message to: silver-list@eskimo.com Silver-list archive: http://escribe.com/health/thesilverlist/index.html List maintainer: Mike Devour <mdev...@eskimo.com>