All photos of blue Argyria that I have seen are splotchy. The "blue" pix of the candidate is completely uniform; I am 99.9 % convinced it was manipulated, regardless of the accuracy of him having the condition and regardless of the extent of the condition. The FDA scare site has a pix of a 90 something year old man who took lots of silver nitrate for years. He turned black. Not dark brown, BLACK. And all over.
On the other hand, Dr. Bruce Marx claims to have taken 9 ounces US of 10 PPM HVAC for over eight years; probably going on 10 now if he continued the practice. I do not think he is the sort of man to lie. He is not black or blue anywhere. James-Osbourne: Holmes -----Original Message----- From: Ode Coyote [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Friday, October 04, 2002 10:23 AM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: CS>Silver Facts: hints at CS in drinking water Argria and Stan Jones The first thing to determine is whether or not the candidate really IS blue. I can envision a scenerio where a photo was taken of him that made him 'look' blue, he was shown the photo and made some offhand joking comments about Halloween and colloidal silver which were then used as an accurate/in context quote in the article. All the 'other' photos of him indicate that may be what happened. The news agencies never do that, ey wot? Everything that comes down the AP wire is the whole truth? Everything gets checked out before it gets published? Not a chance. The pressure to get that edition out 'right now' is enormous. [humm, that's a funny word! Enor-mouse...a BIG little] Heck, I recall that at least 2 stories that splashed the front pages this year had no basis even in rumor and were exposed as hoaxes in those same publications within a few days. How many weren't? ken ken At 10:08 PM 10/3/02 -0700, you wrote: >>>> Nancy/all: Much more silver chloride will form in the stomach upon consuming CS than would form by adding CS into water. The problem with generating CS using salt, saline solution, or "tap" water is not primarily in the formation of silver chloride. The quality of the end product is disasterous. The problem is that the reaction immediately goes out of control-- not only are vast amounts of silver chloride produced, but also very large silver particles. I wouldn't really want to venture a guess at the total amount of silver contained in eight ounces of such a brew... But I'd imagine such a batch run for five minutes would have at least 10X the silver content of a quality product. I don't believe the candidate is lying, or is part of a conspiracy... I would like to know how he made his silver though. It would be extremely difficult to reach the commonly accepted level of silver accumulation via isolated colloidal silver in such a short time. Jason -- 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: [email protected] Silver-list archive: http://escribe.com/health/thesilverlist/index.html List maintainer: Mike Devour

