I had my mercury filings removed in the late '70's after reading a book on
their dangers written by a dentist who lived near me. I went to him, and he
briefed me on what was necessary, and offered to remove the 12-15 mercury
filings I had for $175 a tooth.
Not being able to afford that, I went to Tijuana and had it done for $25 a
tooth by a dentist who specialized in their removal. He, like every other
similarly trained dentist, uses much air circulation and a dental dam as
absolute necessities. High tech labs will have devices to suck the air
(with mercury dust) out of your mouth so it doesn't get inhaled or absorbed
into the bloodstream..
The ADA (American Dental Association) censures every dentist who endorses or
advertises mercury filing removal. It is still suppressing information it
knew when it formed in the 1840s -- that mercury is a dangerous poison,
especially to those super sensitive to it. The opposing group of dentists
the ADA defeated were holistic dentists who did not use mercury in filings
because of its known health dangers (even then!) But it seems there was
much more money to be made in mercury filings, so the health dangers be
damned.
Thus, the ADA is at least partially responsible for any mercury poisoning
which can be directly traced to mercury filings -- which of course is a
practically forensic impossibility. So rather than let the health dangers
be known, the ADA perpetuates the coverup.
My dentist was censured, and lost his ADA accreditation, which is like the
Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval in the dental world.
A perfect example of merury poisoning occurred in the 1970-s in Japan, when
dozens died from a hug mercury spill. Mercury was formely used to make fancy
gentlemen's hats, until they linked its use to the dementia it causes.
Remember the expression "mad as a hatter"?
Dentists are trained never to touch mercury, and keep old mercury filings
and mercury debris in large containers of water so they won't be exposed to
it. But then they put it our mouths and say it's perfectly safe.
Duh?
----- Original Message -----
From: "Charles Marcus" <tansta...@libertytrek.org>
To: <silver-list@eskimo.com>
Sent: Sunday, July 29, 2007 1:02 PM
Subject: CS>Re: mercury fillings- to Miranda
I also read that it is dangerous *to* get rid of them because of the
amount released in one go into the system. Dee
It *can* be dangerous to get rid of them, if:
1. They are not removed properly, and
2. You do not adequately prepare - you should spend a few days prior
loading up your system with mercury scavengers, like bentonite clay,
chlorella, cilantro, and any others you know of, and a few weeks (at
*least* to many months *continuing* the mercury scavengers once the
fillings have been removed.
It is not something to take lightly, and it is not something to have done
by someone inexperienced in the procedure.
Some people say if you have a lot, it is better to do them in stages -
personally, I don't agree - but that is a decision each has to make for
themselves. I do understand the argument - but as long as all of the
proper precautions are taken, it shouldn't be a problem.
Personally, I would also most likely insist on having some kind of
breathing apparatus so I was breathing filtered air through my nose ONLY,
the entire time (to prevent inhalation of mercury vapor while they were
being removed). Of course, this last part would require a bit of
self-control - ie, not breathing through your mouth during the entire
process...
--
The Silver List is a moderated forum for discussing Colloidal Silver.
Instructions for unsubscribing are posted at: http://silverlist.org
To post, address your message to: silver-list@eskimo.com
Address Off-Topic messages to: silver-off-topic-l...@eskimo.com
The Silver List and Off Topic List archives are currently down...
List maintainer: Mike Devour <mdev...@eskimo.com>