_http://healthtruthrhttp://healthttp://heahttp://healthtruh&&page=article_ 
(http://healthtruthrevealed.com/full-page.php?id=1200026003&&page=article) 
 
Almost All Colloidal Silver To Be Removed From Market In Near Future Through  
Stealth Federal Mandates
By: Ben Kage
Source:_  http://www.newstarg  htt_ (http://http//www.newstarget.com) 
March 5, 2007
 

Originally published December 4 2006 
EPA uses nanotech regulation ploy to target colloidal silver  while ignoring 
all other nanotech particles
by Ben Kage 

Nanomaterials -- products and materials  changed or created at the atomic and 
molecular level -- are quickly gaining  popularity for their multitude of 
uses, and while the Environmental Protection  Agency is preparing to regulate 
popular nanosilver antibacterial products,  ostensibly to protect consumers, 
critics say the move is a thinly veiled attempt  to solely regulate nanosilver 
as 
a health supplement. 
Nanosilver is used to kill harmful bacteria in food storage  containers, shoe 
liners, washing machines and even bandages. Particles of  nanosilver and 
other nanomaterials can be as small as one-millionth the size of  a pinhead. 
However, _the  EPA_ (http://www.newstarget.com/the_EPA.html) , citing pressure 
from 
silver industry workers and  environmental groups such as Natural Resources 
Defense Council, is investigating  whether silver ions could pose an 
environmental threat by killing beneficial  bacteria in _the  environment_ 
(http://www.newstarget.com/the_environment.html) , or even harming humans. The 
agency also  
received a letter from Chuck Weir, chairman of a California wastewater 
treatment  plant advisory group known as Tri-TAC, which claimed "silver is 
highly 
toxic to  aquatic life at low concentrations and also bioaccumulates in some 
aquatic  organisms, such as clams." 
Silver was brought under close _EPA_ (http://www.newstarget.com/EPA.html)  
scrutiny when washing machine manufacturers began making models that  were 
lined 
with silver ions or sprayed them onto the clothes as an antibacterial  agent. 
Last year, the EPA decided that the machines should not be regulated  under 
the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide and Rodenticide Act, since they were  
considered devices rather than pesticides. Recently, however, the agency  
re-examined its decision and reversed it. 
"We took a second look at the release of silver ions, and it  was very clear 
that this is a pesticide and not a device," Jim Jones, director  of the EPA's 
Office of Pesticide Programs, told the Washington Post. "Our  original 
determination proved not to be a correct one." 
Under the regulations, any silver product that claims it has  antibacterial 
properties must prove the product is safe to be released into the  environment. 
Mike Adams, a consumer health advocate and proponent of _colloidal  silver_ 
(http://www.newstarget.com/colloidal_silver.html) , suggested the regulations 
might work better were  they aimed at antibiotics and _pharmaceuticals_ 
(http://www.newstarget.com/pharmaceuticals.html) . 
"Isn't it interesting that the EPA chooses to completely  ignore the 
environmental safety of all the millions of tons of pharmaceuticals  flushed 
down 
toilets every year while selectively targeting silver products?" he  said. "Why 
isn't the EPA concerned about the environmental toxicity of  pharmaceuticals?"I
A major point of contention for silver proponents is the fact  that only 
products making antibacterial claims are subject to regulation. Jones'  
commented 
that, "Unless you're making a claim to kill a pest, you're not a  pesticide." 
This decision has caused a severe backlash since it was announced  Nov. 22, 
but not from washing machine manufacturers. Advocates of the use of  silver in 
health have expressed outrage that the EPA has become involved and  made this a 
safety issue, as their decision directly affects sellers whose  silver 
products claim any antibacterial benefits. 
"People have used silver flatware, and in the past silver  coins, for 
thousands of years, releasing silver into the environment with no  question of 
harm," 
said New Jersey lawyer Ralph Fucetola, who runs the Committee  for the 
Responsible Use of Silver in Health (CRUSH) and the _www.SilverFacts.www_ 
(http://www.silverfacts.com/)  website. "The EPA will  require proof of the 
safety of 
silver in the environment only if the companies  make germ-killing claims," 
said 
Fucetola. "They are only concerned about safety  if the public is being given 
information about benefits." 
Fucetola, who is known as the _Vitamin Lawyer_ 
(http://www.vitaminlawyer.com/)  for his work  in the realm of dietary 
supplements, said CRUSH was developed 
to prevent  irresponsible use of silver in health -- with special focus on 
ingested silver  -- from both sides of the equation; both entities that would 
off-handedly  disparage silver's benefits and those who would exaggerate them 
for profit. 
"This is not a regulation designed to protect the environment  from 
_nanotechnology_ (http://www.newstarget.com/nanotechnology.html) , it's a 
stealth ploy 
that  selectively attempts to remove colloidal silver from the marketplace,, 
it's a stealth ploy that  selectively attempts to remove colloidal silver from 
the marketplace,<WBR>"  Adams said. "Silver was gaining momentum in the 
marketplace as a s_antibiotics_ (http://www.newstarget.com/antibiotics.html) , 
antibacterial cleaners and other  products from powerful corporations. That's 
why 
_Big  Business_ (http://www.newstarget.com/Big_Business.html)  had to knock 
colloidal silver off track and  regulate it out of the marketplace. h
Fucetola noted there is a conflict between the EPA's decision  and its own 
safety data on silver. 
"EPA public records show that for ingested silver there is a  safe level of 
use, known as the Reference Dose (RfD), determined by science as  the safe 
daily amount for consumers," he said. "The guidelines make it clear  that the 
only 
concern for the RfD is for the potential for the skin  discoloration known as 
argyria. You would have to consume so much silver that it  would discolor 
your skin before there would be any safety concerns." 
Agyria, the most common health concern associated with silver,  is a 
permanent yet medically benign conditioned marked by discoloration of the  
skin, 
usually brought on prolonged exposure to large amounts of the substance. 
The EPA considers silver a _water_ (http://www.newstarget.com/water.html)  
contaminant, but its Office of Drinking Water decided in the early 1990s  that 
the effects of silver exposure in _drinking  water_ 
(http://www.newstarget.com/drinking_water.html)  were cosmetic, and therefore 
downgraded the  substance 
from a primary contaminant level to a secondary contaminant level.  
Additionally, the U.S. Centers for Disease control _reports_ 
(http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/tfacts146.html)  that spills of silver less than 
1,000  pounds are not required 
to be reported to the EPA. 
"If the EPA were to take the position that all nanosilver  products had to 
qualify as 'safe and effective,' it would be acting contrary to  its own long 
history of determining scientifically valid RfDs," Fucetola said.  "Silver is 
spread throughout the environment already. Taking silver from the  environment, 
using it and having some of it return to the environment is no  different than 
the use of any other metal from the environment, whether iron,  copper, or 
whatever." 
Another factor that is drawing anger from silver proponents is  the seeming 
focus of regulations on nanosilver to the exclusion of other  nanomaterials. 
Indeed, the majority of nanomaterials will not be subject to EPA  scrutiny, as 
they do not make any antibacterial claims. 
"Consider this," said Adams. "Out of all the countless  nanotechnology 
particles used in sun lotion, clothing and cookware, the EPA has  decided to 
regulate only one -- colloidal silver, which is a naturally-occurring  mineral. 
In 
doing so, the EPA ignores all the synthetic nanoparticles introduced  into the 
environment through consumer products made by Big Business." 
"'Nanosilver’ is the sexy new term for ionic silver," said Jay  Newman, CRUSH 
member and president of supplement maker Invision International,  in a press 
release. "Yet the imperative for an efficient delivery mechanism for  human 
use is still the bottom line." 
Newman said in a NewsTarget interview that free silver ions  are needed to 
have an antimicrobial effect, but the ions will automatically bond  with 
chlorine if they find their way into common drinking water, thereby  rendering 
the 
ions inert. 
"Our patented Silver100 is a perfect case in point, where it  took many years 
of development and achieved patent protection because it has a  specific 
molecular structure to control the release of silver ions in microbial  forms," 
he 
said. "Once that occurs, the silver ions do not hang around. That's  just the 
way the chemistry works. 
"All appearances are that the EPA has been succumbing to  corporate pressure 
of vested interests that do not want to see the word get out  that silver has 
these benefits," Newman said. "I remain optimistic that the EPA  will have the 
ethics and responsibility to let science prevail and that this  will go away 
as quickly as it emerged." 
_Original story_ (http://www.newstarget.com/021231.html) 
 
Crusador Comment: We ran this  story when it first broke and decided to run 
it again to help alert consumers  and to shed additional light on the subject. 
This natural wonder product should  be in everyone's home. The federal 
government knows how effective colloidal  silver is. Pharmaceutical companies 
want 
complete control of the market so the  only options available to consumers will 
be their drug based options that all  have toxic and possibly deadly risks. If 
you rely oin colloidal silver and feel  it is something many of us will need 
in a time of emergency then I urge you to  share this story with others. I 
spoke with a person very close to the situation  several days ago and there is 
great fear that within a year or less most silver  will be off the market 
because these small companies will not be able to afford  to do the research 
and 
studies the EPA is requiring. 


«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»


§  Health_and_Healing - PULSE ON WORLD HEALTH CONSPIRACIES! §
_http://groups.http://grohttp://groupshttp://grou_ 
(http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Health_and_Healing) 
Subscribe:..Subscribe:..<WBR>.......  HeSubscribe:Subscribe:..Subsc 

«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»

   
<BR><BR><BR>**************************************<BR> AOL now offers free 
email to everyone.  Find out more about what's free from AOL at 
http://www.aol.com.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Reply via email to