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--- In [email protected], [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
>  
>  
>  
>  
> 
_http://healthtruthrhttp://healthttp://heahttp://healthtruh&&page=arti
cle_ 
> (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. 
> 
> 
> 
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