>I'm recognizing an important milestone in my life this month.  One year
>ago (Oct., '96), I decided I would try an inexpensive commercially
>prepared CS product (5ppm).  
>I had been (Finally) diagnosed in Aug., 1994 with Lyme disease, having
>had numerous strange, seemingly unrelated symptoms for years-- onset of
>allergies, mitral valve prolapse (MVP) with a pronounced click, candida,
>fatigue, hair loss, night sweats (in my early 30's!), bouts of mild to
>moderate stiffeness of my neck, back & shoulders, dizziness, brain fog,
>blurred vision, optical migraines, elbow & knee arthritis, "pins &
>needles", ear buzzing, dyslexia...  The list could go on and on.  

   I think I've figured out how the silver works and the reason it
is so hard to kill with every thing else.
   I beleave the spirochete feeds on negitive material. Made up of
negitive ions. The CS I beleave is a negitive ion base so the chetes
are attracted to it.
   If it is true the chetes are biological superconducters then 
injesting a material that isn't superconductive will cut off there
electcity. It's kinda like taking two wires connected to a battery
touch the ends and the light comes on. If you put a piece of rubber
in between the wires the light never comes on. So the CS is like the
rubber in between. Since the silver particals never reach the speed
of electrical transmission an SC does it cuts off the electrical flow.

   I also beleave that all bugs have north and south poles that they
use to recharge. It's also possable that they have two like poles at 
one end and the oppisite in the middle (- + -). To kill a bug you
have to send juice threw them and have to have the poles close 
enough together to get enough juice in them. You also have to have
the right frequency. Since the chetes are spring like then they
can contract and expand to reduce the amount of current going 
threw. Reducing the current reduses the killing speed.

Reid