Does this imply that CS is not good for hard surface sterilization?

Sorry, I'm just coming in on the conversation.

-Ken Bagwell




________________________________
From: Ode Coyote <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Tuesday, July 28, 2009 1:43:51 AM
Subject: Re: CS>Testing Effectivity of CS in the Labratory



  If you have dire rear, the contents of the intestine are no longer a semi 
solid.

Ode


At 06:28 PM 7/27/2009 +0100, you wrote:
> what is broths please?  and if CS doesn't kill anything in the intestines, 
> how come it helps with dogs with sickness and diarrhoea (and people)? dee
> 
> On 27 Jul 2009, at 16:51, Marshall Dudley wrote:
> 
>> Dorothy Fitzpatrick wrote:
>>> t
>> Those tests were run by me back in 1999, and reported to this list 10 years 
>> ago. The tests are correct, CS will not kill anything on agar plates. This 
>> is a known fact, and is how we realized WHY CS has little or no effect on 
>> bacteria in the intestines.  We ran tests on broths, and agar plates.  There 
>> was 100% kills on the broths and 0% kill on the agar.  The reason is simple, 
>> colloidal silver has to be mobile to find and kill pathogens, on the agar 
>> plates it becomes fixed and immobile, and thus is unable to contact or kill 
>> anything.  This is not new news, but simply confirmation of what we already 
>> know.
>> 
>> Marshall
>> 
>> 
>> --


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