There are other problems with black mold and other toxic molds besides killing 
it. They produce toxins, and the body has to get rid of them. I have wondered 
if Brook's lipsomal vitamin C would address this, since in theory it should 
help a great deal. Killing it is a good idea; however careful attention needs 
to be paid to removing the toxins at the same time. Some methods have been 
listed already- sauna, etc.

btw- aspergillosis is not incurable- it is certainly curable, just not by the 
doctor's usual methods. I am speculating that rotating the antifungal protocols 
to prevent tolerance from developing might be helpful. Not sure though, since 
using the CS worked for me. I don't have to use anything else.

Thanks for the info on the mole and the soda/dmso. That sounds like a good tip.

Kathryn


On Jan 1, 2010, at 4:13 PM, Dick Rochon wrote:

> The Italian oncologist, Dr. Simoncini, (watch on Youtube) was curing lung 
> cancer by using baking soda. He claims that cancer is a fungus, and his 
> videos show the cancer turning back pink again and going away. He was curing 
> stage 4 cancers until they took his licence away. A serious danger to the 
> cancer industry.
>  
> If he is correct that cancer is a fungus, and soda will kill it, then it 
> should also kill black mold, which certainly is a fungus also. If I had it I 
> would dilute baking soda in water and use a nebulizer to breath it.
>  
> By the way, I used a solution of dissolved baking soda and DMSO, 50/50, about 
> twice a day for a month, on a brown mole that was turning black and bleeding, 
> and it totally disappeared. Never had it looked at or diagnosed, so cannot 
> claim it was cancer.
>  
> Dick
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: [email protected]
> To: [email protected]
> Sent: Friday, January 01, 2010 11:06 AM
> Subject: Fwd: CS>.we don't KNOW what would have happened had we NOT taken CS.
> 
> IAspergillosis is an incurable disease of the lungs caused by fungal 
> Aspergillus. It is treated using
> compounds called azoles but researchers at The University of Manchester have 
> found that the fungus has
> been able to mutate making treatment ineffective.
> The research, published in the prestigious US journal Emerging Infectious 
> Diseases, showed that 13 out of
> 14 affected patients recently treated by the team did not respond to therapy 
> and that numerous mutations
> were responsible.
>  
> From: [email protected]
> Reply-to: [email protected]
> To: [email protected]
> Sent: 1/1/2010 12:43:29 P.M. Central Standard Time
> Subj: Re: CS>.we don't KNOW what would have happened had we NOT taken CS.
>  
> fungal_disease.pdf