We should first agree on a terminology. Technically any foreign life form that lives off your body without giving any benefit in return is a "parasite". That would include viruses and bacteria.
But the term "parasite" is usually reserved for multicellular (roundworms, tapeworms, etc.) and eukaryotic single celled (giardia, malaria) parasitic organisms. I am not a biologist but I understand that eukaryotic single celled creatures are more closely related to multicellular animals than to the more primitive prokaryotic single celled creatures (chiefly bacteria) It would seem from the evidence available that CS is effective primarily against prokaryotes (bacteria). I have not seen any reports of success using CS against such diseases as malaria, giardiasis, amoebic dysentery, etc. (but this doesn't mean they don't exist) It is dangerous to assume CS or anything else is a "magic bullet" that will cure whatever is wrong with you, regardless of its cause. -----Original Message----- From: Sharon L. House <[email protected]> To: [email protected] <[email protected]> Date: Thursday, September 09, 1999 12:01 PM Subject: Re: CS>Parasites >>Hi guys, >> >>Just catching up on alot of mail. Someone mentioned that CS wouldn't work >>on intestinal parasites because CS inters the blood stream not the bowel. >>Don't intestinal parasites feed off of the blood stream? So drinking CS >>should clear up parasites, right? >> >>Sorry if I somehow missed a post that addressed this. >> >>Cheers, >>Kim > >Doesn't CS just work on one-celled creatures? Probably the only parasites >it would kill are the single celled ones. Am I right on this? > >Sharon > > > > >-- >The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of colloidal silver. > >To join or quit silver-list or silver-digest send an e-mail message to: >[email protected] -or- [email protected] >with the word subscribe or unsubscribe in the SUBJECT line. > >To post, address your message to: [email protected] > >List maintainer: Mike Devour <[email protected]> >

