Material Safety Data Sheets (MSDS) say that all the vitamins I just looked up are hazardous: A, B, C, D, E. I stopped there. Aspirin too. I expect that just about anything you can ingest is potentially hazardous according to MSDS. They didn't have much to say about coffee and tea. And apparently water is fairly safe.
Not sure how excited to get about these MSDSs or MHDSs. Dick ________________________________ From: bodhisattva <[email protected]> To: [email protected] Sent: Wed, April 21, 2010 2:40:04 PM Subject: Re: CS>Nasal spray (UNCLASSIFIED) It's a Material Handling Data Sheet! You can look up the MHDS anywhere you want for D3, it will say the same thing - these are established by govt. oversight divisions.. Anyone that has worked in industry, safety or anything similar knows what a material data sheet is. They're based on established science and studies, if a data sheet says something is poison, you can bet your ass it is! D-3 is the same toxicity as Mercury, and just a tad under Arsenic in terms of the MHDS, this really can't be debated - anyone can look up the data sheets. You can look up the MHDS for any other vitamin, and compare notes.. Here's the MHDS for Vitamin C.. http://ull.chemistry.uakron.edu/erd/Chemicals/10000/8291.html (0 Poison rating, that is, it's simply not poisonous to Humans) Here's a list of the top 4 rat poisons in the US. (D3 is second, and note it lists low to moderate toxicity for humans) http://icwdm.org/Images/rat-norway/Norway12.gif Please note, I am not saying we don't need D. I am saying to eat some sardines, and get some sunshine. Not take this stuff from the drug companies. I have a gut feeling there is more to the D story than we're being told, just like we know there is more to the fluoride story than we were told. Anytime I see a huge push on something from major media sources, I start to ask questions, and you should to. Draw your own conclusions of course, I'm just pointing out some data on this most people aren't aware of. Nothing more, nothing less. Sardines and Sunlight, there is no "Magic Pill" from Big Pharma, never will be. Dorothy Fitzpatrick wrote: But it says that the views expressed are just those of the page author, and not endorsed by the university. Does anyone on the list (Brooks, Marshall - anyone!) have anything to say about this please? I have just sent off for three lots of D3 sprays because I have read such good reports on this substance. One of those was one of the big insurance companies too. dee > >On 21 Apr 2010, at 17:21, bodhisattva wrote: > > >I'm not mixing up the D's, look at the MHDS yourself, it's for D3. D3 is a >STRONG acidic, oxidising agent. It's D3 that makes the most effective Rat >Poison, along with ZyclonB and Fluoride of course. >> >>http://ull.chemistry.uakron.edu/erd/Chemicals/8000/7235.html >>Chronic ingestion may cause effects similar to those of acute ingestion. >>Ingestion May be fatal if swallowed. May cause irritation of the digestive >>tract. May cause kidney damage. May cause cardiac disturbances. Ingestion may >>lead to mental retardation. >>Hazard class 6.1 >> >> >>

