Remember that CS is more like a “second” immune system and is not foolproof.   
The best defense is to ramp up your own immune system.  I use Vit.D3 with K2.  
That in itself does not kill anything but it stimulates the immune system.   
Works quite well as a defense against cold and flu.  You can still take silver 
on top of it if you wish.  

From: Lena Guyot 
Sent: Sunday, December 21, 2014 5:05 PM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: Re: CS>Viral resistance to CS??? I've been watching Sanjay Gupta's

I've always regarded Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays to be great 
germ-swaps, in which people transmit germs they've become immune to, but 
visiting friends and families from other places have not; sort of like measles 
and the Eskimos. 
That's one reason why I start taking extra silver before, during, and after 
distant visitors.
It's worked here for my family, although this next week will be a test as my 
son and grandson are coming down from Maine with the last vestiges of a local 
cold.


Be well,
Léna

On Dec 21, 2014, at 6:34 PM, Neville wrote:


  That was interesting Mike. 

  I am led to wonder......

  I've been ingesting a small maintenance amount of EIS daily for probly over 
10 years now and have not had a cold/flu, however, we went to Melbourne this 
last June and I came back with a cold/flu?  Both myself AND my wife came down 
with it (she takes a daily dose as well).

  This leads me to wonder?  Due to population density and ethnic variety in the 
city as compared to the locale where we live, if in fact those bugs may mutate 
into a "different?" form of cold/flu bug which we were exposed to, and our 
immune system didn't cope?  It seems to me that maybe cold/flu bugs could be 
different dependant on locale or area?  By way of example and simplicity, like 
mice if you like, you have country mice and city mice, they are both mice but 
country mice apparently have smaller brains than do city mice.  I wonder if 
cold/flu bugs could mutate different somehow in densely populated cities with 
the huge diversity of people, and bug mutations, than the less populated rural 
areas?

  This may be pure science fiction and the ramblings of an idiot of course, but 
I do wonder if it's plausible?

  N.


  > Subject: Re: CS>Viral resistance to CS??? I've been watching Sanjay Gupta's
  > From: [email protected]
  > To: [email protected]
  > Date: Sun, 21 Dec 2014 11:08:35 -0500
  > 
  > Hi Judy,
  > 
  > Just in case there's any confusion:
  > 
  > Remember that viruses are small molecules of genetic material (DNA or
  > RNA) that have evolved the ability to get into living cells and hijack