Neville,
First thinking is to find a better, natural adhesive, to keep that bandage on effectively. As to ‘*silver denial,*' because I use this metal to treat drinking water, bonded to a ceramic substrate, I’m sometimes reminded that even the *most* knowledgeable scientist (or should I say the *least* knowledgeable) can tend to be in silver denial. Silver on a ceramic has been used for well over a hundred years to basically destroy waterborne microbes and yet there are those scientists who should know better, who deny this or refer to it as insignificant. I’m thinking that they do this because of the way that pharmacy professionals and medical pros as their proxy, deny the way EIS is effective as antibiotic; as in other areas of silver effectiveness they are also under their spell. Medical professionals are in general not in on the collusion. They simply go with the flow. Those in leadership who are propagating this fraud for the love of money will, when their time comes most assuredly *not* enter through the pearly gates. Incidentally, many may be unaware that other heavy metals would be effective against germs, just the way silver is. This happens by the oligodynamic effect. For example, their *might* be a *bad* antibiotic called EIC, for Electrically Isolated Copper. This would work in destroying the germs but a byproduct would presumably be some ill health effect caused by the copper. Silver is chosen of course because of no deleterious health effect, other than the cosmetic condition *argyria*, caused by use of the metal in the wrong way. Bye for now On Wed, Nov 27, 2019 at 5:54 PM Neville Munn <[email protected]> wrote: > Well, heres one. Wife, picking a spot on the top of the nose for weeks. > When I discovered it, there was a small hole, redness around the area, I > knew what it was straight away. Administered EIS on bandage and placed on > nose. Unfortunately, Australia is so bloody hot in summer she could sweat > and unable to keep the bandage on, so, that meat was continually being > eaten away. That small hole was eventually spreading in size, due to meat > being eaten away. Also unfortunately, being a layman, I don't keep > documentation of treatment or photos, but, in a week or so the redness > disappeared, the hole stopped spreading and flesh turned white, clear fresh > meat. 8 weeks later, no change, the flesh had stabilised 8 weeks earlier > and remained clear of any sign of cancer. Skin specialist diagnosed Basil > blah blah, took a Biopsy, twice. > > I asked I wanted to know if the cancer cells were still alive, dying, or > dead. Hmmm, stupid me, they couldn't tell me, mainly because when they put > the skin under a microscope, they stain it, hence whatever cells were > there, are killed anyway, so that was a waste of time for me, trying to > ascertain if my EIS had killed it. I told him, in my opinion, I had killed > it 8 weeks earlier. Told him I had been treating it, he enquired as to how > I had treated it, no response from me, but, he kept pressing me for an > answer, so I told him, no further discussion of course, but, perhaps he > knew something I didn't? Perhaps he will file this case away for himself? > Who knows, I don't care anyway, I got my evidence. > > I absolutely believe my EIS had killed it, before a skin graft was > undertaken 8 weeks later. If I could have kept that bandage on the site > without continually coming off, it would have been killed much earlier > (opinion). > > What bugs me the most is they won't hear anything about silver! The > Establishment has done a damn good job regarding silver over years. And > yet, I believe they use silver in Chemo? > > N. >

