Yeah, I wouldn't have worded it the way that individual worded it.  I would 
word it this way..."When a virus inters the lung, (using the lung as an 
example), and enters a cell, which it does, does that virus then convert into a 
one celled organism by sucking the life out of the cell, hence, becoming 
*live*"?

I know Viruses are not *live* per say.  It needs 'energy' to give it 'life', 
which is why they invade a cell, thus becoming a 'living' organism as we know 
it...Yes/No?

Again though...IGNORE THE SILVER part Dan, I don't care about the silver part 
in that quote, ignore that part.

________________________________
From: Dan Nave <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, 5 April 2020 2:22 PM
To: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: CS>Answering CS disinfo correctly.

A living cell doesn't convert into a virus.  While it may or may not convert 
into a more primitive cell (for which he gives no references) what primitive 
form of what enzyme is vulnerable to Colloidal Silver, and how close does 
colloidal silver have to get to affect it.  Closer than 6 feet?...

***"The process of converting a living cell into a virus also converts it into 
a more primitive cell structure.***