Curious, could we live in a world - especially  cities - if we only were
able to treat the faulty water system with colloidal silver? Would that
make it a safe drinking water?
Our tap water is DEAD.  There is such  a living water and I wonder how
much silver is inside a living  (alive) water from clean rivers?


On Wed, Apr 22, 2020 at 11:50 AM Marshall <[email protected]> wrote:

> Some notes on this.  The author is comparing silver nanoparticles, to
> silver carbonate, which is an ionic form of silver.  Their experiment was
> with silver nanoparticles being continually slowly being converted to
> silver carbonate for water treatment.  Basically it is saying that ionic
> silver is 1,000 times as potent an antiviral as colloidal silver, something
> most of us already knew.   Also this took place outside the body.
>
> Practically it should have little effect on CS taken  by mouth.  When CS
> hits the stomach the silver oxide ionic portion reacts with the stomach
> acid and immediately produces silver chloride.  If you mix it with baking
> soda, the ionic portion will become silver carbonate, and when that hits
> the stomach acid, it becomes silver chloride.  Thus the end result is the
> same.
>
> The only thing affected by this would be the colloidal part, maybe 10 to
> 20% of the silver.  This will convert to silver carbonate slowly according
> to this article, and could give you a boost in the effectiveness of the CS
> of 10 to 20%, if you let it sit long enough to convert it all.
>
> Here is the paragraph:
>
> " Closing out 2014, Swathy et alxxviii published research on a surprising
> synergism between silver nanoparticles and carbonate ions. The researchers,
> “discovered that 50 parts per billion (ppb) of Ag(+) released continuously
> from silver nanoparticles confined in nanoscale cages is enough to cause
> antimicrobial activity in conditions of normal water.” By way of context,
> sodium fluoride is often added to water supplies at a level of 1-2 parts
> per million, so this is a concentration of silver some 1/20th to 1/40th
> that of added fluoride. The authors go on to state, “the antibacterial and
> antiviral activities of Ag(+) can be enhanced ~1,000 fold, selectively, in
> presence of carbonate ions “ While not discussed by the authors baking soda
> is an extremely inexpensive source of carbonate ions. "
>
> However this is simply a quote from the abstract.  The entire article can
> be read at https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4241523/ and to
> completely understand any implications it needs to be carefully read.
>
> Marshall
>
> On 4/22/2020 8:06 AM, Ode Coyote wrote:
>
> *The authors go on to state, “the antibacterial and antiviral activities
> of Ag(+) can be enhanced ~1,000 fold, selectively, in presence of carbonate
> ions “ While not discussed by the authors baking soda is an extremely
> inexpensive source of carbonate ions.*
>
>  WOW!!!
>
> ode
>
>
> On Tue, Apr 21, 2020 at 7:34 PM Douglas Haack <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>>
>> Energy Times Newsletter -- Emedia Press "" a great resource for Tech of
>> Free Energy....
>>
>> Here is an authoritative paper by Paul Maher, MD, a contributor to
>> http://energyscienceforum.com and it is jam-packed with accurate
>> information as well as a lot of references.
>>
>> This is provided for informational purposes only and we recommend that
>> you follow your own doctor’s medical advice.
>> Get the paper in PDF format here: Silver is a Broad Spectrum Antiviral
>> <https://emediapress.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/Silver-is-a-Broad-Spectrum-Antiviral.pdf>
>>
>> 2020-04-01
>> <https://emediapress.com/2020/04/01/silver-is-a-broad-spectrum-anti-viral-by-paul-maher-md/>
>>  Aaron
>> Murakami <https://emediapress.com/author/aaron-murakami/>
>>
>> Enjoy: In SILvation, dh, Oz
>>
>>
>

-- 
Quote: “When I was young, I used to admire intelligent people; as I grow
older, I admire kind people. ~Abraham Joshua Heschel