Marshall,
My point was that just as the English did not know what they were being exposed 
to (the sources) neither do we, all the time! ..... ipsofacto... "and ounce of 
prevention......" regardless of the detrimental agents. Wasn't touting CS as a 
cure-all for everything! Geeze!  Robert Bartell
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Marshall Dudley 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Friday, November 03, 2000 9:27 AM
  Subject: Re: CS>English Food Standards


  I agree with the taking of colloidal silver for prevention, but unfortunatly 
the example you gave is not good supporting evidence.  BSE cannot be prevented 
by colloidal silver since no pathogens are involved.  Prions are the cause of 
BSE, and prions are nothing more than misfolded proteins that can not be killed 
because they are not alive in the first place. 
  Marshall 

  Robert Bartell wrote: 

    The reason for taking coloidal silver on a daily basis and maintaining  a 
constant good solid level in your circulation systems is primarily because you 
never know what you are going to be exposed to .... or when! An ounce of cheap 
prevention is worth pounds of expensive cures.... right?  Anyhow, to make my 
point, check this:   
    HEALTHCARE, etc 
    * 'BSE' alert over chicken and lamb 

    Food safety experts have called for a ban on "cannibalistic" farm 
    feeding methods. They fear that feeding blood, tallow, gelatin, 
    chicken manure and feathers to livestock could spark a new BSE 
    epidemic.    Experts believe the last outbreak was caused by feeding 
    cows with infected sheep and cattle remains. Livestock can no longer 
    be fed recycled meat or bonemeal, but the Food Standards Agency said 
    this did not go far enough. It wants an end to the legal practice of 
    putting animal waste in feed, or "intra-species recycling".    FSA 
    chief Sir John Krebs said animal waste was only used on a small scale 
    in the UK but European farmers did use waste in their livestock feed - 
    and much of our meat is imported.    A survey published by the Co-op 
    showed the public is disgusted by animal cannibalism. Nine out of 10 
    disapprove of the use of chicken feathers in feed and 86 per cent the 
    use of blood. 

    Source: Staff reporter Useful link: http://www.foodstandards.gov.uk/ 

    Uuuuuggggghhhh!