Does this post win some sort of “furtherest-out info on the list in a while”
award?  This offers a potential explanation to many puzzles.

James-Osbourne: Holmes

-----Original Message-----
From: gaia research [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Wednesday, May 09, 2001 1:35 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: CS>Biologic Transport of Silver Ions!

Dear List members

I have been a bit out of it lately, so please excuse me if this is already
water undr the bridge.

The following relates to Frank Keys claim that ionic silver does not survive
to enter the body due to chloride compounding. I do not recall the
metalloprotein counter-arguement being raised. If not, any comments,
especially from Frank, and if its already been dealt with, please advise as
to when. The summary and URL follow:

"In order to move mineral ions about your body, for delivery to the area
where needed, your body uses proteins to envelope the ions and render them
inactive, until they are delivered to the cell or area needing them.
Numerous essential biological functions require metal ions, and most of
these metal ion functions involve metalloproteins. One-third of all proteins
are "metalloproteins", chemical combinations of protein atoms (carbon,
nitrogen, oxygen, hydrogen, sulfur) with ions of metals such as iron,
calcium, copper, zinc, etc. If this were not the case, few minerals would
remain useable by your body, including essentials like calcium, iron, etc.
as they would join other free ions and in many cases make insoluable salts
(no bio-availability). Your saliva has over 200 different proteins and thus
they can capture metallic ions before they get near the stomach acid! Also,
silver ions are so small they can be absorbed sublingually, thru your skin,
to directly enter the blood stream, with the help of proteins."
http://www.health2us.com/transport.htm
Regards
Stuart