How would CS be distributed as an airborn aerosol?
Thanks!
----- Original Message -----
From: <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Monday, October 01, 2001 2:31 PM
Subject: CS>Anthrax & CS


> http://www.angelicstars.com/index.htm
> From:
> DUE TO CURRENT EVENTS IT IS IMPORTANT TO KNOW:
>
> Some years ago, an independent research laboratory sent a sample of
colloidal
> silver to the University of California to be tested against AIDS and
Anthrax.
> U.C.L.A. undertook tests and proved; conclusive colloidal silver was a
highly
> effective remedial application against both disease pathogens. The
> independent researcher had obtained the results in his own laboratory, and
> sought out confirmation from U.C.L.A. When The UCLA director called to
> confirm the findings, the director of the independent laboratory asked to
> have, as a professional courtesy, a statement of their findings on UCLA
> letter head. The UCLA director said that he would do the on receiving
payment
> of $10,000.00. The UCLA laboratory report confirming the effectiveness of
> colloidal silver remains unofficial!
>
> Harold Davis the consumer safety officer for the Food and Drug
Administration
> stated in a letter dated September 13, 1991 regarding colloidal silver
(which
> was considered to be a pre-1938 drug): "Colloidal silver may continue to
be
> marketed without submitted evidence of safety or effectiveness, provided
> labeled for use as in 1938."
>
> If the supergerms released have been produced in sophisticated biowarfare
> labs, they will probably have been genetically altered to make them
resistant
> to the antibiotics normally used to treat that species microorganism, e.g.
> tetracycline/doxycycline is normally used to treat Anthrax (the number one
> favorite of "biowarfare warriors" worldwide). It is interesting to note
that
> Silver-both in liquid suspension and as an airborne aerosol-has been known
> since 1887 to be extremely toxic to Anthrax spores. It is widely reported
in
> the medical literature that various forms of Silver, often at surprisingly
> low concentrations, routinely kills bacteria that are known to be
> antibiotic-resistant.
>
> Most antibiotics have an optimal effectiveness against only a few
different
> infections. Even broad-spectrum antibiotics may kill only 10-20 different
> types of bacteria. Most antibiotics that kill bacteria do not affect
> fungus/yeast, protozoal parasites or viruses. Nor will antifungal agents
> eradicate bacteria, viruses, parasites, etc. Virtually all viruses are
immune
> to all known, general use antibiotics. For additional research data [click
> here]
>
>
> --
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