Attaboy, Ode Coyote!!
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Ode Coyote 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Monday, October 22, 2001 10:56 AM
  Subject: Re: CS>I'm from the IRS. I'm Here to Help...I'm from the 
FDA/FTC.I'mHere to Inform



  <<<<

  another reply...
  >>>>
  Stephanie Erickson

  Bear in mind that the FDA has totally ignored several double blind studies by 
MDs and thousands of testimonials as "insufficient evidence" that colloidal 
silver is safe and effective.


  Further, the FDA heads up their reports with the title words "Colloidal 
Silver" and proceed to discuss "silver compounds" at massive doses in every 
single cited instance, STILL fail to demonstrate a major health risk to the 
average person and never once specifically mention "colloidal" silver in the 
text.
  The FDA says, "Not recognized as safe and effective", but that's not the same 
as being unsafe and ineffective. "Not recognized" could just mean they didn't 
look very closely, but more likely means, they averted their eyes in the face 
of overwhelming evidence that , at least, serious testing should be done. 

  If ten thousand eye witnesses said "He done it!", the courts would schedule a 
trial...not the FDA. [who, incidently, relies on the accused to run and pay for 
their own testing which is much like a criminal orchestrating his own trial]
  How many of these have come up as fraudulent? [a lot]

  Now, if silver is not an effective agent, why is it used in burn treatment 
centers?
  Why is it used in water purifiers and filters?
  Why are the Japanese inpregnating telephone and toy plastic with silver to 
prevent disease transmission?

  I have never found one single person who has claimed [true or not] to have 
been harmed by electro-colloidal silver. [NOT the same as mild silver protein, 
silver nitrates or any other silver compound]
  <<<<
  Electro colloidal silver has been home made and used, unregulated, for 
decades.
  Where are all the blue people? Folks just love to complain and the internet 
is a great place to vent...true or not. But after searching literally thousands 
of pages on the net, I have failed to find a single complaint [other than 
Rosemary Jacobs, who did NOT use "electro-colloidal" silver.]
  In fact, even she doesn't know what she used. If what she used was in common 
usage in her day, where are all the 'other' blue people?
  One case in , say, ten thousand, doesn't exactly consitute a threat.
  >>>>



  Electro-colloidal silver: Bredig sol, pure silver suspended in pure distilled 
water by elecrolytic process.

  By the EPAs own standards, one would drown or die of water toxic shock while 
drinking 10PPM electro-colloidal silver water before reaching a harmful level 
of silver.
  An FOIA request has revealed that the FDA has NO RECORDS of any person who 
has developed argyria from consuming elecro-colloidal silver in any amount or 
come to harm in any way.
  Even at massive doses of silver compounds and dust, inhaled and injected, 
researchers have had a difficult time inducing arygria. It is historically rare 
even with people who work in silver industries such as refining and mining.

  I personally know a person who overcame a life threatening lung infection 
that his doctor could not touch by inhaling colloidal silver mist . His doctor 
was clearly amazed.
  I also know, in a more roundabout manner, a person who ended years of 
repeated hospital care for chronic lung infection in the same manner. He is no 
longer wheelchair bound. [Unfortunately, I seem to have lost the letter of 
gratitude sent to me, unbidden, that describes the persons journey through the 
health system after I told him about colloidal silver] 
  I myself have ended yearly dental cavity filling and have achieved a total 
lack of plaque and tarter by simply using electro colloidal silver as a mouth 
wash...and amazed my dentist. He just refuses understand what happened to make 
my checkups so different from past years. 

  I had a bad sty dissappear in just two days using colloidal silver as 
eyedrops.

  I have seen people get only mildly ill from strep throat while their friends 
were bedridden for days.
  I have friends who expressed amazement at how fast their cold sores 
disappeared.

  on and on...



  While colloidal silver might not be a magic bullet in every single case, 
there is most certainly something to it that deserves unbiased attention. 
[something which the medical establishment has fallen far short of]

  BUT! There are several companies that are now receiving recogition for 
inventive uses of silver in bandages "Silverlon" [especially when the bandage 
has a miniscule electric current applied to it, ei: 'on site' production of 
electro-colloidal silver and silver ions]

  Ken Steckenrider, NC




  At 09:45 AM 10/21/01 -0500, you wrote: 
  >>>>

    Listers:

    This woman's e-mail address is at the bottom of the article. I sent her a 
message yesterday, and informed her that the mayor she quoted was 100 percent 
correct, and all the debunkers either didn't know what they were talking about 
or had ulterior motives (i.e., corporate greed) behind their words. Why don't 
you tell her too? The more we spread the word, the better.


      ----- Original Message ----- 
      From: <mailto:[email protected]>Black 
      To: <mailto:[email protected]>[email protected] 
      Sent: Sunday, October 21, 2001 8:53 AM
      Subject: Re: CS>I'm from the IRS. I'm Here to Help...I'm from the 
FDA/FTC. I'mHere to Inform

      Roger,
      I saw this article too (I live near Orlando) and I was so mad I could 
have chewed Silver Dollars!! The saddest part is that most sheeple will believe 
it.
      Nancy...



        ----- Original Message ----- 
        From: <mailto:[email protected]>[email protected] 
        To: <mailto:[email protected]>[email protected] 
        Sent: Saturday, October 20, 2001 4:35 PM
        Subject: CS>I'm from the IRS. I'm Here to Help...I'm from the FDA/FTC. 
I'm Here to Inform


        Howey Pushes Silver as Anthrax 'Remedy' 


        By Stephanie Erickson 
        Sentinel Staff Writer 

        October 19, 2001 

        HOWEY-IN-THE-HILLS -- The magical elixir is supposed to cure all sorts 
of ailments: gonorrhea, leukemia, sleepwalking, AIDS, arthritis, athlete's foot 
-- even anthrax. 

        And now, thanks to Howey-in-the-Hills Mayor Greg Bittner and the Town 
Council, colloidal silver is the officially endorsed "simple solution" for 
anthrax or any other malady that might strike the 950 residents of the quiet 
Lake County village. 

        Bittner, definitely not taking his cue from medical science, told a 
council meeting last week: "This is the greatest medicinal item that has ever 
come along. It wipes out virtually every virus." 

        Wishful thinking. 

        Federal health officials in 1999 prohibited the marketing of colloidal 
silver as a remedy for any disease because it turns human skin blue and gray -- 
permanently. And they say the fluid -- actually, tiny particles of silver 
suspended in distilled water -- doesn't cure a thing. 

        Officials at the Food and Drug Administration and the Federal Trade 
Commission were horrified to learn that any government would promote what they 
consider a scam. 

        Said FDA spokeswoman Laura Bradbard, "That's absolutely amazing." Added 
senior attorney Rich Cleland of the FTC: "There is no scientific evidence that 
suggests it will be effective against any bacteria." 

        And Dr. Stephen Barrett, vice president of the National Council Against 
Health Fraud and head of a Web site called Quackwatch.com, all but laughed out 
loud when told of Bittner's endorsement. 

        "Is he going to be re-elected as buffoon of the year?" Barrett said. 

        But the 67-year-old mayor, who researched colloidal silver on the 
Internet, where it's described as "nature's most powerful antibiotic," 
predicted it could "sweep the country." 

        Bittner brought colloidal silver to the attention of the Town Council 
on Oct. 8, just as an anthrax case in South Florida was beginning to generate 
talk of bioterrorism. Just in case, Bittner said, the town should spend $100 to 
buy a colloidal-silver "generator" that produces a gallon of the stuff for 
about a nickel. That way, he said, residents will have enough for their 
families, and "you can take care of your neighbors, too." 

        Council member Joanna Gaskill was the only one to question whether 
there is any medical proof that the silver solution works. 

        "I just don't want a Howey medicine show," she said. 

        Regardless, the latest edition of Council Talk, the town newsletter 
that arrived in mailboxes this week, told residents of the "simple solution" to 
fight anthrax and provided police Chief Curtis Robbins' number as a contact for 
more information. The chief has said a friend of his with cancer was helped by 
the stuff. 

        Colloidal silver actually is nothing new. 

        Silver was, indeed, used through the 1930s as a preservative, 
especially in milk, and it was routinely added to nose drops for allergies 
through the 1950s. 

        That's when doctors began to notice that people using silver for a long 
period were turning ashen-gray or blue, a condition called argyria. So 
manufacturers stopped using silver in the mixtures. 

        As diseases became more resistant to antibiotics, however, some 
alternative-medicine advocates began encouraging use of colloidal silver and 
selling generators to make it. The devices use silver rods as electrodes, which 
are inserted into a container of water. When the electrodes are hooked to 
batteries or an electrical transformer, electrolysis causes tiny particles of 
silver to become suspended in the fluid. The amount of time the generator runs 
determines the strength of the silver in the mixture. 

        By the mid-1990s, the FDA had begun warning colloidal-silver marketers 
to stop selling it as a medicine; last year, at least 18 Web-based marketers 
got such warnings. 

        Also last year, as part of "Operation Cure.All," the FTC charged a 
Central Florida company, Palm Bay-based Aaron Co., with fraudulent marketing of 
the stuff on the Internet. Without admitting it violated any law, the company 
paid fines and refunded money to customers. 

        Still, sales of colloidal silver are rising. 

        Since the Sept. 11 attacks, business is up 10 percent, said Yvonne 
Hengst, who sells it from Delaware via her Web site. Indeed, since the 
terrorist acts, she herself has been drinking a half-ounce a day of the elixir. 

        "This is something that people really need and use, especially now with 
the anthrax scare," Hengst said. "You're crazy not to." 

        What does the FDA say? 

        Colloidal silver can't be considered safe. 

        Stephanie Erickson can be reached at [email protected] or 
352-742-5921. 



        Copyright (c) 2001, Orlando Sentinel 

        Visit OrlandoSentinel.com 






  <<<<




  -- The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of colloidal silver.
  To join or quit silver-list or silver-digest send an e-mail message to: 
[email protected] -or- [email protected] with the 
word subscribe or unsubscribe in the SUBJECT line.
  To post, address your message to: [email protected] Silver-list archive: 
http://escribe.com/health/thesilverlist/index.html List maintainer: Mike Devour