I don't know where it comes from but it thankfully is not correct. First of all one cannot simply define friendly and unfriendly bacteria. Friendly bacteria can be decidedly unfriendly, when in the wrong place. I.E. any of the intestinal bacteria in the womb, or in the blood stream. And unfriendly bacteria can be friendly, I.E. yeast used in cooking, or making alcoholic beverages. Even the general definition of gram positive bacteria (+) bacteria being friendly, and gram negative being bad breaks down because that can change when the bacteria switches from aerobic to anaerobic mode, which many if not most can do if they lack oxygen. All bacteria in the intestines are in anaerobic, or "bad" mode, when in the intestines since there is no free oxygen there. The friendly bacteria on the skin are aerobic.
Our testing has shown that CS is just as effective on aerobic as anaerobic bacteria. There is no significant difference. The only difference we could find was that CS is almost totally ineffective if not in a liquid state. Thus CS has almost no effect on the bacteria in the intestines unless you have dysentery. This is much better, since that means that it will not kill the bacteria in a healthy colon, but will kill the same bacteria in the blood or womb. Marshall Connie wrote: > > > > Among other things, CS works on a vibrational level and attaches itself to > > UNFRIENDLY bacteria (negative charge) and leaves the friendly bacteria alone > > (as that has a + charge). So there is no fear that CS will kill off the > > friendly flora in your gut. > > Does this come from the book ''The Silver Bullet?" > > ?????? > Connie > > -- > 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 <[email protected]>

