Hi Catherine,

The article is posted below. The link is at the bottom of the email. Notice 
that the list of minerals contain lead and such. They don't tell you how 
much. Anyhow, I remember listening to this guy on the radio and hearing about 
the people who lived to be 140 years old because they drank from the sacred 
spring and how he was selling the spring water. He was busted for selling 
shale water and had to stop advertising. I think people like him don't help 
to promote the cause. What do you think?

Regards,
Andy

From: C Creel 
Date: Tue, 22 Apr 2003 22:07:04 <<It turned out that there was no 
civilization of 140 year old people and
that he was really selling crunched up shale water from a mine in Utah. It
contained heavy metals as well as traces of everything else.>>


   Where did you hear the latter part of this sentence?  The "mine" that the
minerals came from he was touting at the time was certified long ago to
provide trace minerals in supplemrnt form.  In fact, it is the only mine in
the U.S. certified for this purpose.  Thre companies now have rights to this
mine.  They all produce colloidal trace minerals.  One of them has been in
business since the 1940s.

Regards,
Catherine



The most notorious colloidal mineral promoter is Joel D. Wallach, DVM, ND, 
who says that Americans desperately need his minerals. Wallach has a <A 
HREF="http://www.ncahf.org/newslett/nl19-2.html#dead";>long 
history of involvement in dubious healthcare schemes</A>, such laetrile 
treatment 
for cancer, as well as chelation and hydrogen peroxide therapies for coronary 
artery disease. He has also hosted an AM radio talk show in San Diego titled 
"Let's Play Doctor" and briefly plied naturopathy at <A 
HREF="http://www.youngagain.com/donsbach.html";>Kurt Donsbach</A>'s Hospital 
Santa Monica. His widely distributed "Dead Doctors Don't Lie!" audiotape [4] 
quotes from U.S. Senate Document 264:



> [Erosion and unwise farming methods] have led to mineral-depleted soils 
> resulting in mineral-deficient plants, livestock, and people . . . . .the 
> alarming fact is that food now being raised on millions of acres of land 
> that no longer contain enough of certain minerals are starving us -- no 
> matter how much of them we eat. No man of today can eat enough fruits and 
> vegetables to supply his system with the minerals he requires for perfect 
> health because his stomach isn't big enough to hold them. . . . Laboratory 
> tests prove that the fruit, vegetables, grains, eggs, and even the milk and 
> meats of today are not what they were a few generations ago. . . . It is 
> bad news to learn from our leading authorities that 99% of the American 
> people are deficient in these minerals [74th Congress, 2nd Session, 1936].
> 
> 


The cited quotation is genuine, but it did not, as colloidal mineral 
promoters usually imply, arise from a government research study. In fact, it 
is merely a reprint of a baseless opinion piece that originally appeared in 
the June 1936 issue of Cosmopolitan magazine and was placed into the 
Congressional record by a Florida senator [5]. Most Americans are not slowly 
starving to death or dying from mineral deficiency.


Some promoters use fraudulent <A 
HREF="http://www.colloidal-soil.com/index-13.html";>"symptomatology 
questionnaires"</A> for assessing 
purported mineral deficiency-related health problems. The test asks more than 
1,000 questions about physical and psychological symptoms. As far as I can 
tell, everyone who takes it will be advised that supplements are needed. The 
test costs $125 but is free if colloidal minerals are purchased.


At present, five mines [6] in Emery County, Utah supply three main 
manufacturers [7] with bulk quantities of shale leachate that are repackaged 
and sold as distinct products by a burgeoning network of multilevel 
distributors. <A HREF="http://www.tjclarkinc.com/";>T.J. Clark & Co.'s</A> Daddy 
Dearest 1-9/Blackhawk Mine, which 
started it all in the late 1920s, is the source of "BHI Lifeminerals," 
"Toddy," "Golden Minerals," and other product lines. The Clark company 
controls leases totaling approximately 20 acres and has established major 
overseas distributorships. In an effort to distinguish itself from a host of 
recent competitors, it downplays its product's shale origins and has coined th
e term "PolyfloraminTM" (literally "many plant minerals") to describe it. Its 
main rival, <A HREF="http://www.trccorp.com/";>Rockland Corporation's</A> Body 
Toddy Mine, opened in 1985 and 
produces products for <A HREF="http://www.americanlongevity.net/";>American 
Longevity</A>, <A HREF="http://www.bodysystemtechnology.com/";>Body Systems 
Technology</A>, <A HREF="http://www.sourceofhealth.com/";>Source of 
Health</A> and <A HREF="http://www.lifeplus.com/";>LifePlus</A>. Rockland 
currently owns 1,000 acres of shale leases in 
Emery County and a new production/bottling facility in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Its 
reserves are estimated to be 320 million metric tons of shale, enough for 950 
billion gallons of product. Rockland has no qualms about the source of its 
products: several color photos of mining operations are prominently displayed 
on its home page. <A HREF="http://www.new-vision-intl.com/";>New Vision 
International</A> and <A 
HREF="http://www.snodgrass-industries.com/vitamins.htm";>Nature's Sunshine</A>, 
have 
refused to disclose the source of the leachate used in their products.


In all of the operations, the shale (often referred to as "a special ancient 
rainforest deposit") is mined, crushed, ground to a powder-like consistency, 
and placed into large stainless steel vats. The vats are then submerged in 
"cool, contaminant free water at low temperatures." Many distributors stress 
these conditions to counter claims that acids, solvents, and high 
temperatures will ruin the minerals' special properties. Unnamed competitors 
are routinely accused of using such faster methods in order to force mineral 
extraction. After 3-4 weeks, during which time water-soluble components of 
the shale enter into solution, the bitter-tasting leachate is siphoned off, 
filtered and ready for tonic, capsule, and oral-spray production. Depending 
upon the filtration process used, a variable amount of insoluble particulate 
matter suspended in the leachate will pass into the final product. 
Advertisements state that colloidal supplements contain 75 "minerals." 
Actually they are elements occurring in various mineral forms: Ag, Al, As, 
Au, B, Ba, Be, Bi, Br, C, Ca, Cd, Ce, Cl, Co, Cr, Cs, Dy, Er, Eu, F, Fe, Ga, 
Gd, Ge, H, Hf, Hg, Ho, I, In, Ir, K, La, Li, Lu, Mg, Mn, Mo, N, Na, Nb, Nd, 
Ni, O, Os, P, Pb, Pd, Pr, Pt, Re, Rh, Ru, S, Sb, Sc, Se, Si, Sm, Sn, Sr, Ta, 
Tb, Te, Th, Ti, Tl, Tm, V, W, Y, Yb, Zn, and Zr. Some distributors modify 
their tonics with flavorings and/or nutritional additives, but most sell them 
straight and emphasize their "all-natural" quality. 
    
http://www.youngagain.com/colloidal1.html