Well...

If we soon se a silver-resistant strain of the flu, that can be genetically 
traced to these bacteria, then that's rock solid proof for a class action suite 
against the vaccine & flu flim flam business...  Will they pick up on this tid 
bit and promptly breed a new flu strain using part of the rna & dna of these 
bacteria ?
Only time will tell. However if it is done, the charges should be both treason, 
and genecide.

Regards,
Alex

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Trem 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Friday, December 05, 2003 4:25 PM
  Subject: CS>Silver-resistant micro-organisms?


  Hi Mathew,

  DO you happen to have any more info on the outbreak?  That is, did they use 
CS internally, how much, etc.  Or was it some other silver compound like MSP?

  I tried to get the article mentioned by Warren in his book but the search 
function for the company he mentioned in his book is out of order and no note 
of how long it'll be down.

  I find it fishy that silver doesn't kill ALL bacteria except the ones we 
speak about in silver mines and their environs.  I wouldn't be surprised to 
find it was a sham to put CS in a bad light.  I wasn't aware any allopaths were 
using silver in 1999 and admitted to it...especially to knock it.  Sounds fishy 
to me.

  Best regards,

  Trem
    ----- Original Message ----- 
    From: Matthew McCann PE 
    To: [email protected] 
    Sent: Friday, December 05, 2003 12:11 PM
    Subject: [silver_list] CS>Silver-resistant micro-organisms?


    Hi, Marshall.

    Thanks for your information about
    the silver-mine micro-organisms.
    The outbreak of Ag+ resistant
    Salmonella in Massachusetts
    was reported in 1999. Maybe it
    was a fluke. Has anything like it
    been observed and reported since
    1999?

    It is a concern, to be sure. But
    judging from news reports today,
    we have bigger fish to fry, pronto.
    New reports indicate that influenza
    vaccine stocks are low and perhaps
    depleted , sooner than expected.
    And it seems the vaccines were not formulated
    for the A-Fujian-H3N2 strain, which
    is expected to be the main culprit
    this season (which runs to May.)

    Matthew