I don't think so Ode, cause there are too many protien strands in the
body that would also become gummed up and not work. Enzymes for
instance, are protien strands.

Garnet

On Fri, 2004-04-30 at 04:12, Ode Coyote wrote:
>   But then we have mild silver protein.
>  Perhaps silver will bond to wild proteins and make them, er, unsticky?
> Act like a bird in their jet engines? Gum up their landing gear?
> 
> 
> Ode
> 
> At 06:59 AM 4/29/2004 -0500, you wrote:
> >CS is thought to act by inactivating an enzyme that is resposible for
> >cellular respiration. A protein strand does not have enzymes and does
> >not respire. It does not have any of the structures of a "cell", such as
> >a nucleus, a cell membrane or cell wall, a cytoplasm, DNA, RNA etc.
> >
> >It is outside of common knowledge because the information is relatively
> >new. Science is often slow and plodding about releasing information as
> >"known" to the public. And the public is often slow to pick it up, who
> >reads science journals, not the everday person generally.
> >
> >Then there are things like slow viruses that infect your body but do not
> >act for 20 or more years. Science does not know it all, they have
> >theories, but proof is harder to come by and due to the Hesinberg
> >Uncertainty Principle, even that proof is called into doubt and rightly
> >so. You change an event by observing it, indeed by your very thoughts.
> >
> >Garnet
> >
> >On Wed, 2004-04-28 at 22:39, Wayne Fugitt wrote:
> >> Evening Garnet,
> >> 
> >> >Prions are not unicellular organisms they are protiens, so no CS will
> >> >not kill them.
> >>     Can you elaborate on this a bit.
> >> 
> >>     Most people want to think of prions being alive because they appear so 
> >> deadly.
> >> 
> >>     My idea has been that prions are simply defective protein 
> >> molecules.  The body is fooled somehow  into processing these as normal 
> >> proteins, and maybe storing these ( or using ) molecules to build brain
> cells.
> >> 
> >>    I see a similarity between defective protein molecules and defective
> fat 
> >> molecules.   The body is not well equipped to reject these defective 
> >> molecules, whether fat or protein.
> >> 
> >>   Now, we have defective carbohydrate molecules.  All of these are made by 
> >> man, not by nature.
> >> 
> >>   So, the human body is in a world of hurt.   Most problems of man are 
> >> caused by man.
> >> 
> >>   Wayne
> >> 
> >> 
> >>    
> >> 
> >> 
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>