I thought the eyes were blacked out to hide identity. The silvery whole
face I wondered about.......the skin color looks kinda overly even and
shiny, even in the whorls of the ear, which seems quite unlikely that
any undoctored photo would show such totally even skin color on any
human. Most of us look at least somewhat uneven, if not a bit blotchy
with or without argryia. For those SNG fans it looks like Cdr. Data makeup.
As to the rest of the article, the terms used changed too much for me to
follow. I am not sure what to make of it, but I also questioned the lack
of details of the process used to make the CS the person took. 450 ppm
from a simple battery generator seems beyond unlikely, and no mention of
what water was used or if any additives were used, nor how the figure of
450 ppm was obtained.
I wish the fingernail photos had been much better. I have some suspicion
my fingernail moons are greying, but since I never in my life paid any
attention to them I have no idea what they looked like before I started
ingesting my CS. As near as I can tell, my nails look like the
photo.............If anyone has a really good true color photograph of
what fingernail moons/nailbeds should look like could you please share?
My biggest concern would be the mention of loss of intestinal mucosa,
and the possibility of stomach ulcers, and the eye effects. This is the
first time I've ever heard mention of "CS" of any kind causing that sort
of thing. All in all I hope a lot more members here will read and
comment or dissect this article, as I really don't know enough to know
what to make of it. But it seems the terms used for all kinds of silver
were used rather interchangeably or at least were not well distinguished
in discussing various types of harm from "silver".
sol
Marshall Dudley wrote:
Well, just as I expected, they have no idea what they are talking about:
-- He ingested approximately 16 ounces (~ 450 ml) of 450 ppm colloidal
silver three times a day for 10 months. --
That is impossible, colloidal silver cannot be made in strenths anywhere
near that high. It is obvious that he did not take colloidal silver as
indicated by the article, but silver salts. The absence of the protocol
used to make it supports that they did not research this in a reasonable
manner.
Then later on he writes:
-- Some of the silver in plasma is carried as a salt and may be deposited
in various tissues after being reduced to its metallic form. --
So he apparently does not know the difference between a colloid and a salt,
now admitting that it was a salt that caused the argyria, despite claiming
otherwise in the title.
Also upon examination it is obvious that they have doctored the photos. The
eyes have been edited to be black, and can be easily verified by
examination of the pictures blown up! Argyria will darken the eyes, but
never like he shows.
--
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