Garlic is clearly dangerous because when those same Roman soldiers
breathed on their adversaries they fainted dead away!

No, seriously, I don't know for sure of any other danger in garlic than
very bad breath, but I seem to have a severe allergy to it, because even
the smell can make me ill, and if I eat any (as I did once so as not to
be impolite to a host) I get very sick indeed.  So there is something
going on there in my case.

Del
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Terry Chamberlin" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Saturday, October 28, 2006 10:29 AM
Subject: CS>Garlic dangers


I have several difficulties with the 'Garlic is
Dangerous' idea.

It is a well-known historical fact that the Roman
military made a point of keeping their soldiers
supplied with garlic. The garlic is credited with
helping to keep the Roman soldiers healthy.

The British Navy supplied their sailors with limes,
lemons, onions and garlic to accomplish the same
thing. The Roman army and the British Navy were two of
the most effective military forces in history.

The whole Italian nation eats garlic like North
Americans eat sugar, but Italian airline pilots don't
have a reputation as being slower, less competent
pilots (that I've ever heard).

There is much more evidence for the beneficial affects
of garlic than there is non-beneficial.

As a health practitioner, were I to report to you that
some of my clients had negative reactions when they
ingested milk or chocolate, would you conclude that
milk and chocolate were bad for people? No, you would
understand that some folks are allergic to those food
items, or had other metabolization difficulties with
those foods.

The conclusion that garlic is a bad substance to
ingest would need to be well-established with some
objective research to convince me.

I think the more practical conclusion would be that
some folks should avoid it, and others don't need to
worry about it, or even can greatly benefit from it.

Before I would recommend to a client that they avoid
garlic, I would utilize muscle testing or the Pulse
Test to determine any negative reaction their body
might experience.

I also used Beck's Blood Purifier, wearing it 8 hours
per day over a 3-month period, experimenting to see if
I could induce the poration side-affect that Beck
warns against, but was never able to produce it in
myself. I tried it with garlic, coffee, sugar, etc.,
and noticed nothing. One of the folks at SOTA
Instruments admitted to me that it only happened maybe
1% of 1% of the time, and usually only with
prescription drugs, but they warned their clients
about it just to be legally safe.

Terry Chamberlin



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