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>>>SILVER ION has the proven ability to cause any HUMAN CELL to revert back to a STEM CELL!!<<<
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[quote:Levi Philos 590644:MV8xNTkwNDgxXzI2MjkyNTk1X0IzQTFFOTU5] Silver is one of the common metals that have been historically used as money. At the bottom of this page: http://rhetoricaldevice.com/articles/BriefHistoryOfMoney1.html we find discussion of the first coinage of precious metals. In regard to that, I offer this: "Dollar" - The Name and Usage The word "dollar" was historically associated with silver coins, not gold. Here are a couple of citations. The word "dollar" is derived from Low Saxon "daler", an abbreviation of "Joachimsdaler" – (coin) from Joachimstal – so called because it was minted from 1519 onwards using silver extracted from a mine which had opened in 1516 near Joachimstal, a town in the Ore Mountains of northwestern Bohemia. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_United_States_dollar The "daler" or "stal" portion of the name might be referring to a valley; thus Joachim's Valley - this part is not clear to me, but Rothbard made that point in some writing whose link I have (temporarily) lost. The weight of silver in the dollar coins varied widely over time and place; the earliest "taler" (sometimes "thaller") coins (in Scandinavian countries "daler") were about 8 grams, the Spanish created the milled "dollar" with the edge reeds to prevent scraping of the edges; and the first US dollar was about one ounce - 31 grams more or less. The Hanseatic League who were businessmen of northern Europe settled their accounts using the silver coinage and this spread down to Spain and over to the new country - the north American states. http://www.projects.ex.ac.uk/RDavies/arian/dollar.html The period of time from 1519 to 1873 when the coinage act was passed that demonitzed silver and made gold the recognized "dollar" http://coinschool.blogspot.com/ was about 350 years. Even after that coinage act, silver continued to circulate and silver "dollars" could be found in the great basin states, especially Nevada up to about 1960. Altogether about 425 years. The William Bryan speech "Cross of Gold" was a reaction to the switch from silver to gold: short version: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HeTkT5-w5RA (3.5 minutes) - longer 9.3 minute version from 1921: http://www.historicalvoices.org/earliest_voices/bryan.html Douglas Gnazzo wrote a five part series in 2005 that says basically that silver is the lawful money of the states and gold was only priced in relationship to silver. http://www.financialsense.com/fsu/editorials/gnazzo/2005/silver1.html http://www.financialsense.com/fsu/editorials/gnazzo/2005/silver2.html http://www.financialsense.com/fsu/editorials/gnazzo/2005/silver3.html http://www.financialsense.com/fsu/editorials/gnazzo/2005/silver4.html http://www.financialsense.com/fsu/editorials/gnazzo/2005/silver5.html Hugo Salinas Price of Mexico wants to bring back silver coinage: http://www.gold-eagle.com/editorials_08/salinas060911.html and Fekete writes: "THE MARGINAL UTILITY OF SILVER" http://www.gold-eagle.com/gold_digest_08/fekete061411.html which is related to the Price writing. Further review of the history of money reveals that money originated first as types of warehouse receipts usually redeemable in various food and clothing materials. They were often stamped with family crests and whoever in the family could offer those described items was the redemption center. Accountant sites argue that about 7,500 B.C. simple tokens and clay balls (with various shapes) came to represent inventory figures for agricultural goods including wheat, sheep and cattle: http://rhetoricaldevice.com/articles/BriefHistoryOfMoney1.html http://www.complementarycurrency.org/gallery.php (top) and http://www.investopedia.com/articles/financialcareers/09/ancient-accounting.asp#ixzz1UROCDNcU to prove that money originated in accounts. The original money of Egypt was clay tokens receipts for grain called "ostraca" (Lietaer) and the Maya and Inca of S. America used cocoa beans as currency along with knotted string accounting devices. I believe it was in Greece where the first coins were named after oxen even though the coinage was gold. This can be used to prove the actual "backing" was oxen - not gold. I have a longish piece written by Hyman Blumenstock that argues the first backing for money issue was food. (easy to find by search) Brass, tin, and copper were as often used as gold and silver. Because it was nearly impossible to purify aluminum, it was at one time as valuable as gold and has also been used in coinage. Various histories of money exist; http://www.xat.org/xat/moneyhistory.html and http://projects.exeter.ac.uk/RDavies/arian/amser/chrono.html & http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/ancient/history-money.html Close examination reveals that Tally Sticks lasted for about 712 years which is longer than any coinage. There are arguments that money originates in credit and these arguments come out of the Austrian School as well as other places. Dr Randle Wray is more left-wing: http://www.cfeps.org/pubs/wp/wp32.html Innes made these arguments in 1913 and 1914: http://www.ces.org.za/docs/what%20is%20money.htm & http://www.ces.org.za/docs/The%20Credit%20Theoriy%20of%20Money.htm Hummel is in the same school of economics as Randle Wray: http://wfhummel.net/ It was Edward Popp that got me to thinking that money was actually a communication - thus a special extension of language by means of symbols and contracts that allow the exchange of real things by proxy. Money: Bona Fide or Non-Bona Fide - (E-Book) Dr. Edward E. Popp 1970 pdf 685k http://www.complementarycurrency.org/ccLibrary/materials/Popp.pdf The Great Cookie Jar - (E-book) Dr. Edward E. Popp 1978 pdf 829k http://www.complementarycurrency.org/ccLibrary/materials/PoppCookieJar.pdf For discussion of what is money and how to make it better for the people [b]IN DEPTH, WITH DETAIL AND LINKS [/b] go to this thread: http://www.godlikeproductions.com/forum1/message980789/pg1 [/quote]
Original Message
Nano Silver Induced Stem Cell Activation Therapy
SILVER IS HUGE! And if this gets out will be > $ 1,500 $ an ounce!
Silver ions can help regenerate human cells that have been destroyed by disease or damaged in accidents. one patient who had sustained three crushed fingers in an accident grew new tissue immediately.
Within 2-1/2 months, skin coverage was complete and there was normal, full sensation, good blood supply and all joints had a normal range of motion.
The mechanism by which silver ions help rebuild tissue has been studied for more than a decade by Robert O. Becker, M. D., Becker Biomagnetics, Lowville, New York.
Dr Robert O. BECKER Silver Ionotophoresis
[
link to www.rexresearch.com
]
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