Protect yourself from the endless stream of virus's in the future. | |
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abeland1 The Art of making Colloidal Silver User ID: 81679411 ![]() 01/14/2022 02:40 AM ![]() Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | It looks like the virus mutations...variants(maybe the results of side effects from the shots).... and possible engineered new bioweapons for depopulation will continue and continuous shots will be futile. I refuse the poison shots and will maintain Ivermectin....Fenbendazole if needed.....supplements to include Zinc...vitamin C and D....Oil of Oregano gel caps...colloidal silver and anything else I can think of to fight virus's and boost my immune system. Any other suggestions for the future? Quoting: Endtimewatchman10 Learn how to make colloidal silver Stay away from all the snake oil salesmen. Very few of them have any idea what they’re making and selling. There is no need to buy any particular thing from any specific supplier. Here is a source of authentic, well-reviewed, accepted information with no commercial activity allowed: [link to www.goldismoney2.com (secure)] I started that thread six years ago. It has had 995 replies. Colloidal / Electrically Isolated Silver Wouldn't it be smart to check out what's needed and how to make it ... while the economy's wheels are still rolling, and you can still get items from the brown truck of happiness? Hmmm. |
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New Atlantis User ID: 70873560 ![]() 01/14/2022 03:53 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | It looks like the virus mutations...variants(maybe the results of side effects from the shots).... and possible engineered new bioweapons for depopulation will continue and continuous shots will be futile. I refuse the poison shots and will maintain Ivermectin....Fenbendazole if needed.....supplements to include Zinc...vitamin C and D....Oil of Oregano gel caps...colloidal silver and anything else I can think of to fight virus's and boost my immune system. Any other suggestions for the future? Quoting: Endtimewatchman10 Learn how to make colloidal silver Stay away from all the snake oil salesmen. Very few of them have any idea what they’re making and selling. There is no need to buy any particular thing from any specific supplier. Here is a source of authentic, well-reviewed, accepted information with no commercial activity allowed: [link to www.goldismoney2.com (secure)] I started that thread six years ago. It has had 995 replies. Colloidal / Electrically Isolated Silver Wouldn't it be smart to check out what's needed and how to make it ... while the economy's wheels are still rolling, and you can still get items from the brown truck of happiness? Hmmm. ![]() "What you think, you become." - Buddha |
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SmoothSailing User ID: 35509688 ![]() 01/14/2022 04:26 AM ![]() Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | This is the correct answer, hence the homeless and Amish being immune to Covid. ![]() "A nation can survive its fools, and even the ambitious. But it cannot survive treason from within. An enemy at the gates is less formidable, for he is known and carries his banner openly. But the traitor moves amongst those within the gate freely, his sly whispers rustling through all the alleys, heard in the very halls of government itself. For the traitor appears not a traitor; he speaks in accents familiar to his victims, and he wears their face and their arguments, he appeals to the baseness that lies deep in the hearts of all men. He rots the soul of a nation, he works secretly and unknown in the night to undermine the pillars of the city, he infects the body politic so that it can no longer resist. A murderer is less to fear." Marcus Tullius Cicero |
abeland1 The Art of making Colloidal Silver User ID: 81679411 ![]() 01/18/2022 01:15 AM ![]() Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | [link to theartofmakingcolloidalsilver.com (secure)] https://imgur.com/a/KLMIeyR Have we found the true cause of diabetes, stroke and Alzheimer’s? Does this one microbe cause heart disease, stroke, Alzheimer’s, diabetes, Parkinson’s, pre-term birth, pancreatic cancer, and kidney disease… and does that mean we can beat them? For decades, health experts have been lecturing us about our bad habits, blaming them for the surge in “lifestyle diseases”. These often come on as we age and include heart disease, Alzheimer’s, type 2 diabetes and some cancers. Worldwide, 70 per cent of all deaths are now attributed to these conditions. In the U.K., it is a whopping 90 per cent. Too much red meat, too little fruit and veg, smoking, drinking, obesity and not enough exercise appear to make all these diseases more likely – and having any of them makes getting the others more likely. But no one really knows why, and we still haven’t worked out what causes any of them. Alzheimer’s is now one of the U.K.’s biggest killers, yet the main hypothesis for how it originates imploded this year after drugs based on it repeatedly failed. High blood cholesterol is blamed for heart attacks, except most people who have heart attacks don’t have it. What we do know is that these conditions usually start causing symptoms later in life, and their prevalence is skyrocketing as we live longer. They all turn inflammation, the method our immune system uses to kill invaders, against us. And, by definition, these diseases aren’t communicable. They are down to bad habits and unlucky genes, not germs. Right? Not necessarily. In disease after disease, we are finding that bacteria are covertly involved, invading organs, co-opting our immune systems to boost their own survival and slowly making bits of us break down. The implication is that we may eventually be able to defeat heart attacks or Alzheimer’s just by stopping these microbes. Until now, bacteria’s involvement completely eluded us. That’s because they tend to work very slowly, stay dormant for long periods or hide inside cells. That makes them difficult to grow in culture, once the gold standard for linking bacteria to disease. But now D.N.A. sequencing has revealed bacteria in places they were never supposed to be, manipulating inflammation in just the ways observed in these diseases. The findings are so contrary to received wisdom and emerging in so many diseases, each with its own separate research community, that awareness of all this is only starting to hit the mainstream (See “Germ theory“). And predictably, as with any paradigm shift, there is resistance. But some researchers, frustrated by years of failure to find causes, and therefore real treatments, for the diseases of ageing, are cautiously excited. And with reason: this could change everything. The worst culprits, which seem to play a role in the widest range of ailments, are the bacteria that cause gum disease. This is the most widespread disease of ageing – in fact, “the most prevalent disease of mankind”, says Maurizio Tonettiat the University of Hong Kong. In the U.S., 42 per cent of those aged 30 or above have gum disease, but that rises to 60 percent in those 65 and older. It has been measured at 88 percent in Germany. Strikingly, many of the afflictions of ageing – from rheumatoid arthritis to Parkinson’s – aremore likely, more severe, or both, in people with gum disease. It is possible that some third thing goes wrong, leading to both gum disease and the other maladies. But there is increasing evidence that the relationship is direct: the bacteria behind gum disease help cause the others. Circumstantial evidence is certainly damning. In the U.S., states that put federal Medicaid funds towards people’s dental costs, including those related to preventing or treating gum disease, ultimately pay between 31 and 67 per cent less than states that don’t, to help those people later with heart attacks, diabetes, strokes and cancer. Private insurance companies report similar patterns, says David Ojcius at the University of the Pacific in San Francisco. But how can the bacteria that cause gum disease play a role in all these conditions? To answer that, we have to look at how they turn the immune system against us. Your mouth hosts more than 1000 species of bacteria, in a stable community where potential bad actors are kept in check by peaceful bacteria around them. Elsewhere in the body, including on the skin or the lining of the gut, communities of bacteria live on a continuous sheet of cells, where the outermost layer is constantly shed, getting rid of invasive bacteria. But your teeth can’t cast off a layer like that, says Tonetti. There, the bacteria live on a hard surface, which pierces through the protective outer sheet of cells. When the plaque the bacteria on your teeth live in builds up enough to harden and spread under the gum, it triggers inflammation: immune cells flood in and destroy both microbes and our own infected cells (see Diagram). If this goes on too long, an oxygen-poor pocket develops between gum and tooth. A handful of bacteria take advantage of this and multiply. One of them, Porphyromonas gingivalis, is especially insidious, disrupting the stable bacterial community and prolonging inflammation. |
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abeland1 The Art of making Colloidal Silver User ID: 81679411 ![]() 01/24/2022 02:00 AM ![]() Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | [link to theartofmakingcolloidalsilver.com (secure)] Quoting: abeland1 https://imgur.com/a/KLMIeyR Have we found the true cause of diabetes, stroke and Alzheimer’s? Does this one microbe cause heart disease, stroke, Alzheimer’s, diabetes, Parkinson’s, pre-term birth, pancreatic cancer, and kidney disease… and does that mean we can beat them? For decades, health experts have been lecturing us about our bad habits, blaming them for the surge in “lifestyle diseases”. These often come on as we age and include heart disease, Alzheimer’s, type 2 diabetes and some cancers. Worldwide, 70 per cent of all deaths are now attributed to these conditions. In the U.K., it is a whopping 90 per cent. Too much red meat, too little fruit and veg, smoking, drinking, obesity and not enough exercise appear to make all these diseases more likely – and having any of them makes getting the others more likely. But no one really knows why, and we still haven’t worked out what causes any of them. Alzheimer’s is now one of the U.K.’s biggest killers, yet the main hypothesis for how it originates imploded this year after drugs based on it repeatedly failed. High blood cholesterol is blamed for heart attacks, except most people who have heart attacks don’t have it. What we do know is that these conditions usually start causing symptoms later in life, and their prevalence is skyrocketing as we live longer. They all turn inflammation, the method our immune system uses to kill invaders, against us. And, by definition, these diseases aren’t communicable. They are down to bad habits and unlucky genes, not germs. Right? Not necessarily. In disease after disease, we are finding that bacteria are covertly involved, invading organs, co-opting our immune systems to boost their own survival and slowly making bits of us break down. The implication is that we may eventually be able to defeat heart attacks or Alzheimer’s just by stopping these microbes. Until now, bacteria’s involvement completely eluded us. That’s because they tend to work very slowly, stay dormant for long periods or hide inside cells. That makes them difficult to grow in culture, once the gold standard for linking bacteria to disease. But now D.N.A. sequencing has revealed bacteria in places they were never supposed to be, manipulating inflammation in just the ways observed in these diseases. The findings are so contrary to received wisdom and emerging in so many diseases, each with its own separate research community, that awareness of all this is only starting to hit the mainstream (See “Germ theory“). And predictably, as with any paradigm shift, there is resistance. But some researchers, frustrated by years of failure to find causes, and therefore real treatments, for the diseases of ageing, are cautiously excited. And with reason: this could change everything. The worst culprits, which seem to play a role in the widest range of ailments, are the bacteria that cause gum disease. This is the most widespread disease of ageing – in fact, “the most prevalent disease of mankind”, says Maurizio Tonettiat the University of Hong Kong. In the U.S., 42 per cent of those aged 30 or above have gum disease, but that rises to 60 percent in those 65 and older. It has been measured at 88 percent in Germany. Strikingly, many of the afflictions of ageing – from rheumatoid arthritis to Parkinson’s – aremore likely, more severe, or both, in people with gum disease. It is possible that some third thing goes wrong, leading to both gum disease and the other maladies. But there is increasing evidence that the relationship is direct: the bacteria behind gum disease help cause the others. Circumstantial evidence is certainly damning. In the U.S., states that put federal Medicaid funds towards people’s dental costs, including those related to preventing or treating gum disease, ultimately pay between 31 and 67 per cent less than states that don’t, to help those people later with heart attacks, diabetes, strokes and cancer. Private insurance companies report similar patterns, says David Ojcius at the University of the Pacific in San Francisco. But how can the bacteria that cause gum disease play a role in all these conditions? To answer that, we have to look at how they turn the immune system against us. Your mouth hosts more than 1000 species of bacteria, in a stable community where potential bad actors are kept in check by peaceful bacteria around them. Elsewhere in the body, including on the skin or the lining of the gut, communities of bacteria live on a continuous sheet of cells, where the outermost layer is constantly shed, getting rid of invasive bacteria. But your teeth can’t cast off a layer like that, says Tonetti. There, the bacteria live on a hard surface, which pierces through the protective outer sheet of cells. When the plaque the bacteria on your teeth live in builds up enough to harden and spread under the gum, it triggers inflammation: immune cells flood in and destroy both microbes and our own infected cells (see Diagram). If this goes on too long, an oxygen-poor pocket develops between gum and tooth. A handful of bacteria take advantage of this and multiply. One of them, Porphyromonas gingivalis, is especially insidious, disrupting the stable bacterial community and prolonging inflammation. In the natural world, more than 99% of all bacteria exist as biofilms (Costerton et al. 1987). Biofilms are the protective structures created by the colonies of pathogens in order to evade the effects of antibiotic drugs. They are protected by an extracellular matrix held together by proteins and polysaccharides commonly referred to as extracellular polymeric substance. This affects the efficiency of the strongest of antibiotics and biofilms can be as much as a thousand times more resistant than planktonic cells. The growth of biofilms is a major problem within the healthcare and food industries. Biofilms can form on many medical implants such as catheters, artificial hips and contact lenses. According to the National Institute of Health more than 60% of all infections are caused by biofilms. These include, but are not limited to endocarditis, cystic fibrosis, otitis media, chronic prostatitis, urinary tract infections, dental plaque infections, gingivitis, periodontitis, chronic sinusitis, burn wound infections and bone infections (Kim 2001). Many recent studies have demonstrated conclusively that antimicrobial silver can penetrate through the bacterial biofilms to completely destroy them and can even prevent microbes from developing biofilms. As compared to the antibiotics, silver is proposed to be less affected by the micro-environmental variations found in biofilms due to its multimodal mechanism of action (Bjarnsholt et al. 2007). [link to theartofmakingcolloidalsilver.com (secure)] |