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Re: Fulvic Acid Minerals & Dennis's Test

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Dennis wrote on 5/17/2004, 7:36 AM:

> From: " Dennis " <dlipter@...>

> Subject: Re: Re: ConcenTrace® Trace Mineral Drops

>

> Tried Fulvic Minerals in the footbath tonight.

>

> Didn't work!

>

> Dennis

Wow Dennis. I've been waiting with baited-breath for your results with

the Fulvic Acid Minerals. I felt great on them the first couple of days,

but then I suddenly crashed and felt I should dramatically cut back my

intake. Could it have been a herx reaction of some sort? I don't know,

but it just didn't feel quite right. I feared the Fulvic Acid after

that. Since then, I've reasearched Glyconutrients (and I'm quite

impressed with those - has anyone had any experience with them?),

considered Concentrace, and have been trying to figure out which product

would be the best way to go. You just helped me with that and I thank

you. I've had a gut-level feeling there are some missing link(s) to

optimum health and I won't stop until I find all of them (I'm certain

h202/oxygen/ozone are in that category). For those of you with

experience taking the Fulvic Acid Minerals, please take a look at the

following negative report and offer your thoughts. This, along with my

strange crash on the product, has given me considerable pause. Thanks.

***********

http://www.pathguy.com/altermed.htm

Fulvic Acid

This is presently being promoted as a cure for tumors, as part of a

" colloidal mineral " regimen.

This is an obvious fraud and differs from most of the others because

fulvic acid is not just a harmless placebo. Readers should know that

As of October 2001, there is exactly nothing published in the mainstream

medical literature on fulvic acid having any therapeutic effects. The

few citations come from obscure third-world publications which often

promote cheap local remedies; I have concluded that the data in most

such articles are simply made up.

Fulvic acid is a fungal poison and free-radical generator which is

considered, by people who actually study this sort of thing, as

contributing to the epidemic of mutilating arthritis in central Asia

(Cell & Tiss. Res. 297: 141, 1999; many others.)

The major website promoting fulvic acid, which I'll let you find on your

own, is a mass of obvious, preposterous untruths which are intended to

sound like actual scientific statements to people who don't know any

real biology. For example, " The DNA of every living or extinct species

of organism on Earth, whether plant, animal, or microbe, has eventually

become a highly refined component of fulvic acid. " " Fulvic acid contains

literally hundreds of complex minerals which include traces of virtually

every element listed in the periodic table. " Although they claim that

" medical and agricultural research continues to conclusively point to

one fact, fulvic acid holds the keys to healing and preventing the

world's diseases " , the only major paper which they cite (Science 275:

1541, 1997) has nothing to do with fulvic acid and the writers have

grossly misrepresented its contents and conclusions. The statement that

coal miners are protected from tuberculosis is a bald-faced lie;

historically tuberculosis was a major component of " black lung " . The

writers claim that one pharmaceutical company has patented a humic

substance to remove HIV from blood, but doesn't give a name or any way

for the reader to confirm this. And so forth.

I predict (October 2001) there will be successful criminal and/or civil

actions against the people who are selling fulvic acid as a nutritional

supplement. Someone should go to prison for this.

--

Jodi Waldman Menard

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Pathguy is a skeptical sort of guy so this doesn't completely deter me.

Were the fulvic acid minerals used by Dennis the Vital Earth type? J.

http://www.pathguy.com/altermed.htm

Fulvic Acid

This is presently being promoted as a cure for tumors, as part of a

" colloidal mineral " regimen.

This is an obvious fraud and differs from most of the others because

fulvic acid is not just a harmless placebo. Readers should know that

As of October 2001, there is exactly nothing published in the mainstream

medical literature on fulvic acid having any therapeutic effects. The

few citations come from obscure third-world publications which often

promote cheap local remedies; I have concluded that the data in most

such articles are simply made up.

Fulvic acid is a fungal poison and free-radical generator which is

considered, by people who actually study this sort of thing, as

contributing to the epidemic of mutilating arthritis in central Asia

(Cell & Tiss. Res. 297: 141, 1999; many others.)

The major website promoting fulvic acid, which I'll let you find on your

own, is a mass of obvious, preposterous untruths which are intended to

sound like actual scientific statements to people who don't know any

real biology. For example, " The DNA of every living or extinct species

of organism on Earth, whether plant, animal, or microbe, has eventually

become a highly refined component of fulvic acid. " " Fulvic acid contains

literally hundreds of complex minerals which include traces of virtually

every element listed in the periodic table. " Although they claim that

" medical and agricultural research continues to conclusively point to

one fact, fulvic acid holds the keys to healing and preventing the

world's diseases " , the only major paper which they cite (Science 275:

1541, 1997) has nothing to do with fulvic acid and the writers have

grossly misrepresented its contents and conclusions. The statement that

coal miners are protected from tuberculosis is a bald-faced lie;

historically tuberculosis was a major component of " black lung " . The

writers claim that one pharmaceutical company has patented a humic

substance to remove HIV from blood, but doesn't give a name or any way

for the reader to confirm this. And so forth.

I predict (October 2001) there will be successful criminal and/or civil

actions against the people who are selling fulvic acid as a nutritional

supplement. Someone should go to prison for this.

--

Jodi Waldman Menard

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Yes...Vital Earth

All I am reporting is that the Vital Earth minerals didn't conduct

electricity as well as ConcenTrace. Draw your own conclusions.

Dennis

RE: Re: Fulvic Acid Minerals & Dennis's Test

> Pathguy is a skeptical sort of guy so this doesn't completely deter me.

> Were the fulvic acid minerals used by Dennis the Vital Earth type?

J.

>

>

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Pathguy could actually be right. I corresponded with him some back in the

days when the Internet was a novelty and I found the small amount of

alternative medicine info there was largely on Alta Vista. Ed wasn't

slanted much towards holistic medicine. It was easy to refind info. in

those days as there were only a few pages of entries! I was interested in

the fact that the ConcenTrace seemed to work well electrically. I have some

liquid minerals by Tropical Oasis but haven't tried ConcenTrace as yet.

J.

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