Guest guest Posted September 6, 2004 Report Share Posted September 6, 2004 Hi Ken, Well, that is a good point. Like taking antibiotics for every small reason. Makes super resistant bugs. I only use those in last ditch situations,I take nothing for the rare cold I get, Just recently got my first cold in ~16 months and taking nothing I feel speeds up the thing going through my system. Sometime when you get to spend a few hours researching the net, cross check and plot a graph of when the first catalytic converters came out, when the numbers of these in use grew, when they were mandated and really came to use in numbers, then cross ref that with the number of reported cases of breathing problems and related disorders, As the things break down to smaller particles and other gasses, the bio-filtering can't catch as much and problems start. Of course you won't find support for this by the auto industry but we know the mind set on other industries with other secrets to hide now, don't we. When you chart the converter usage against the breathing disorder reports, better label the charts well because overlaying them likely will not identify them, too much alike. Used to be you could blow your nose and at least see what got caught in your filtering system, getting rid of most. Look at the ratio of breathing disorders now to pre-converter dates before you even start and you will see what I mean. Then track the ratio year by year. Clean air act, yea, right. At least with diesel, it goes up, looks bad, then quickly settles to the ground, larger,heavier particles. You can see a bus exhaust is already on the ground in 100 feet or so. Not so the converters. Can't wait for hydrogen to catch on. Mike A few bugs are good Greetings, A friend of mine caught a documentary on the Discovery Health channel last week. (Australia) Basically, it said if we live in a too sterile environment, and our microbe loading is low, and our autoimmune system is under worked, that our body will itself develop allergies and sinus problems to give our autoimmune system something to do. To keep it busy. This highlights the benefits of selective microbe targeting as we do with our R.I.F.E. machines and try to avoid blanket microbe reduction as some of the cheaper devices do. Regards Ken http://www.heal-me.com.au/frex Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 6, 2004 Report Share Posted September 6, 2004 Hi Ken, That's interesting. Guess I better throw out my Beck blood electrifier before I'm tempted to use it again. And I thought cheap and effective was good! Maybe someone could find some harmless bacteria or something that can be added to a drink to increase the microbe loading when using these cheepo devices. Hey, it could even double as a (live) protein drink. Bil Green PC 1000 Mammoth Lakes, CA 93546 Sunday, September 5, 2004, 6:46:59 PM, you wrote: KU> Greetings, KU> A friend of mine caught a documentary on the Discovery Health channel last KU> week. (Australia) KU> Basically, it said if we live in a too sterile environment, and our microbe KU> loading is low, and our autoimmune system is under worked, that our body KU> will itself develop allergies and sinus problems to give our autoimmune KU> system something to do. To keep it busy. KU> This highlights the benefits of selective microbe targeting as we do with KU> our R.I.F.E. machines and try to avoid blanket microbe reduction as some of KU> the cheaper devices do. KU> Regards KU> Ken KU> http://www.heal-me.com.au/frex Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 6, 2004 Report Share Posted September 6, 2004 Ken Uzzell wrote: > Greetings, > > A friend of mine caught a documentary on the Discovery Health channel last > week. (Australia) > > Basically, it said if we live in a too sterile environment, and our microbe > loading is low, and our autoimmune system is under worked, that our body > will itself develop allergies and sinus problems to give our autoimmune > system something to do. To keep it busy. LOL!! Use or lose it. Makes sense. -- Ken, Pookie and Sammy http://www.dogster.com/dog_page.php?i=14172 -- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 6, 2004 Report Share Posted September 6, 2004 Re: A few bugs are good > Greetings, > > A friend of mine caught a documentary on the Discovery Health channel last > week. (Australia) > > Basically, it said if we live in a too sterile environment, and our microbe > loading is low, and our autoimmune system is under worked, that our body > will itself develop allergies and sinus problems to give our autoimmune > system something to do. To keep it busy. With hydrocarbons and chemtrails in the air; allopathic drugs and bacteria in our water; pesticides and herbides in our food; volatile organic compounds (VOCs), persistent organic pollutants (POPs), and plastics in our body fat; heavy metals in everything; and the very nature of our stomach bacteria negative altered due to genetically engineered foods that are sneaking into the food supply -- I don't think we have to worry about our immune function not being busy enough. As far as I'm concerned, we'll do ourselves a favor by continuing to use Rife, colloidal silver, ozone, and other modalities. The only thing the above might apply to is the folly of vaccinating children against childhood diseases such as measles and chicken pox, and other similar illnesses -- which, ironically, people are doing now. Everything is backwards! Nenah Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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