Guest guest Posted April 12, 2000 Report Share Posted April 12, 2000 In a message dated 4/12/2000 11:16:53 AM Pacific Daylight Time, egroups writes: << hydrocobalamin >> Hi, I am interested in the hydrocobalamin. I have injected the other kind before. How much? (Combien) Thanks, HelenW8262@... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 12, 2000 Report Share Posted April 12, 2000 In a message dated 4/12/00 1:16:41 PM Central Daylight Time, egroups writes: << This not sleeping has got to stop though. Has this happened to anyone else? Did it stop after a while? Thank you for listening, >> I had a hard time sleeping the first week or so. But then, I became so active that I was actually tired at night and slept good. So only take your Pro in the morning, and try to be as active as you can during the day, even if it only walking around the house or doing lite housekeeping. Mike Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 22, 2001 Report Share Posted November 22, 2001 wrote: > From: " Raushanah N. " <blisbomber@...> > Subject: Milk May Lower Colon Cancer Risk > > Cann someone please give an educated opinion about this article, something > just does not seem right about it. Can you elaborate on what you find " not right " ? (and perhaps on what you would regard as an " educated opinion " !) > Researchers interviewed approximately 10,000 people about their diet, > medical history and lifestyle habits such as smoking and vitamin use. During > the next 24 years, 38 cases of colon cancer and 34 cases of rectal cancer > were diagnosed among the participants in the study. > > The subjects who consumed the most milk were 54 percent less likely to > develop colon cancer. Well, it's vague. How many consumed whatever is meant by " the most " milk? However, this isn't meant to be a presentation of the data but a summary of the results so we should expect that. Nevertheless, numbers of cancers such as 38 and 34 strike me as waaaaaaaaaaay too small from which to start extracting meaningful statistics such as " 54%... " . I would guess this figure is taken from more data given in the actual report and not this summary. Also, these numbers relative to 10,000 people are so small as to be very affected by chance: if you picked another 10,000 people you'd probably be just as likely to find e.g. 10 and 70 such cancers. I'd rather see the full report to say anything more. I remember seeing something about milk consumption a couple of years ago which studied Seventh Day Adventists - their faith apparently leads them to consume rather more milk than the general population. Alas, it was a couple of years ago and only a side issue in a talk about the possible health benefits of vegetarianism and I can't remember the jist of it. -- Tel 07092057581 ICQ 40628243 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 22, 2001 Report Share Posted November 22, 2001 Mike (the one with the FIL doing badly with alternatives for a potentially curable cancer) said-- > > My problem is with alternative medicine when there is a serious > disease is > > that it's the same thing as committing suicide. A little strong, Mike. The vast majority of cancer sufferers who turn to alternatives do so either because they have run out of conventional options and are likely to die anyway, or as a supplement to conventional treatment, looking for some insurance, if you like. That in itself is OK -- cancer sufferers have always done this to some extent. These folk will (mostly) not come to any added harm and may feel better for doing so, and some of the things they do may be of benefit, and for all we truly know may very rarely have spectacular effects. This behaviour is rational. Folk like your FIL pose a quite different and increasing problem. They are being seduced by extremist propaganda that even most AM supporters don't take too seriously. So while it is enough for those described in the first paragraph to know that a treatment method seemed to work for a few people, and to be induced to try a treatment by a few testimonials, that is clearly not enough to justify your FIL being pushed into alternatives the way he has. Who knows if Lorraine Day's methods work even 1% of the time, when we can be certain of the 70% cure rate with conventional methods? There is the potential for side effects with the latter, but we can give him figures for those too. This is the essence. Why the numbers are important. Any such approach is avoided/ defused within deep alternative circles by applying two fictions that make alternatives seem the more viable option. One is that conventional treatments are " worse than the disease " . Another is that conventional treatments never work, anyway. Such perceptions are reinforced when all those who have had bad experiences congregate into one place like this one. But even Vince does not support any of these notions. There is some truth on the alternative side when it comes to advanced cancer when chemotherapy is the only option, and the cancer is one that is not normally very responsive to that. I do think oncologists are inclined to apply chemotherapy in many situations where it is not likely to do much good, but how much of that is at the urging of patient or relatives, or the desire to avoid that helplessness that sometimes confronts all who treat cancer, is hard to know. Unfortunately this limited but common scenario seems to dominate some alternative minds to the exclusion of all that is positive about conventional medicine. Chemotherapy is the " bete noir " , but it is not really understood. Thus herbal treatments are embraced, but if they work at all they are very likely to have similar effects and disadvantages to the many herb-derived chemotherapeutic agents in general use. I have rambled on. Sorry. My main points were that there are very different scenarios where alternatives are applied for cancer, that what is reasonably defensible in one is not in others. Also that people will interpret and/or misinterpret what you say according to the focus of their own perceptions. Regards Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 23, 2001 Report Share Posted November 23, 2001 > > Message: 16 > Date: Wed, 21 Nov 2001 17:02:29 -0800 (PST) > From: Chia-wen s <cwpeters00@...> > Subject: For M > > Dear , > > Where are you in Australia? We are in Sydney. My dog, > Dago has andenocarcinoma in anal sac dx 7/13/01. He > has not had any conventional treatments. We were told > he had one month to live if without the proposed > treatment options: surgery, chemo with Doxorubicin and > radiation. Dearie me. Sounds like very expensive treatment for a pet, but as I once spent $2400 on reconstruction of a dog's pelvis after it was hit by a car, I suppose I shouldn't talk. > > We are into our fifth month with the support of > vitamins, supplements and herbs. He started Poly-MVA > on Monday 11/19/01 and we are hanging tight. > > I read your posts with great interest. May be you can > help us with your medical knowledges. We are pretty > much abanded by the vets because of Dago's prognosis > was so poor. There are comparable cancers in humans, which are also normally treated much the same with fair cure rates . I have no other suggestions except perhaps getting another opinion from a University Vet Hospital. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 23, 2001 Report Share Posted November 23, 2001 Message: 19 Date: Wed, 21 Nov 2001 18:18:55 -0700 From: " MJ " <MJB5@...> Subject: Re: re: principles of health independence >Mike, forgive the many emailed response. >You ask " Where are studies? " As others here have stated, the NCI & NHI & >FDA suppressed and discredited many of these studies. >Case in point is >Burzynski. >He was once considered a quack, and dishonest at that. Now his >work is in clinical trial in major hospitals & the results for many forms of >brain cancer are impressive. Better than conventional med & non-toxic as >well. Mike is new to this field. Some facts ---. There has never been a comparison of B's treatment with conventional treatments. Far from trying to suppress his treatment, many years ago a trial was actually commenced with NIH support but was abandoned. From memory this was because B wanted to give children potentially lethal doses of his antineoplastins and became uncoperative. His treatment entails huge doses of sodium intravenously (27G/day or more) , and there have been a few near-deaths from it. There are also no controlled trials going on. Unless there has been a recent change that I don't know about, the trials described on his site are a political fiction to allow him to continue to treat patients under strict conditions. He cannot treat them outside of a " trial " . There is no control group to compare his patients with. Those undergoing his treatment for brain cancer have all undergone full medical treatment, and in consequence it is difficult to know whether he is helping or not. He has been stopped from treating some cancers that his methods clearly were having no effect on. After well over twenty years of applying his treatment B has produced no worthwhile data, despite all the research he is supposed to have been involved in. He admitted in a recent magazine interview that he has no idea how often his treatment works, and for someone making over a million dollars yearly from treating cancer I think that stinks. I don't know whether his treatment may sometimes work but I still think that stinks. As you know, I think the quality of information that cancer patients are offered by alternative practitioners is pathetic and the trials you quote and some others shows what they could do if they so chose. You also might have mentioned that as the result of the impressive trial that you quoted the NIH has allotted 1.7 million dollars to perform a proper controlled trial of his method. Or didn't you know that? Did you also not know that the NCCAM with its committee of strong alternative sympathisers now has 30 million dollars yearly to apply to the investigation of alternatives? Why aren't all those others offering alternative cancer treatments putting up their hands for this research money? What could be a more important use of this money? The other trial is a non-randomised pilot study that is interesting but needs to be confirmed. A few studies of alternative cancer treatments are emerging, including a recent survey of five year results from American Biologics and the Livingstone-Wheeler clinic. The usual excuses are wearing very, very, very thin. Moran Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 31, 2003 Report Share Posted January 31, 2003 Dear all My Sure Start research keeps me firmly on the sidelines of the Senate debate but like to read with the on-goings. I have been so interested in this topic that I wanted to add my oar in. In 2000 Cowley Margaret Buttigieg and myself presented something of a tome to the UKCC that led to the much applauded further work on competences in health visiting (incidentally we talked about school nursing in the report too). I was minded to fetch out that scoping document in light of the recent discussions on senate and quote from it, in 2000 we said 'The first consistent picture from health visitor education is one of concern about the difficulty faced by students and their teachers (in college and in the practice setting in trying to maintain and ensure that new practitioners are truly 'fit for practice' on qualifying. The level of anxiety appeared to reflect a deep and genuine concern about the difficulties of maintaining professional standards as well as considering the impact on stressed students. Most of the difficulties appear to stem directly from implementation of a new curriculum that lacks practical and conceptual coherance with health visiting and that emphasises topics of central importance to clinical nursing at the expense of those needed for health visiting practice. Importantly, most of the programmes were far too short to allow inclusion of all the topics course leaders regarded as important' p89 we found that, 'differences appeared in every element - entry requirements, length of programme, course content, practise supervision and learning outcomes. It would be extremely difficult to identify any common themes to unify the practitioners prepared on these programmes and only a minority appeared able to include all the key aspects of learning that might have been anticipated in any health visiting programme' p90 from A First Steps Project to Scope the Current and Future Regulatory Issues for Health Visiting Report prepared for the United Kingdom Central Council for Nursing Midwifery and Health Visiting April 2000 Cowley S, Buttigieg M, Houston A Finally a real world comment from my typist on the project (she typed up the curriculum analysis for me, of all the HV programmes we looked at) She was as amazed as the researchers at the disparity of training programme content ' am I being naive in expecting that a health visitor trained in one part of the country should have had the same training experience as a health visitor trained in another part of the country, I had no idea it could be so different' And so here we are 3 years on!!!!! Houston >From: >Reply- > >Subject: Digest Number 837 >Date: 30 Jan 2003 16:44:04 -0000 > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 10, 2003 Report Share Posted September 10, 2003 Karolyn, I don't want to break your bubble but the "detoxification symptoms" you speak of have no relationship to detoxification!! Let me ask you a question and that would be "What do you think you were detoxing your body of...chemicals, parasites or other??" Once you have answered that we can address the issue further on a phsyical chemistry and biochemical processes level. This is a topic that consistently comes up and don't feel that this is picking on you but please let's just use your experience and gut instincts about that to have a decent discussion on the topic...NOT THE PERSON!!! please respond cicily and let us see what that brings as far as information...OK? regards, BobK At 08:53 PM 09/13/2003 -0000, karolynt47 wrote: >>>> > Andy - How do you explain the detoxification symptoms I had for a > month when I started taking Microhydrin? > Karolyn > > > > > Hey Biggrick, how are ya? No the mega-H does not have ephedra in > > it.... blessings, Satya > > > Re: [ ] Digest Number 837 > > > > > > > > > get him skin slapper he he, do you know if flannagans micro. > has > > > ephedra in it,somebody told it did. you crack me up > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 13, 2003 Report Share Posted September 13, 2003 get him skin slapper he he, do you know if flannagans micro. has ephedra in it,somebody told it did. you crack me up Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 13, 2003 Report Share Posted September 13, 2003 Hey Biggrick, how are ya? No the mega-H does not have ephedra in it.... blessings, Satya Re: [ ] Digest Number 837 get him skin slapper he he, do you know if flannagans micro. hasephedra in it,somebody told it did. you crack me up Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 13, 2003 Report Share Posted September 13, 2003 Wow, now your attesting to what the ingredients of MegaH...I suppose you know doubt have a masters in organic chemistry and a lab to carry out these tests This product is sold by one of the biggest bullshitters ever to walk this planet. Flanagan MD, Ph D. inventor of an ICBM launcher...etc MD bought from a degree mill in Sri Lanka and the Ph D bought from a mail order degree mill in Indonesia. Next year he will claiming that he has invented air and will sell air as necessary for a healthy bioterian. I can attest for mega H as it's tap water, as there are numerous studies done by Universities to confirm my attestation. > Hey Biggrick, how are ya? No the mega-H does not have ephedra in it.... blessings, Satya > Re: [ ] Digest Number 837 > > > get him skin slapper he he, do you know if flannagans micro. has > ephedra in it,somebody told it did. you crack me up > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 13, 2003 Report Share Posted September 13, 2003 Andy - How do you explain the detoxification symptoms I had for a month when I started taking Microhydrin? Karolyn > > Hey Biggrick, how are ya? No the mega-H does not have ephedra in > it.... blessings, Satya > > Re: [ ] Digest Number 837 > > > > > > get him skin slapper he he, do you know if flannagans micro. has > > ephedra in it,somebody told it did. you crack me up > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 13, 2003 Report Share Posted September 13, 2003 Karolyn, What exactly are " detoxification symptoms " ? Are they something that Jeanine and others continually suggested you would encounter? I'm jsut going on peer reviewed science from Simon Fraser University, that has confirmed that Microhydrin is just water. The power of suggestion or the placebo effect may have more to do with your detoxification symptoms, or it may well be any number of problems we humans enjoy with our bodies from time to time. > > > Hey Biggrick, how are ya? No the mega-H does not have ephedra in > > it.... blessings, Satya > > > Re: [ ] Digest Number 837 > > > > > > > > > get him skin slapper he he, do you know if flannagans micro. > has > > > ephedra in it,somebody told it did. you crack me up > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 13, 2003 Report Share Posted September 13, 2003 Andy, I had headaches for a while and diarrhea/loose stool for a month before leveling off. I certainly don't think that was psychosomatic. If it is just water, how do you account for its antioxidizing properties. If an apple slice is dipped in Crystal Energy, it does not turn brown. Crystal Energy is the liquid form used in water. Microhydrin and MegaH are in pill or capsule form. I really can't remember all of the facts I was given when I started. I know that when you brush your teeth with Microhydrin powder, tartar is removed. It also seemed to help alleviate my allergy symptoms last year. They started in June and only lasted a couple of weeks after I increased my Microhydrin. Since I gave it up a few weeks ago, the symptoms are back big-time, and I'm really suffering. (BTW, I gave it up only for financial reasons. Karolyn > > > > Hey Biggrick, how are ya? No the mega-H does not have ephedra > in > > > it.... blessings, Satya > > > > Re: [ ] Digest Number 837 > > > > > > > > > > > > get him skin slapper he he, do you know if flannagans micro. > > has > > > > ephedra in it,somebody told it did. you crack me up > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 13, 2003 Report Share Posted September 13, 2003 I think it is pathetic that any person here should have to defend or justify their choices for their own health and treatment. I think it's ludicrous that an ignoramus like ANDY or whatever his name is, should put anyone on the defensive. Forget about him--think of the stress and frustration he is causing in those who are working to overcome stress and all other "dis-ease" causing behaviors! Arguments and discord are his Bread and Butter....Surely there is another list somewhere, or perhaps one that can be started that will encourage everyone, have healthy discussions and informed messages---I've been around here for a few years now and andy only speaks up to trash Jeanine or Satya--who he has now lumped up with Jeanine, just as he did to me when I uncovered the fact that he was carrying on whole threads of dialogue with HIMSELF in order to convince people he was right. The guy is off his nut. Toxic, you know, needs a high colonic. In any case, I am sure he will now attack me, say something ugly about my mother etc....I know him by now. I only worry about people just tuning in....well, please listen with an open mind! And though it seems almost impossible to resist facing off with him, try to resist and know what you are doing is the RIGHT thing for YOU! D Re: [ ] Digest Number 837> > > > > > > > > > > > get him skin slapper he he, do you know if flannagans micro. > > has> > > > ephedra in it,somebody told it did. you crack me up> > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 13, 2003 Report Share Posted September 13, 2003 Bottom line is you can call me what you please, you can even lie through your teeth to support the crap that comes out of your dirty little mouth...but when it is all said and done... WHERE DID YOUR MOM GET THE RIBAVIRIN DERA CROFTS? PS...you actually exposed someone, or your actually to dim to have figured that one out. > > > > > Hey Biggrick, how are ya? No the mega-H does not have > ephedra > > in > > > > it.... blessings, Satya > > > > > Re: [ ] Digest Number 837 > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > get him skin slapper he he, do you know if flannagans > micro. > > > has > > > > > ephedra in it,somebody told it did. you crack me up > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 13, 2003 Report Share Posted September 13, 2003 Is flannagan megahydryn the best silica hydride compaired to rbc and others,how do you purchase it cant find order form ,and satya I wish you would put up your protocol again so i can copy this time,do you think a 1a would do as well as you? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 14, 2003 Report Share Posted September 14, 2003 Hi Biggrick, I'm not sure what sells the best -- I like Flantech's brand, but I think Karolyn swore by RBC--....I get mine at www.flantech.com, and if you get the special (5+ one free), each bottle comes to just over $17......as far as my protocol, I take Dr. Zhang's Group I protocol, Mega-H, Superhydrate, MAP, New Life Colostrum Plus, Ravensara Oil (topically), Jay's Milk Thistle, Olivessence Capsules, Organic Greens, a probiotic w/ digestive enzymes, and VitaSynergy for Women. As far as genotype, I'm a 4a, which is supposed to be like a 1a, but I've recently read that response to treatment (tx?) is a bit better for the 4's.....anyway, as you know, along with my protocol, I use Acupuncture , energy healing, yoga, visualizations, affirmations, crystals and the like. You have to eat well, sleep well, and drink plenty of pure water also. And of course, you must keep a positive attitude. If you put the right things in your body, and treat it well, I don't see any reason you wouldn't feel as good as I do. But then, I don't know the state of your liver/ how much the disease has progressed. Either way , I don't see how it could hurt you..........and possibly you could end up feeling great ! Blessings to you , Satya Re: [ ] Digest Number 837 Is flannagan megahydryn the best silica hydride compaired to rbc andothers,how do you purchase it cant find order form ,and satya I wishyou would put up your protocol again so i can copy this time,do youthink a 1a would do as well as you? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 14, 2003 Report Share Posted September 14, 2003 All I know of the ingredients is what's listed on the bottle. I doubt you can produce any studies that prove it's merely tap water. But if so, please post it! Maybe it'll keep you busy looking for it so we can get on with the forum without further bullshit from you. Re: [ ] Digest Number 837> > > get him skin slapper he he, do you know if flannagans micro. has> ephedra in it,somebody told it did. you crack me up> > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 14, 2003 Report Share Posted September 14, 2003 why don't you POST such a study as you have found, Andy? Or is it again just your bullshit? Re: [ ] Digest Number 837> > > > > > > > > get him skin slapper he he, do you know if flannagans micro. > has> > > ephedra in it,somebody told it did. you crack me up> > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 14, 2003 Report Share Posted September 14, 2003 Karolyn, I can agree with you on that one . I stopped for financial reasons just lately , and my symptoms are also coming back . I'm saving up to get some more as soon as possible . be well, and blessings ! Satya Re: [ ] Digest Number 837> > > > > > > > > > > > get him skin slapper he he, do you know if flannagans micro. > > has> > > > ephedra in it,somebody told it did. you crack me up> > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 14, 2003 Report Share Posted September 14, 2003 Thanks for calling a spade a spade, D. Unfortunately, Andy would probably follow us, since we are giving him his jollies! You're right that newbies may believe his crap, so that's why I try to clarify that we are not all quacks who use natural healing methods. And yes, I have a fresh mouth which can't always resist answering his rude and off-the-wall comments. I'm like that in "real life"--I don't take shit from anyone. But I do apologize to the group for doing this. And you're right, none of us should have to justify what treatment we choose for our own bodies..... He really doesn't frustrate me--I just see it as sparring, but it isn't fair to the group, I agree.....Andy bashes EVERY time I post about natural healing---I'd like to write my post and be done with it, but Andy ALWAYS has to bash me each time I post. And I'm not leaving the group. yes I know he is sick, D, he seems to be even obsessed with me (and Jeannine, who doesn't even post here anymore) but I'll do my best to keep it low key. Thanks for laying out Andy's true colors here, so it doesn't look like the only one "defending" is the one who's bashed.....Ever notice the only thing Andy "shares" is a nasty attitude? You never hear him share anything personal, such as a personal story from his life experience, or encourage anyone. He is just miserable, I suppose, and possibly even mentally ill. I should consider this, and feel sorry for him rather than enable him........ Blessings, Satya Re: [ ] Digest Number 837> > > > > > > > > > > > get him skin slapper he he, do you know if flannagans micro. > > has> > > > ephedra in it,somebody told it did. you crack me up> > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 14, 2003 Report Share Posted September 14, 2003 NOW who's getting defensive???????? Andy, you can't even spell correctly when you get this mad....... Re: [ ] Digest Number 837> > > > > > > > > > > > > > > get him skin slapper he he, do you know if flannagans > micro. > > > has> > > > > ephedra in it,somebody told it did. you crack me up> > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 14, 2003 Report Share Posted September 14, 2003 By DR. GIFFORD-JONES -- Special to C-Health Never before have we had such unpa- ralleled access to medical facts. Now the Internet has added another dimension to communication. But one thing will never change: The old legal maxim, " Let the buyer beware. " Some of the nutritional gobbledegook that's being touted as fact makes the old snake-oil salesman seem like a saint. There are tons of examples of questionable nutritional advice. The best example I've seen was reported in a recent University of California, Berkeley, Wellness Letter. Mailing packages of Microhydrin, an " anti-aging " supplement and cure- all, make an extraordinary claim. They state that the product was " reviewed and approved by the Berkeley Wellness Newsletter. " But the newsletter states, " This claim is completely bogus. " The damage, however, had already been done. The company had conducted a hard-sell campaign for Microhydrin via Internet and audio- and videotapes. Editors of the Wellness Letter raise red flags about this product. For instance, its inventor was said to be a " Nobel Prize Nominee. " But there is no such thing. The Nobel nominating process is strictly confidential. Nominees are never informed that they have been nominated. Editors point out that the inventor claims that his discovery is based on high-altitude water consumed by the Hunza people of northern Pakistan. And that these people supposedly live to well over 100 and don't get cancer. The company claims it contains special minerals and negative hydrogen ions. This supposedly makes Microhydrin the ultimate antioxidant. In effect, it fights damaging free radicals that are associated with aging and cancer. Promoters of Microhydrin claim that ordinary tap water is the villain. That it robs the body of hydrogen ions. And that aging, chronic disease and everything bad is due to a lack of negative hydrogen ions. Wow! If only the cure for aging and cancer was that simple! The marketing claims of Microhydrin go on and on. It is supposedly " thousands of times more effective than any other known antioxidant. " But it is also supposed to be the most exciting discovery of the century. One that also prevents heart disease, tooth decay, asthma, diabetes, athletes foot and vision problems. And if all this isn't enough reason to open your wallet, it's also said to be good for impotence. Then, of course, there are the usual testimonials. A child with a lung infection was cured by Microhydrin. It revived a cat! A woman bitten by a scorpion was saved by Microhydrin. One user says it prevents sunburn, another that it boosts energy. It would appear that this Hunza find would put us doctors out to pasture very quickly. This is all science-fiction. And as experts point out, the chemistry is wrong. Dr. Pryor is director of the Biodynamics Institute at Louisiana State University. He's an expert on free radicals and I've interviewed him on several occasions. Pryor says that negative hydrogen ions can't even exist in water! When marketers claim that Microhydrin reduces the surface tension of water so that fluids can pass through the cells and toxins can be released, this is nonsense, according to Pyror. And the explanation for how Microhydrin boosts energy is " total garbage. " The whole idea that the source water for Microhydrin is better than other water, let alone life-prolonging, is absurd. All water is simply H2O. Other experts agreed with Pryor. Today, piles of technical, pseudo-scientific humbug about nutritional supplements reach the public from multi-level marketers. Don't fall for them, particularly those on the Internet. And if someone claims to be a Nobel Prize nominee, just smile. > > > > Hey Biggrick, how are ya? No the mega-H does not have ephedra > in > > > it.... blessings, Satya > > > > Re: [ ] Digest Number 837 > > > > > > > > > > > > get him skin slapper he he, do you know if flannagans micro. > > has > > > > ephedra in it,somebody told it did. you crack me up > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 14, 2003 Report Share Posted September 14, 2003 lol Re: [ ] Digest Number 837> > > get him skin slapper he he, do you know if flannagans micro. has> ephedra in it,somebody told it did. you crack me up> > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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