Wednesday, April 29, 2015

Analysis Of History Connected To The Use Of Colloidal Silver

By Stella Gay


History has shown that the rich outlived the poor in large numbers during the Bubonic Plague, and many believe it was due to the fact that their food and drink was always served in silver goblets and bowls. While modern medical professionals will not admit openly that this is true, a detailed look at history reveals the fact. Those who follow a more traditional system of health maintenance stand firm in their belief that this is just more proof that there are health benefits to colloidal silver.

History has often cited that the aristocracy lived in larger numbers due to better nutrition and cleanliness. The fact of the matter is that even the very wealthiest in society had to be wary of accusations of witchcraft. Housecats who would have killed the flea-ridden mice who spread this disease were killed on-sight, and bathing was regarded as sinful vanity and viewed with suspicion.

Their clothing was often much cleaner than their bodies. People at this time had gotten the notion that lice were good luck, and fleas in the bed kept one from having impure thoughts. Leave it to fundamentalist Christianity to bring about a dark age of ignorance, paranoia, and overall backwards thinking.

People did not eat from sterling with any intent on maintaining health, as such wisdom had been largely eradicated from society by that time. It was more a force of tradition which allowed that speck of social vanity. There may have been a time prior to the Dark Ages where people had connected the use of sterling dinnerware with good health, but by this time such objective analysis was not common.

One cannot say that none of the wealthy families within that society fell victim to plague. However, when compared to the peasantry, a greater percentage of the gentry survived the Plague despite having similar habits. Even more telling is the fact that members of the Christian Priesthood who also had the luxury of eating and drinking from sterling, the monks and nuns who tended to victims of both leprosy and plague, survived in a vast larger percentage than the peasants.

In these modern times people want to understand the science behind this survival, and it repeatedly points to the presence of sterling in the diet of Dark Age people. If the findings are all true, it is most certainly the wonder-drug that has not yet been turned into a drug. It is possibly an antiviral, antibiotic, and antifungal all in one.

The research conducted has been limited, and largely funded through private means. Universities and hospital scientists are discouraged from researching any homeopathic remedies by pharmaceutical companies who provide much of the funding for their institutions. It is possible that the pharmaceutical companies themselves may be conducting studies whilst preventing others from doing so in order to either corner the market, or eradicate the notion of such healing all together.

The fact is, these attributes are well-established even if they are not accepted openly by any official source. There is little doubt that the pharmaceutical companies themselves probably have something in store as far as research is concerned, for they must be able to synthesize sterling as well as create a monitoring of the dose to make sure the public does not get too healthy. If they do, in fact, find a way to synthesize sterling, they will have either shut Pandora back in a box, or opened several cans of worms.




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