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History Supports The Use Of Colloidal Silver To Maintain Health

By Stella Gay


It is known that the gentry of society, also called the aristocracy, outlived the peasantry by a vast margin during the centuries of The Plague. Many people connect their culture, which included using sterling cups and bowls, and it does appear that there was some truth to this. With more research it may become very clear that there are health benefits to ingesting colloidal silver.

Common knowledge wants to point to better nutrition and personal hygiene as the reason for their survivability. However, the facts of history do not support that theory, especially when it came to bathing. Their nutrition was sometimes worse than the poor as they insisted on eating white bread rather than wheat or rye, and society at large frowned upon regular bathing during that era.

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.

Early Renaissance-era people might have made the connection between using silver dinnerware and the maintenance of good health. Such things were probably written about, but these writings would have been the victim of fires lit by Christian soldiers at museums and libraries of old. The habit of eating and drinking from sterling most likely continued strictly out of habit.

Wealthy people did die of the Plague in large numbers, but the percentage of wealthy to poor who survived was large. Not only was it the one-percenters of their time, but Nuns and monks also had the benefit of eating and drinking from silver, and they survived in larger percentages as well even though they were the ones who tended to the sick. With that much exposure, one must research what it was that they were doing different.

In recent years more attention has been paid to the science behind the survivability, and there is no doubt that it points to the use of sterling as an eating and drinking receptacle. Turns out, sterling in microscopic doses has antibacterial as well as antiviral and antifungal properties. This makes it possibly the most effective preventative medicine ever used.

Limited research has been performed, and seems to back up this widely held theory. However, there are no universities willing to provide funding for this research, as it acts in opposition to the wishes of pharmaceutical companies who provide much of their funding. If the pharmaceutical giants are doing active research on this, it is being kept quiet.

Since it is known that this metal does have these qualities, one must wonder if a pharmaceutical company is working out a way to synthesize it. Modern medicine is made up of nearly all synthesized compounds, as it is more cost-effective for them to synthesize rather than harvest the true organics from nature. If silver can be synthesized in large enough quantities to create another magic pill, one must wonder if it opens a can of worms or puts Pandora back in her box.




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