History Supports The Use Of Colloidal Silver To Maintain Health

By Stella Gay


It has been claimed that the aristocracy vastly outlived the peasantry during the Plague because they ate and drank from sterling cups and bowls. There may be some truth to this claim, although modern doctors are basically paid to deny that diseases can be treated by anything other than a battery of prescriptions. When one looks at the circumstances surrounding The Plague, it is clear that there may be some 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 clothes were generally clean, but to bathe away the lice or eradicate fleas from their beds would have been looked upon with suspicion by the church. Having parasites constantly drawing your attention was believed to help prevent impure thoughts from entering the mind. Between the tolerance of fleas but intolerance of housecats, the superstitions of Christianity were directly responsible for the Plague.

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.

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.

Only small snippets of research ever gets conducted on such homeopathic remedies, and then only through a small group with little to no funding available. Pharmaceutical companies do not wish to have such a universal remedy available to the populace, as it could make so many of their pills obsolete. If there is any serious research being conducted, it is certainly news.

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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