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.

Better nutrition and being clean is often cited as the reason wealthy outlived poor during this time. While there may be some truth to the benefit of better nutrition, wealthy aristocrats were not all that much cleaner than their peasant counterparts. Due to fears of being accused of witchcraft, all cats were killed in the wealthy houses as well as the poor, and bathing was not regarded as a necessity for anyone.

So while their clothing may have been more fine, the bodies of the upper class were just as ridden with lice, and the beds were just as full of fleas as any peasant. In fact, these parasitic insects were somehow regarded as good luck by most people. Let us not forget that these were the Dark Ages, so called because fundamentalist Christianity had led mankind into an age of ignorance and paranoia.

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.

While many of the wealthy households did perish from Plague, statistically speaking they had a much greater survival rate than those who lived in the parish villages. This is made even more pointedly when one realizes that the monks themselves often survived both victims of Plague as well as Leprosy. Monks and Nuns were most often exposed to victims of these two afflictions, as they provided the health as well as spiritual care to these poor souls.

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.

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.

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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