Guest guest Posted July 17, 2006 Report Share Posted July 17, 2006 Body Balance is the product. Upon seeing all the minerals present in the formula, including lead, mercury, cadmium, (I forget whether or not fluorine was in there or not although I think that it was I wrote the company an email. The “head scientist” told me what I said below. I may still have that email. If I can find it, on another computer, I will send it along to you. Probably have to just type it in on present computer and send it here. I could not remember the name of that product and right, its been a while since you’ve mentioned it. And, one of the things I’m aware of is that “alternative” or “complementary” health has also become an industry, whose main motive, like any other industry, is not consumer health, but industry profits. While not being quite so “evil” as the pharmaceutical or chemical industry because of its being closer to its roots, its still something we have to be aware of. On Behalf Of Duncan Crow Monday, July 17, 2006 10:27 AM To: Health_and_healing Re: Re: fluoride in tea > Posted by: " Ed Siceloff " siceloff (AT) earthlink (DOT) net esiceloff2001 > Sun Jul 16, 2006 9:12 am (PDT) > > > Duncan, I think that you sell a product that is a formulation of > various sea vegetables. Ed, I sold Body Balance for about a year, but not for more than eight months now; I'll try to answer your questions. > In the support literature for that product is > the claim that plant life picks up heavy metals but changes the > ionization of it. No. > That changed ionization actually chelates to the > toxic form of the heavy metals in our bodies that come from non-life > form sources. Your claim. I haven't seen that claim before. > Would that not include fluoride? I can't speculate on it without making assumptions that'll probably turn out to be incorrect; I would rather learn. I do think that no forms of fluorine are good for you if that's what you're getting at. > Is fluoride one of the metals, actually? No. > I'm going on the basis of my memory here and if I remember correctly > what > it is that you are involved in, I was as well. Most of the sea > vegetables " drinks " , or formulations, all list cadmium, lead, > fluoride, and even some or all of the radioactive metals (certainly > not enriched). Body Balance from the sea vegetables, and another product I've seen analysis for, Kona Gold minerals fom Integris (montmorillonite?), showed on an independent analysis to contain almost undetectable cadmium, lead and mercury, unlike humic shale- derived minerals from land deposits. > This was said to be ok by the lead scientist because > of the different ionization that chelated and took out the actual > toxic, oppositely charged, metal atoms from the body. > ed Again, I hadn't heard that one come up at all; I think it must have been a different product. Sounds like bullshit to me on the face of it. Hmmm.... I stopped selling Body Balance when I learned that benzene compounds used as a preservative leak benzene, a carcinogen, into acidic solutions. Duncan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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