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1,783
Published:
16 y
Re: Your response is incredible!
Health freedom does not include mis-labeling products. Those truly selling
Colloidal Silver have nothing to worry about. Only those selling something other than
Colloidal Silver , bearing a label that says "
Colloidal Silver "
would be disturbed by regulation.
I'm all for colloidal silver !!!!!!!! I don't use it personally, but it sounds from what some have written, that it might help some people, and they should have access to it if they want to.
I'd be against fakers though, just as I'd be against a manufacturer that labeled a product as containing codeine, if it really only had aspirin in it.
I'm sure you'd agree that products should contain what their label says. Otherwise merchants would be able to put whatever they want on a label and sell it as such to an unsuspecting public. How about, if one had an infection and needed penicillin and the label said penicillin, but the pills only contained dried pickling lime and kelp ?? eeeek !
Why should "colloidal silver" products be exempted from the same labeling requirements as any other product ? I'd like to see some stability tests if I were a consumer of it. Enforcement of labeling requirements would undoubtedly lead to higher quality products for consumers, and assurances. And if colloidal silver isn't stable, at least there won't be a bunch of products out there claiming to be colloidal silver, fooling people. Maybe they ought call it "colloid-like" silver instead.
So its not really that incredible of a response, rather one that should probably help the public interest.
Imagine the chaos if merchants were permitted to slap whatever label on something they wanted to !!!