Re: Some more answers *EDIT
Hello Veronicalives,
Just a minute now. Let's back up a little.
What we are saying is that Jim Humble lied in his book when he reported his test results. Based on his lies, how can we trust what he says the amounts should be?
For example... Jim Humble states that the dose of
Miracle-Mineral-Supplement results in a concentration of chlorine dioxide of about 1 PPM.
Here is a comparison you can do.
In a glass put 1 drop of
Miracle-Mineral-Supplement , then add 4 drops of water. Next, add 5 drops of 10%
citric acid and let the solution activate for 5 - 10 minutes. Now add 8
ounces of water and set this aside for comparison.
Next put 15 drops of
Miracle-Mineral-Supplement into a glass and add 75 drops of 10%
citric acid . Let this solution activate for 3 minutes and add 4
ounces of water to it (half a glass).
The first solution you made has a concentration of free chlorine dioxide of around 1 PPM. The second solution, according to Jim Humble, also has a concentration of around 1 PPM free chlorine dioxide.
Do you see, smell, and taste any differences between the two solutions?
The next step is to take both solutions to a test laboratory to determine the amount of free chlorine dioxide in each. Or, you could purchase some test strips and do the testing yourself. Or you could do both.
In addition to lying to everyone, this deception also makes the less aware less cautious. If you look up water treatment you find that the allowable residual is just slightly under this 1 PPM concentration. The average person reviewing this would not be alerted. The claim is that the does only has a concentration of 1 PPM and that is about what is allowed in water treatment.
The fact is that the MMS dose has a much higher concentration, and Jim Humble lied.
Tom