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Re: the good news (water and salt too!)
 
Ohfor07 Views: 3,152
Published: 17 y
 
This is a reply to # 834,649

Re: the good news (water and salt too!)


"salt" seems just as good of a side-topic to light on as any other that may be connected to the idea of Iodine debate and or support.

For starters, it seems important to get past the relative nature of what we generally know as and call "salt". For me, the When It Rains, It Pours people generally come to mind first on any casual discussion of salt. But, this is just me. That stuff the snowplow guys scatter across the roads is also known loosley as "salt". That stuff that contrails-not-chemtrail guys scatter across the sky has been shown to conatin in large part, salt, specifically, barium salts. The Dr Stan/Flechas A/V mentioned that back in the day (somwhere around the 1920s to 50s), "the medical authorities" noticed the problem of high incidence of goiter afflicting people "in the great-lakes regions", and the a/v mentioned several times thereafter "but that problem was fixed through the sales of Iodized salt (table salt" by the When It Rains It Pours people.

Just one of the many things that confuses me on this greater topic is, for years, even long before I ever knew there was a thing called CureZone, I had already generally understood that commercial "table salt", even the good stuff - the iodized stuff, is generally a form of poison that most of us have adorned our kitchen tables with. In large part, it seems this was due to the various refining processes that goes into denaturing original salt into table salt . There was room for uncertainty, but I got the general impression that Stan & Flechas were generally giving their approval of commercial table salt as it pertains to the goiter issue. Can somebody please expound upon this "salt" issue, please?

Also, for anyboy who wants to, would you please expound upon what the prevailing theories were as to why this goiter problem seemed to pick on people living close to a great lake? Not to be cute, but in all seriousness, did it have something to do with "something in the water"?, or, perhaps, was it in some way related to the industrial revolution in this country that in large part grew up around the Great Lakes (and rivers too). ?

 

 
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