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BARAHONA, DOMINICAN REPUBLIC – Fasten your seatbelts, because the MMS story is

about to take the greatest roller coaster ride of its life. The FDA is following

up its July 30, 2010 warning on the personal and discretionary use of chlorine

dioxide with a vengeance, having picked out a sampling of MMS suppliers in the

United States and Japan (yes, Japan), to begin a global dissuasion campaign that

you can be sure, willbe televised.

On the heels of their warning, a convoy of FDA agents appeared at PGL

International (www.projectgreenlife.com), in Spokane, Washington, and their

fulfillment house, intent on gathering " forensic " evidence of wrongdoing.

On the same day, on the other side of the world, agents from the Drug Regulation

and Monitoring Agency, a unit of Japan's Ministry of Health, visited an MMS

supplier in Tokyo, while agents from the Health and Hygiene Agency made another

impromptu call to a distributor in Osaka.

According to a reliable source, the tone of the Japanese encounters was

decidedly different from those in Spokane. After three days of investigation,

the FDA representatives made their objective very clear; a full recall of all

MMS sold. To make the appearance of justification of wrongdoing and harm to the

public complete, they were offering no consideration to the company owners.

The purpose of a recall isn't so much about returning MMS to the suppliers, it

would amount to an admission of wrongdoing, of harm having been done on the

public (who the FDA is " protecting, " ), for which some form of " punishment " would

be in order. The Agency has been mobilized to make discrediting MMS a priority,

facts and evidence to the contrary, be damned.

IF " wrong " had been done, if harm had been done, I would be in full agreement

with the Agency. However, they appear, curiously to be inactive and

disinterested in the harm that happens daily America, thanks to drugs that they

have evaluated, collected very high application fees for, and approved. MMS'

major " sin, " according to the FDA is, (1) not having gone through the approval

cycle, and (2) making fantastic (presumed to be false and fraudulent) claims for

what they call unrelated conditions.

The question of whether the claims, reported, not by the MMS sellers, but by

people who have used it, are true, has not been considered. If the claims are

true, then it may mean that the diseases mentioned, are not unrelated.

The FDA wants to discredit MMS before enough people put " 2 + 2 " together and

begin asking these questions.

I suspect that it is too late.

MMS is not the only " public domain " chemical on the block that can point to

fantastic claims that are true. Dimethyl Sulfoxide, otherwise known as DMSO, is

another which is backed by over 40 years of clinical research. It was first

formulated by Dr. Stanley at the University of Oregon Medical School.

http://logisticsmonster.com/2010/08/16/fdas-smear-campaign-against-mms-begins/

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Very interesting... where did this information come from? Is there a link please?thankssunny A peek into our world.. Feed the Future - Forest gardens - Sustainable Lifetime Food for AllFeed the Future- The blog In depth articles - forest gardens, natural wellness, human consciousness WHAT has to happen for us to evolve and emerge? Follow us on Twitter - www.twitter.com/return2earth Wellness v

pharma, free energy v oil, own grown v processed food, community v nuclear, natural building v concrete, consciousness v asleep Info on what's going on and alternative and natural technologies for a simpler lifeTune in and friend us on Facebook - Pierre Soleil return to earth From: healinghope <mfrreman@...> Sent: Fri, August 20, 2010 5:30:52 PMSubject: [ ] Project Green Life MMS

BARAHONA, DOMINICAN REPUBLIC – Fasten your seatbelts, because the MMS story is about to take the greatest roller coaster ride of its life. The FDA is following up its July 30, 2010 warning on the personal and discretionary use of chlorine dioxide with a vengeance, having picked out a sampling of MMS suppliers in the United States and Japan (yes, Japan), to begin a global dissuasion campaign that you can be sure, willbe televised.

On the heels of their warning, a convoy of FDA agents appeared at PGL International (www.projectgreenlife.com), in Spokane, Washington, and their fulfillment house, intent on gathering "forensic" evidence of wrongdoing.

On the same day, on the other side of the world, agents from the Drug Regulation and Monitoring Agency, a unit of Japan's Ministry of Health, visited an MMS supplier in Tokyo, while agents from the Health and Hygiene Agency made another impromptu call to a distributor in Osaka.

According to a reliable source, the tone of the Japanese encounters was decidedly different from those in Spokane. After three days of investigation, the FDA representatives made their objective very clear; a full recall of all MMS sold. To make the appearance of justification of wrongdoing and harm to the public complete, they were offering no consideration to the company owners.

The purpose of a recall isn't so much about returning MMS to the suppliers, it would amount to an admission of wrongdoing, of harm having been done on the public (who the FDA is "protecting,"), for which some form of "punishment" would be in order. The Agency has been mobilized to make discrediting MMS a priority, facts and evidence to the contrary, be damned.

IF "wrong" had been done, if harm had been done, I would be in full agreement with the Agency. However, they appear, curiously to be inactive and disinterested in the harm that happens daily America, thanks to drugs that they have evaluated, collected very high application fees for, and approved. MMS' major "sin," according to the FDA is, (1) not having gone through the approval cycle, and (2) making fantastic (presumed to be false and fraudulent) claims for what they call unrelated conditions.

The question of whether the claims, reported, not by the MMS sellers, but by people who have used it, are true, has not been considered. If the claims are true, then it may mean that the diseases mentioned, are not unrelated.

The FDA wants to discredit MMS before enough people put "2 + 2" together and begin asking these questions.

I suspect that it is too late.

MMS is not the only "public domain" chemical on the block that can point to fantastic claims that are true. Dimethyl Sulfoxide, otherwise known as DMSO, is another which is backed by over 40 years of clinical research. It was first formulated by Dr. Stanley at the University of Oregon Medical School.

http://logisticsmonster.com/2010/08/16/fdas-smear-campaign-against-mms-begins/

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Other than Project Green Life, that does not sell it anymore, where can i buy MMS???? I sure there are other suppliers that haven't been raided by the criminal FDA.

[ ] Project Green Life MMS

BARAHONA, DOMINICAN REPUBLIC – Fasten your seatbelts, because the MMS story is about to take the greatest roller coaster ride of its life. The FDA is following up its July 30, 2010 warning on the personal and discretionary use of chlorine dioxide with a vengeance, having picked out a sampling of MMS suppliers in the United States and Japan (yes, Japan), to begin a global dissuasion campaign that you can be sure, willbe televised.On the heels of their warning, a convoy of FDA agents appeared at PGL International (www.projectgreenlife.com), in Spokane, Washington, and their fulfillment house, intent on gathering "forensic" evidence of wrongdoing.On the same day, on the other side of the world, agents from the Drug Regulation and Monitoring Agency, a unit of Japan's Ministry of Health, visited an MMS supplier in Tokyo, while agents from the Health and Hygiene Agency made another impromptu call to a distributor in Osaka.According to a reliable source, the tone of the Japanese encounters was decidedly different from those in Spokane. After three days of investigation, the FDA representatives made their objective very clear; a full recall of all MMS sold. To make the appearance of justification of wrongdoing and harm to the public complete, they were offering no consideration to the company owners.The purpose of a recall isn't so much about returning MMS to the suppliers, it would amount to an admission of wrongdoing, of harm having been done on the public (who the FDA is "protecting,"), for which some form of "punishment" would be in order. The Agency has been mobilized to make discrediting MMS a priority, facts and evidence to the contrary, be damned.IF "wrong" had been done, if harm had been done, I would be in full agreement with the Agency. However, they appear, curiously to be inactive and disinterested in the harm that happens daily America, thanks to drugs that they have evaluated, collected very high application fees for, and approved. MMS' major "sin," according to the FDA is, (1) not having gone through the approval cycle, and (2) making fantastic (presumed to be false and fraudulent) claims for what they call unrelated conditions.The question of whether the claims, reported, not by the MMS sellers, but by people who have used it, are true, has not been considered. If the claims are true, then it may mean that the diseases mentioned, are not unrelated.The FDA wants to discredit MMS before enough people put "2 + 2" together and begin asking these questions.I suspect that it is too late.MMS is not the only "public domain" chemical on the block that can point to fantastic claims that are true. Dimethyl Sulfoxide, otherwise known as DMSO, is another which is backed by over 40 years of clinical research. It was first formulated by Dr. Stanley at the University of Oregon Medical School.http://logisticsmonster.com/2010/08/16/fdas-smear-campaign-against-mms-begins/

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I sell it. It is $10 a 4 ounce bottle and it comes with an empty bottle for putting your acidifier in. Priority shipping is $7. You can paypal me at

Gaiacita @ gmail.com or write me off list and I'll send you my address for a check.

Samala,

-------Original Message-------

Other than Project Green Life, that does not sell it anymore, where can i buy MMS???? I sure there are other suppliers that haven't been raided by the criminal FDA.

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Hi Keycross. This site was given to me by Healinghope. Orrilia

http://www.sodium-chlorite-supplier.com/#BULK_CATALOG_AND_RAW_MATERIALS

From: Keycross <crossshapedkeys@...> Sent: Sat, August 21, 2010 12:20:17 PMSubject: Re: [ ] Project Green Life MMS

Other than Project Green Life, that does not sell it anymore, where can i buy MMS???? I sure there are other suppliers that haven't been raided by the criminal FDA.

-----

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Do you have any idea how many gallons of 5% you can make out of your bottle of MMS instead of paying $100 a gallon for it? And besides, the $100 for a gallon of 28% will only last 2 to 4 years. Unless you are selling it, you will waste a LOT of it by having to throw it away. Well, maybe if a person was taking baths for the family they could use it up before then.

I have not understood their sale on full strength MMS. You can buy 4 ounces (with some citric) for $20 or 15 ounces with citric for $25. How odd.

I sell 4 ounces ofr $10 and you could certainly buy a lot of citric acid for that other 10 bucks.

But as it stated at the top of their site--they are not making any claims and not providing instructions for use. It is STILL not illegal to sell sodium chlorite flakes (if you use ground shipping and been through the hazmat classes) nor is it illegal to sell the liquefied sodium chlorite, also known as MMS. It was never impossible to buy the sodium chlorite flakes--anyone could and can still do it. I had a business license so bought a 100 pound barrel for $250. No questions about water purification asked. Then the FDA started hammering the ebay sellers and suddenly you had to PROVE that you were in the water purification business to be able to buy the big barrels. But, even then, you could still buy small amounts, a few pounds, from chemical supply houses.

The FDA is simply using scare tactics, and the big companies like Global Light simply don't want to get harassed. They are withdrawing all sales of MMS after Monday. They tripled their customer base when they started selling MMS, and now they won't supply them with it anymore. But of course--who wants to have to deal with the FDA? I didn't want to deal with hazmat so stopped selling the flakes through the mail.

But you will still be able to buy MMS from small suppliers like me, or the ones that refuse to mention health in the same breath as MMS, and you will still be able to buy flakes from chemical companies.

The FDA simply likes to play bully boy, because they know they can stop a lot of the sheeple from buying it. Sad, really.

Samala,

-------Original Message-------

Hi Keycross. This site was given to me by Healinghope. Orrilia

http://www.sodium-chlorite-supplier.com/#BULK_CATALOG_AND_RAW_MATERIALS

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