Post Number:#13 Post
by ofonorow » Sat Nov 22, 2008 6:12 am
Touché
Yes, antibiotics are a good example of a success of modern medicine!
There are 2 interesting aspects to this.
1) After learning about oxygen therapies (esp. oral H2O2) I haven't required an antibiotic (and I think vitamin D has a lot to do with this too)
2) The very first antibiotic (according to Isaac Asimov) worked by blocking biotin in the bacteria. In other words, the bacteria could manufacture almost everything necessary for life, and the only vitamin it required from its food was biotin - and the first antibiotic substituted itself for biotin in the receptor - but didn't work like biotin and thus the cell died.
Asimov explained it better, but wouldn't it be something if the real medical science was explained in schools? I've noticed that anything that remotely smacks of a vitamin having anything to do with health has been expunged from textbooks at all levels. You have to be a detective to find out about any of this.
Owen R. Fonorow
HeartCURE.Info
American Scientist's Invention Could Prevent 350,000 Heart Bypass Operations a year