Lymester,
Lymester said...
There is a lot of hedging in that paragraph. Several hundred strains of bacteria? Where is he getting this statistic from? I highly doubt there are several hundred stains of bacteria in a mouth filled with mercury fillings. In fact, it belies his point, since the mercury vapor released would presumably be bactericidal no?
The "several hundred strains of bacteria" come from Weston Price's research. Rabbits were embedded with a tooth with a cavitation or root canal from a person who died of a specific cancer. Each rabbit with said tooth under its skin developed the same type of cancer as the person who died--even if the rabbit didn't have the body part (the same type of cancer would develop elsewhere).
When I attended Huggins' presentations on mercury and disease in relation to cavitations and root canals, he listed out the specific bacteria strains in his power points. They are specifically related to various cancers, etc. I couldn't jot all of them down, as there were on average 2-3 dozen per illness. I can tell you that I did jot down the handful I knew I already had tested positive for in a pathogenic bacteria test from the parasite lab. (Klebsiella, pseudomonas, various strains of e. coli (not all are deadly), and various types of candida).