Alzheimer's

GO TO HOMEPAGE

Alzheimer's Disease


 

   Alzheimer's disease is not really a medical "disease" but in reality is a medical "condition" and it's cause is still a medical mystery. Alzheimer's disease is not due to infection by a microbe, but is actually the result of long term exposure to poison that adversely affects the human neurological system. Over the long history of medicines, doctors discovered that certain substances were effective against disease, and one common medicine that was found to be universally effective against many diseases was mercury. In fact it was the medicine that was taken along on the 1804 Lewis and Clarke expedition. It was known that red mercury powder effectively prevented wounds from becoming infected and in fact you can still purchase red mercurachrome tinctures in most drug stores today. But although doctors knew that mercury was effective, they did not know how it worked. It's a known fact that mercury is actually a metal, and it's also well known that all metals are neurotoxins. "Neurotoxin" means these metals act as a poison to the human nervous system. Metals can interrupt the communication signals that the body uses to send messages to and from the brain. When disease cells try to enter a human cell they first must read the DNA of the cell, and then duplicate it to be allowed to enter. Mercury confuses that process, and thus interferes with disease progression.

   You don't get something for nothing however, and it also turns out that metals can cause permanent damage to the human central nervous system. The lead pigment that was used in paints years ago still causes damage to the brains of children in many American homes today. Metals like mercury and zinc are still used in some medicines but only in trace amounts. In the 1960s an effort was launched to examine the lifestyles of Alzheimer's patients to see if a common denominator could be found for the disease. The majority of workers in 1960s America were blue collar workers, but almost all Alzheimer victims worked in white collar jobs. The common denominator turned out to be the use of antiperpirants containing aluminum. Soon antiperspirant sales started slipping, and the manufacturers of course started an ad campaign to convince everyone that they needed to smell good. Soon even blue collar workers were using antiperpirants. The combination of aluminum in antacid products, antiperspirants, baking powders, and aluminum in drinking water from acid rain desolving bauxite ore deposits in our mountains combined to create an aluminum tidal wave for America's seniors. This however, was great news for American nursing home operators.

   So if you want to explore the crazy history of diseases in America, simply click on one of the secure book links on this webpage to order your book by Edward Oliver.

 

 

IS FRANCIS I OUR LAST POPE?

 

 

GO TO HOMEPAGE

 

USE THIS SECURE AMAZON LINK
TO ORDER A BOOK OR EBOOK: