COLLOIDAL SILVER: THE BEST WAY TO FIGHT VIRULENT PANDEMICS
COLLOIDAL SILVER: NATURE'S OWN ANTIVIRAL ANTIBIOTIC
Re: The Age Of The Unthinkable by Joshua Cooper Ramo
http://www.salvationscience.com/v225.htm
The Biblical "Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse", mentioned in the Revelation of
John, are the "Tribulations" of hunger, disease, war, and death. They are
"unthinkable", because thinking about negative things makes you worry. So, you
go into a State of Denial about it, which only makes the problem much worse by
non-preparation.
In the case of fast-moving viruses, slow-moving Urine Therapy will not act fast
enough. You will need the help of nature's own antibiotic - anti-viral Colloidal
Silver. You can buy a good Colloidal Silver maker for around $100. Make sure it
has an automatic cutoff and that it works on both AC current and batteries.
You should also have a good supply of silver, to make your medicine. Colloidal
Silver will greatly enhance the efficacy of Urine Therapy in such viral or
bacterial infections. Cipro is the only anti-viral I know of, and it is doubtful
you can get a prescription for it in time for an emergency case. Don't be
dependent on outside help.
Also, bacteria are developing immunity to antibiotics, so scientists are always
trying to develop a new formula, which in a short time will also be rendered
useless by bacteria's ability to constantly evolve new immunity against attack.
I suppose the same problem might develop for anti-virals. Don't depend on
pharmaceutical drugs.
Colloidal Silver is the answer to all these problems. The fact that the AMA
won't use it, will cause many deaths in the event of a virulent pandemic. So,
get your Colloidal Silver makers now, before it is too late. This is an
inexpensive and very critical addition to your own survival preparations.
Salvation Science is for your own
survival.
Of course, the Americans have little interest in survival and have "quarantined
the cure", while persecuting its advocate - all of them against one good man,
and they enjoy it with sickening relish! The Americans have willfully rejected
Truth without having been forced in any way to do so and without any rational
enquiry whatsoever.
All subservient and subordinate peoples and nations of the USA and the Global
Sectarian Fundamentalist Conspiracy, are endangering themselves by conforming to
such erroneous opinions and behavior. When the "wolf comes", your own proverbial
State of Denial will be like the false shepherd who runs away and leaves you
defenseless.
You must survive to get Saved. Jai Om. - Sw. Tantrasangha
------------------------
The Next Global Panic by Joshua Cooper Ramo
http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2009-04-28/the-age-of-the-unthink\
able-swine-flu-and-the-100-days
Info RSS Joshua Cooper Ramo is Managing Director and a partner at Kissinger
Associates, one of the world's leading strategic advisory firms. Prior to
joining Kissinger Associates, he was Assistant Managing Editor of Time and
worked in the advisory and banking business in China.
Eduardo Verdugo / AP Photo: The arrival of swine flu at Obama's 100-day mark
signals the challenges that will define his presidency. From financial panic to
Islamic fundamentalism, a new wave of dangers is sweeping the planet. Joshua
Cooper Ramo, author of The Age of the Unthinkable: Why the New World Disorder
Constantly Surprises Us and What We Can Do About It, reports.
What's bothering me particularly about the Mexican swine-flu outbreak isn't just
the gory sense of what the disease does once you get it, but rather how you get
it in the first place. H1N1 has an eerily familiar way of sliding into our lives
and it reminds me that this latest epidemic looks unnervingly like so many other
dangers. The spread of swine flu looks similar to the financial flu that blitzed
and crippled our banking system last year. It evokes the virus of Islamic
fundamentalism that we now see infecting the planet at an ever-faster rate—and
that is terrifyingly unresponsive to traditional medicines of politics or even
the best surgical strikes.
Read an excerpt from The Age of the Unthinkable:
Here's what's making me nervous about H1N1: It' a reminder that a dangerous
contagion abounds now, not just a disease contagion. And it's a pretty clear
reminder that in his first 100 days at least, President Obama hasn't yet laid
out the full set of plans we need to deal with an age of infectious danger. But
the weird coincidence of swine flu and the 100 days offers an interesting set of
lessons for the president as he plans for the next 100.
I studied epidemic science in some detail for my book The Age of the Unthinkable
because, frankly, we are now living in a petri dish of infectious risk. Here are
the lessons I learned and how they fit with the larger problems the president
now faces.
1. Virus risk is now everywhere—we can't avoid it and live the way we want.
Maybe the most unnerving feature of our age is that the things we rely on to
make life better often also make it more perilous. Airplanes, financial markets,
computer webs—all of these bind us ever closer together and into shared webs of
risk and danger.
Scientists call dangers like these "systemic risks" because they emerge from the
very way in which the system is organized. Any tightly bound network faces
systemic risk, and the more closely a food web or financial web is linked, the
more dangerous it becomes. In fact, in one of those weird quirks of our world,
the more efficient a network is, the more dangerous it is—this is why financial
markets are so efficient at blowing themselves up. Perturbations in linked nets
spread with astonishing speed; crises in one area (think the subprime crisis)
quickly turn into challenges in another (U.S.-China relations). The lesson:
Obama has to begin to think and speak in terms of how he is preparing all of us
for flu attacks of all kinds: financial, ideological and biological.
2. Think like an epidemiologist, not a politician.
Confronted with big challenges—economic crises, health disasters—the instinct of
most politicians is to hack problems to pieces and then tackle them bit by bit
with targeted legislation or departments or high-level envoys. But in an
interconnected world, that's not enough. Every problem is linked to every other
problem so our solutions need to be broad-based and aim not only at the
particular problem (like bad lending practices), but also at the way these
problems effect everything else. And that offers a crucial lesson for Obama:
Systemic risk means that simply tackling the parts of a challenge—no matter how
brilliantly you do so—can never be enough. In foreign-policy terms, this
systemic sense is called a "Grand Strategy," and it's the thing most obviously
missing from this very active presidency at the 100-day mark.
3. Even the best doctors can't stop a pandemic alone.
What the president has built so far is an administration that looks like a
health-care system filled only with great doctors but without a plan for public
health. Today there is no unifying principle that backs the work of aggressive
diplomats like Richard Holbrooke or smart operational Cabinet members like Janet
Napolitano. In an age of unthinkable pandemic risk, that's a dangerous problem.
Without a grand strategy, the ambitions of Obama's Team of Rivals risk slipping
into incoherent political struggle. And a big strategy hole like the one we have
now encourages our enemies to mistake Obama's valuable openness for
indecisiveness. Worse, it makes it hard to progress in complex areas such as
nuclear proliferation or trade and environment talks because we'll never have a
real plan for where to compromise and where to stand firm. And worst of all,
we'll be poorly prepared for other pandemic surprises that lie ahead.
4. The next 100 days: Build us an immune system.
What Obama needs to deliver now isn't a grand strategy in the old-school style
of the Monroe Doctrine, but rather one that looks like a global immune system:
fast-moving, capable of quickly working across traditional lines to confront
problems, flexible, and with power and responsibility widely distributed. Many
of our enemies have such an immune system. For my book, I spent time with
Hezbollah. Their resilience in the face of Israeli attack is famous.
Building an immune system for the United States would be a political boost to
Obama, helping to reinforce ideas he holds most strongly. Epidemic theory—which
studies everything from runs on banks to forest fires—teaches that it's vital to
focus on the weakest, most vulnerable links in a networked system, a lesson that
supports Obama's actions on poverty and on narrowing the rich-poor gap. Another
epidemic-crisis principle is the importance of resilience, of the ability of a
system to withstand challenge and get stronger—an idea that transforms Obama's
focus on infrastructure, education, and health care from "nice to have" reforms
into urgent priorities. An immune system grand strategy would also help end the
debate about if Obama is "doing too much." Confronted with the potential of more
destabilizing infections, we can never "do too much" to boost our immunity.
Foreign-policy types often like to joke that "Democrats don't do grand
strategy." But in a moment of global viral crisis, that's like saying "doctors
don't do public health." Ultimately this is work only the president can do, a
task that involves at once transcending the tactical minds around him and
uniting them in common purpose. The simultaneous arrival of swine flu and the
100 days may turn out to offer a fortunate reminder to the White House: In an
age of viral dangers, no medicine is of any use without a clear plan for our
long-term health. Obama can learn from the swine flu—and if he wants to succeed,
he must.
Joshua Cooper Ramo is managing director and a partner at Kissinger Associates,
one of the world's leading strategic-advisory firms. Prior to joining Kissinger
Associates, he was assistant managing editor of Time and worked in the advisory
and banking business in China.
http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2009-04-28/the-age-of-the-unthink\
able-swine-flu-and-the-100-days
---------------------------
Excerpt: The Age Of The Unthinkable by Joshua Cooper Ramo
NPR.org, March 23, 2009
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=102064994
You probably didn't need to hear it from Greenspan to have a sense of the
confused navigation of our leaders. How can the president of the United States
declare a war won just as it becomes more violent? Why are Russian bombers
flying off American coasts again? How did China, a country with an average daily
income of $7 per person, amass nearly $2 trillion in U.S. debt in less than a
decade? How is it that the secretary of the treasury of the United States, a
near- billionaire financier, can say that the worst of a crisis is over in May
and then find himself in August furiously battling to save the global financial
system? Why is it we can agree on an immense collection of problems, such as
global warming or the spread of nuclear weapons, that must be solved now — and
then make no real progress or only move backward?
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=102064994
http://www.salvationscience.com/v225.htm
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