Jul 5, 2009

MMS, Defined

By Lee Jacobs

MMS is a name given to a supplement that was originally put together by someone named Jim Humble. Humble made discovery while he was on a gold finding expedition a number of years ago. On the expedition, two members were struck down with malaria, and help was hours away. No matter; Jim sprung into action. He had liquid oxygen with him, and within hours the two men were up and feeling fine. When he got home, Jim took a closer look at this molecule, and tried to determine how it actually worked.

Ok, now for a little science.

MMS's active constituent is not sodium chlorite, otherwise known as liquid oxygen. Instead, it's the small amount of chlorine dioxide within it. When sodium chlorite is mixed with a premeasured amount of citric acid, in two or three minutes a significant amount of chlorine dioxide is produced.

With the chlorine dioxide molecule, you may think that its chlorine component is for chlorine gas. Nonetheless, chlorine is found in many places in nature, and most often is bound to sodium, which produces table salt.

Chlorine dioxide is composed of a chlorine ion and two oxygen ions.

Chlorine dioxide in this form is a powerful oxidization agent, and actively except electrons from other molecules more commonly known as "electron donors." It's important to know that almost all pathogenic stressors are electron donors. That's why the chlorine dioxide compound does usually not affect the body's healthy tissue.

Chlorine dioxide itself has been used within the industry for a good 60 years as a water sterilizer. It's been approved by the EPA (several decades ago) because it has the ability to remove deadly pathogens like anthrax from the water supply; this is a further endorsement of chlorine dioxide's efficiency as a destroyer of pathogens. And unlike chlorine, the compound itself breaks down into harmless byproducts of water and carbon dioxide. On the other hand, chlorine takes much longer to break down, which is in its only problem; when it does, its byproducts can be carcinogenic.

In spite of the fact that it is safe and effective in many applications, chlorine dioxide itself is very volatile, and must be created immediately before it's used. That's why it's usually transported in its more inert state of sodium chlorite. It's become a much more accepted compound within the water purification industry, such that sodium chlorite (chlorine dioxide) is now a preferable molecule to use for water purification, and is thus replacing chlorine in more and more applications across the country.

Jim Humble's final solution of MMS is composed of 28% of sodium chlorite in a mix of distilled water. Chlorine dioxide can be thus manufactured on site by mixing 5 drops of citric acid activator with 1 drop of MMS solution (sodium chlorite).

By having your very own supply of sodium chlorite and appropriate activator on hand, which is entirely safe to transport, you can have your very own pathogen killer and water purifier with you regardless of where you may happen to find yourself.

In short, you have your good health in your hands.

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