Posted on 06/26/2018 8:39:04 AM PDT by Gamecock
Televangelist, author and convicted felon Jim Bakker is back with another product he says cures 'all venereal disease' and is made up of 'silver.'
In a video clip where he's introducing the product, the star of The Jim Bakker Show sits beside his co-host and wife, Lori Bakker, as the two tout the benefits of 'Silver Solution.'
'Do you know the one thing we never talk about, really, is one of the few gels and products that cures, or gets rid of, all venereal diseases,' he says to the man and woman sharing the screen with the Bakkers, in a video shared to the Twitter account for Right Wing Watch.
'This is like a miracle in a tube!'
The product is available in liquid and gel form in various bundles, ranging from $25 for four ounces of the gel version, $40 for one 16-ounce bottle of the liquid version and $175 and $250, respectively, for a case one dozen of each version.
(Excerpt) Read more at dailymail.co.uk ...
“It is so unlike him to be selling things to gullible people.”
ROFLMAO! :)
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Unfortunately, those telling the false story here are actually proud of it.
Silver is clearly the very best anti-bacterial in existence, since it harms only pathogens.
There was an episode of “WKRP in Cincinnati” where they were trying to get rid of a preacher named Little Ed (a 300 pound former professional wrestler) who did a Sunday morning program on the station. It seems he was making a lot of money selling things like “John the Baptist shower curtains” and “Last Supper steak knives.”
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>> “Too bad Colloidal Silver doesnt get rid of idiots!” <<
But in a way it does. The idiots won’t use it, so it gets rid of them through their own inaction.
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Is that not practicing medicine without a license? Did it cure his VD?
Liars never stop lying.
The FDA cracked down. The copper is now claimed specifically for odor reduction.
But I'm sure the companies are subtly implying that "copper cures arthritis", or at least playing off memories of that [undocumented] belief.
One of my coworkers at the time was a radio enthusiast. He brought up a "border radio" type that was selling autographed pictures of Jesus Christ.
Her husband is a sucker, she probably thinks the rest of the world is too.
Hey, wasn’t she “that the chick that did the [music] video with” Sam Kinison?
All that being said, silver is a good topic antibiotic. I use it on the occasional cut and scrape to good effect.
I rather doubt applying a gel to an affected area would cure a systemic infection, though...
Is that the guy who sells buckets of slop for the apocalypse?
And how are his flock catching all these sexual diseases?
Titanium Dioxide (TiO2) kills too. Implicated in type 2 diabetes and possibly pancreatic cancer. Found in toothpaste and sundry food items to enhance appearance since the 1950’s. Content not a required disclosure on labeling.
I dont doubt that colloidal silver might remove bacteria or viruses from a place it could reach. But if the infection is raging farther than an orifice, youd be needing something systemic.
Why is this a huge problem in his flock?
I’ll take the word of the Mayo Clinic over a snake oil salesman.
Chief Dan: What’s in it?
Huckster: Uh, I dunno; I just sell it.
Chief Dan: You drink it then.
Interesting. Never knew that.
Found this at Wiki...
The medical uses of silver include its use in wound dressings, creams, and as an antibiotic coating on medical devices.[1][2]
While wound dressings containing silver sulfadiazine or silver nanomaterials may be used on external infections,[3][4][5] there is insufficient evidence to support such use.[6]
There is tentative evidence that silver coatings on endotracheal breathing tubes may reduce the incidence of ventilator-associated pneumonia.[7]
Silver generally has low toxicity, and minimal risk is expected when silver is used in approved medical applications.[8]
Alternative medicine products such as colloidal silver are not safe or effective.[9]
Contents
1 Mechanism of action
2 Medical uses
2.1 Antibacterial cream
2.2 Dressings
2.3 Endotracheal tubes
2.4 Catheters
2.5 X-ray film
2.6 Other uses
3 Adverse effects
4 Water purification
5 Alternative medicine
6 History
7 Cost
8 See also
9 References
10 External links
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