As far as Larry goes I haven't heard anything about him since the full page ad in the Washington Times about his book (years ago).
I would be interested in how to get the colloidal silver You talk about. Do you know if it would protect us from viral or bacterial attacks? The reading I have done says that silver was used as an antibiotic up until the 1930's when Rockefeller took over the pharmeceuticals and started using sulfa drugs, again I'm no expert and may be using a wrong phrase. The reading also said soldiers in the Civil War used to swallow silver coins to protect themselves from infections. And the people used to put silver coins in milk so it wouldn't spoil so quickly. They say that, if I remember right bacteria and viruses have to create oxygen chemically and if exposed to silver they are unable to produce oxygen and die. The reading also said that when our cells are attacked they turn themselves insideout to expose the attacker to our bodies protection in this case the silver.
This is recalling the best I can reading from over three years ago.
And as a warning to anyone about the silver coins, when I first started making colloidal silver I used coins, when I had the mixture checked it came out with as much zinc and copper as it did silver. Coins are .900% pure, the bars are .999% pure. The people that tested mine said the rattlesnake poison is made of copper and zinc.
Re: sulfa drugs. Sulfa has one great advantage over colloidal silver: it's an organic compound. That means it generally is broken down and excreted out of your body a LOT more easily than colloidal silver. It wasn't a conspiracy--sulfa and antibiotics work a LOT better than colloidal silver (if they didn't, you'd be able to buy antibiotics and sulfa from the health food store, and you could only get colloidal silver by prescription :o)
Colloidal silver is my personal "final protective fire" before going to the doctor.
I don't know where you got the image of a cell turning itself inside out as a defense--a cell that did that would be dead (some defense :o)
Re: rattlesnake venom. It's an organic compound, so it definitely has carbon in it. I do not know if it has copper in it or not. But the story sounds fishy. Also, zinc helps prevent things like dandruff.