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<blockquote data-quote="Simeon_Strangelight" data-source="post: 1306396" data-attributes="member: 6783"><p><strong>RE: Health remedies and prevention for Coronavirus / flu</strong></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>I agree - no idea what you are doing. I am not even putting it in water - just taking some and drinking water. I don't even know how it could stay on the teeth. If it does, then takea different version, because I never even heard or read about it. MDs who treated thousands of patients haven't experienced anything about it. </p><p></p><p>I only saw how people did stupid shit like taking spoonfuls of vitamin c and mixing it with toxic bodybuilder workout powders that were filled with lots of interesting toxins - toxins which sometimes interact with vitamin C. And the best part is the guy taking huge doses daily because he thought more is more healthy - yeah just mix it with aspartame and benzoates which dissolve into benezes right away in your stomach. </p><p></p><p>All people I know and me just take a gulp of pure powder, then drink water afterwards - it's more like eating a pill. The citric taste isn't bad. </p><p></p><p>Whether sodium ascorbate has a lower absorption rate is irrelevant. You still take huge doses of vit c and it won't make a difference. And again - the majority won't do better with sodium ascorbate, but will have better reactions with pure l-ascorbic acid - the same stuff that MDs have been using since the 1950s. </p><p></p><p>It's exceedingly safe, but of course you can't take it with some toxic stuff and then blame vit c for the toxic stuff. Benzoates for example turn to benzene with any acids taken with it.</p><p></p><p>As for teeth studies that try to link it to vitamin C. Chewable vitamins are tricky since 98% of products are toxic. I wouldn't give it to my dog. And if you pick one of the good producers, then maybe you could do a study, but better account for dietary habits of that person too and check for sugar and fructose first. </p><p></p><p><a href="http://www.doctoryourself.com/toothbrush.html" target="_blank">http://www.doctoryourself.com/toothbrush.html</a></p><p></p><p>Here at the bottom you will find a couple dozen studies that already took a good glance at vitamin C and oral health. Turns out that vitamin C plasma levels improve oral health - nothing was found of it eroding enamel. </p><p></p><p>Also funny in the article above they mix vitamin C together with various sugary foods treating it as one category. Gummi bears and vitamin C chewables - the same. So my guess is that they picked the toxic Flintstone chewables as their test subject. Sure - if you want to poison your kid slowly with that crap....</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Simeon_Strangelight, post: 1306396, member: 6783"] [b]RE: Health remedies and prevention for Coronavirus / flu[/b] I agree - no idea what you are doing. I am not even putting it in water - just taking some and drinking water. I don't even know how it could stay on the teeth. If it does, then takea different version, because I never even heard or read about it. MDs who treated thousands of patients haven't experienced anything about it. I only saw how people did stupid shit like taking spoonfuls of vitamin c and mixing it with toxic bodybuilder workout powders that were filled with lots of interesting toxins - toxins which sometimes interact with vitamin C. And the best part is the guy taking huge doses daily because he thought more is more healthy - yeah just mix it with aspartame and benzoates which dissolve into benezes right away in your stomach. All people I know and me just take a gulp of pure powder, then drink water afterwards - it's more like eating a pill. The citric taste isn't bad. Whether sodium ascorbate has a lower absorption rate is irrelevant. You still take huge doses of vit c and it won't make a difference. And again - the majority won't do better with sodium ascorbate, but will have better reactions with pure l-ascorbic acid - the same stuff that MDs have been using since the 1950s. It's exceedingly safe, but of course you can't take it with some toxic stuff and then blame vit c for the toxic stuff. Benzoates for example turn to benzene with any acids taken with it. As for teeth studies that try to link it to vitamin C. Chewable vitamins are tricky since 98% of products are toxic. I wouldn't give it to my dog. And if you pick one of the good producers, then maybe you could do a study, but better account for dietary habits of that person too and check for sugar and fructose first. [URL]http://www.doctoryourself.com/toothbrush.html[/URL] Here at the bottom you will find a couple dozen studies that already took a good glance at vitamin C and oral health. Turns out that vitamin C plasma levels improve oral health - nothing was found of it eroding enamel. Also funny in the article above they mix vitamin C together with various sugary foods treating it as one category. Gummi bears and vitamin C chewables - the same. So my guess is that they picked the toxic Flintstone chewables as their test subject. Sure - if you want to poison your kid slowly with that crap.... [/QUOTE]
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