30-07-2012, 02:49 AM
Quote:From article by Jon Rappaport, July 26, 2012, posted by Peter Lemkin on July 27, 2012, Post #141.Here's what I'm inferring from their work. First, the heavy blood trail outside the Aurora theater, in the back parking lot, has been wrongly attributed to a neck wound suffered by one of the victims, Allie Young. When viewed in the hospital, her scar doesn't look serious enough to account for a massive blood loss, and the wound isn't even dressed. Why would anyone lie]about this?
Somewhere I have seen a photo of the neck wound taken three days after the event in the Aurora theater in Colorado. The wound looks like it is 3-4 inches long on the side of the young woman's neck, The skin is indeed knit and it looks as if there is new skin over the cut. So it is well on the way to healing, and does not need dressing since the cut is covered with new skin..
There is a simple explanation for this. It is not a miracle, although it seems like one, and the photograph is not of a hoax. The author of the article, Jon Rappaport, is not familiar with certain advances in medical treatment of wounds. Actually, the treatment is done with gels or creams containing silver in the form of silver salts, such as silver chloride. The silver ion is lethal to bacteria so there is no need for anti-biotic salves or creams. You can buy these preparations in most drug stores off the shelf wherever they have first-aid preparations.
After a debridement (cleansing of the wound), the cream or gel is applied, covered with a band-aid or gauze dressing, and is left alone for three days (the length of time of effectiveness of the cream or salve) and the cream or salve may then be reapplied as needed.
I learned about this a few years ago when I had an abrasion on my lateral ankle bone. Fearing an infection could develop in the bone underneath, my physician referred me to the Wound Clinic at a hospital. There I learned from the treating physician that silver has been used to destroy bacteria for hundreds of years by the Greeks and Romans. They threw silver coins into wine jugs and barrels to keep their wines from turning into vinegar by the action of bacilli. Dairy farmers did the same to keep their milk from souring before refrigeration was widely available in this country and in the world.
Adele

