Jim Humble’s “Miracle Mineral Supplement” remains controversial several years after its introduction to the western world’s alternative health movement.
Certain people are bashing it pretty hard, making claims about it doing damage internally to the body.
You can find the active ingredient in his formula…a formula he does not take direct credit for…in over-the-counter mouth washes and similar.
There is no question it is a potent anti-pathogen.
I personally used it for a while, several months worth, several years ago, with some interesting results and all positive that I could discern.
I am forever open-minded about what it may be doing in the body, but since I used it for a while with seeming only benefits, I’m a little suspicious of the people slamming it with vigor, and shouldn’t we assume…don’t we HAVE to assume…that an effort would be put into place to discourage and/or frighten people from using a product that seems to be much more effective than other products, at a fraction the cost of those other products?
Heck, forget FDA or government conspiracy.
How about just plain ole’ fashioned fear of competition from other major players whose income could be hit hard if such a development actually came out that was both far less expensive and far more safe and effective than where the competing corp’s interests currently lay.
It would certainly be worthwhile and easy to produce anti-MMS text and video content to fulfill the only purpose that would need to be fulfilled; that of creating doubt and concern about a product people really don’t know much about to begin with.
Perhaps on some mystical spiritual level, all of this is very much by design…
…Meaning, what WILL people do when faced with the challenge?
Rise to the occasion, or allow the powers that be to do their biding?
What I do know is that I seemed to benefit from it, as have others I have associated with.
People can and do get nauseated at a certain point, and does this reaction indicate more than what we may understand?
Those who choose to experiment with it do so because they know of other people who’ve done so as well, and not only lived to tell about it, but seemed to have benefited from it.
I personally do not use it any longer. I would like to see more at-home research done on it (meaning in the U.S.) as well as hear what others have to say first-hand about their experience with it.
But my main problem with the entire issue is that if something new does exist that truly helps people…the forces in place to stop it, or impact its ability to get into the hands of people who need it, leave me realizing how naive idealism can often be.
Sincerely,
Idealist