Generally when I start acting this way, or when conversations get to this point, I realize I am on the wrong track. It is one reason I did not push any harder when talking to Mrs. Riverra. I looked again, and Wikipedia stated that though it was "relatively," toxic, it broke down into Chloride, which is not so toxic, not toxic at all really. Wanting a better source, I found one, which stated the same thing. That is a good sign considering Chlorate accounts for only 30% or less of what CD breaks down into. The rest is either already Chloride or Chlorite which breaks down into Chloride. The Sodium Stand by Daniel Mentioned is left over from the original Sodium Chloride and the oxygen is from the Chlorite and Chlorate that CD breaks down into, as well as the CD itself I would assume. So now everything is accounted for. You could also argue that as drinking water is used all the time and as CD is not meant to be taken at the same levels all the time, that the comparison is not fair. As far as the LD50, that could be accounted for by the fact that you don't take a lot of CD all the time. Even higher dose protocols are only meant to be temporary and kept up until symptoms are resolved. Then a maintenance dose is used, and it is a lot lower than what that article was talking about. I also would want to look into how the animals were administered the CD / Chlorite / Chlorate. Further, the WHO reported the NIH study and looking over their report helped me to realize that I was probably overly focused on the increased two year mortality rate in animals and not on the fact that in man, even at protocol 1000 levels (24 mg / Liter) There were no concerning trends. This also shows that there is no way that CD ever, at two drops, could have stopped oxygen transport in Silvie Nash, in 45% of that woman's blood, the only one I have ever heard associated with death from MMS. If it were it should have caused it in one of them, but no significant trends were observed. Again I would want to see how it was administered in the animal cases, for instance straight or in liquid and dose, because CD is dilute and isn't meant to be used at high doses forever and Chlorite and Chlorate aren't used at all, except topically to treat burns and insect bites, and even then Chlorite and it's salts is in solution and washed off within five minutes. In fact if the need for that, for high dose CD treatment occurs over long periods of time Jim Humble states it is likely something else going on, as he found out when suffering from low oxygen levels and dust in an apartment he was using, an experience he shares in The Master Mineral Solution of the Third Millennium.
Heero Yuy
Heero