@Kingb
I caught the sarcasm, but I didn't wish to debate the idea that HIV nor Corona virus being a fraud. The PCR test can rule out the possibility of an MRSA infection, probably others too. It's just not good at definitely detecting MRSA. But a bad positive test doesn't prove that HIV or Corona are hoaxes. I think the number people dead from them are enough proof of their existence and it pays to be cautious rather than catching viral pneumonia. MRSA is pretty real as well. Doctors have refused to prescribe me antibiotics just because of it.
Quick CDS, yes, the bento box. CLO2 showed me that some time ago. I couldn't find one locally. I may try it, it's just that right now I'm mostly using CDH externally in a spray bottle and with cotton swabs. I've tried taking CDS internally but couldn't tell if it was doing much for the out breaks.
Okay, Mexico is out of it's mind! But those prices are actually in pesos. Like,
right here
a bottle of hershey's chocolate syrup is $134 pesos, but converted to USD it's
$6.72. So that $590 liter of hydrochloric acid is actually $
38.09 USD. And that $590 Clorito de Sodio y Activador is
$29.60 USD. Mexicans
don't get paid very much
in pesos relative to that though and that's likely what invites all the corruption.
Indeed, here are also 31 proofs to find that MMS helps against MRSA.
mmstestimonials.co/
respectively here
mmstestimonials.co/mrsa-staph
Yes, I've been all over that site, it's a great place to find hope for curing whatever disease you suffer from. I especially liked this one:
mmstestimonials.co/mrsa-staph/staph-infection-cure-with-mms . Anecdotal evidence is nice, but most of the time it's hard to find pictures of healing progress. On top of that, it's also possible that sometimes people can misdiagnose themselves, try MMS, watch it go away easily, and say that it cured what they believed they had without going to a doctor or getting a lab test done. A lot of people tend to mistake MRSA for a "spider bite" for example. But I'm not saying that doctors are the best way either. Doctors can be egotistical, greedy, and extremely dismissive at times. What I do like to trust is when something is experimentally tested, like all those clinical trials and studies on pubmed and other sites. It's very dry reading, but they leave out a lot of the political bias and personal bias and just show what they found. The photos and description of the infected finger healing up are a great example of that too.