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#81
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Elimination of mercury
"Mark Probert" wrote in message ... cathyb wrote: Notice how it does not see Mark responding to Jason What are you gibbering on about now, Jan? I was out on the beautiful Atlantic Ocean all day yesterday, from just after sun up to late night. Irrelevant. The FACT is you repsonded to Jason. Busted again. |
#82
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Elimination of mercury
"cathyb" wrote in message oups.com... Jan Drew wrote: "cathyb" wrote in message ups.com... cathyb wrote: Jason Johnson wrote: In article .com, "cathyb" wrote: Jason Johnson wrote: In article , "Vernon" there@atthere wrote: "Jason Johnson" wrote in message ... In article , "Vernon" there@atthere wrote: "Jason Johnson" wrote in message ... In article , Mark Probert wrote: Jason Johnson wrote: In article , Mark Probert wrote: Jason Johnson wrote: In article , Mark Probert wrote: http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/art...gi?artid=3D12= 80342 Abstract Thimerosal is a preservative that has been used in manufacturi= ng vaccines since the 1930s. Reports have indicated that infants = can receive ethylmercury (in the form of thimerosal) at or above t= he U.S. Environmental Protection Agency guidelines for methylmercury exposure, depending on the exact vaccinations, schedule, and size of the infant. In this study we compared the systemic disposition and brain distribution of total and inorganic mercury in infant monkeys after thimerosal exposure with those exposed to MeHg. Monkeys were exposed to MeHg (via oral gavage) or vaccines containing thimerosal (via intramuscular injection) at birth and 1, 2, and 3 weeks of age. Total blood Hg levels were determined 2, 4, and 7 days after each exposure. Total and inorganic brain Hg levels were assessed 2, 4, 7, or = 28 days after the last exposure. The initial and terminal half-life of= Hg in blood after thimerosal exposure was 2.1 and 8.6 days, respectively, which are significantly shorter than the elimination half-life= of Hg after MeHg exposure at 21.5 days. Brain concentrations of tota= l Hg were significantly lower by approximately 3-fold for the thimerosal-exposed monkeys when compared with the MeHg infants, whereas the avera= ge brain-to-blood concentration ratio was slightly higher for the thimerosal-exposed monkeys (3.5 =B1 0.5 vs. 2.5 =B1 0.3). A hi= gher percentage of the total Hg in the brain was in the form of inorganic Hg for the thimerosal-exposed monkeys (34% vs. 7%). The results indicate that MeHg is not a suitable reference for risk assessment from exposure to thimerosal-derived Hg. Knowledge of the toxicokinetics and developmental toxicity of thimerosal is needed to afford a meaningful assessment of the developmental effects of thimerosal-containi= ng vaccines. -------------------- Clearly, the claim by the Mercury Militia that it accumulates after each vaccination is not supported by this research. Ethyl Mercury, = the byproduct of thimerosal metabolism is eliminated rapidly, and = is gone before the next vaccination. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ How was this study funded? Is that the best you can do? Whine about funding. Obviously, you = did not bother to even attempt to read it. You answer is at the link I posted. Do your own homework. Read the study and try to find fault with methodology, etc. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Mark, I read the study that is posted above and have read other research studies that have had similar conclusions. I have also read other research studies that have had different conclusions. I posted the link since the entire study is available. Now, specify what other *studies*, with references, have different findings? I cannot find fault with this studies methodology. Chemistry does not change. Completely independant of taking any side here, Chemistry (the observation of elemental constructs and reactions) always changes. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Vernon, It depends on what Mark meant when he used the term "chemistry". Mark should explain what the meant. Perhaps he was referring to "natural la= ws". No, he was referring to chemistry, which doesn't change. Vernon appears to be incapable of saying that our understanding of chemistry certainly progresses without redefining chemistry. Chemistry, however, does not change. It's been over 25 years since I have taken any science classes but see= m to recall learning that natural laws never change. Jason ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Sort of my point. No, not really. Add what I posted to a constant change in what people, especially college professor book writers define as "Natural laws". Add to that the basic = fact that very few professors have a clue about the various elemental (not chemistry) effects on statistics. Good lord, Vern, you're certainly good at saying nothing. Your link MAY be 100% accurate, but still mostly opinion. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Vernon, Good points. There weren't any points, Jason. Do try and explain what vern's point's were. Because it certainly looked to me as though our little Walter Mitty was just trying to say that people with more education than him simply don't know anything. Again. Many college science professors are teaching lots of false information to their students. Really? They want to be politically correct so teach students that global warming is caused by pollution. Of course, pollution may play a role. However, anyone that has a degree in natural science knows that global warming happened several times in the history of the earth even before mankind was on the earth. Global warming could very well be the result of those same factors that caused global warming before mankind was on this = earth. Any science professor employed by a state university would be fired (by his politically correct bosses) if he taught his or her students that global warming was NOT caused by pollution. Really? If a science professor in a state university developed a theory that conflicted with evolution theory, that professor would be fired by his politically correct bosses. Only if he couldn't back it up with some evidence, Jason. Which, to date, hasn't been done. Academic freedom is no longer a reality. I'm sorry that you feel that people actually having to back up their hypotheses with evidence indicates a lack of academic freedom, Jason. Or more precisely, I'm sorry for you. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ And I also feel sorry for you. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Well, that's nice, but I note you couldn't explain Vincent's "points", or come up with any examples of alleged lack of academic freedom. Oops. Vernon's "points". Like the Oops Jacob........................... I'm sorry, did you actually have a meaning to convey here, Jan? That's nice that you are sorry. My meaning is very clear. If so, I'm afraid you failed again. Remedial English, Jan. NO. I did not failed again. Like the Oops Jacob........................... http://groups.google.com/group/misc....0712d6acb1f7e6 What on earth are you on about, Jan? Mark simply reiterates that he won't engage in discussion with Jacob. Is there a point to your post? The point to my post was showing Mark changed his words. Indeed he responded to Jason. FACT: YOU tried to cover for Mark YOU failed. HarASSer. Note that I merely comment on your posts, and, until such time as you email me, I will not engage in a discussion with you. Note how Mark changes his words...... http://groups.google.com/group/misc....msg/f3db5f3991... Jul 30 2006 12:57 pm BTW, just for your information, if wish to have further discussion with me, I suggest that you email me. mark{dot}probert{at}gmail{dot}com No email, no further responses. == Since then Mark HAS responded. In the same thread. http://groups.google.com/group/misc....msg/fabb845871... Mon, Jul 31 2006 9:38 am [Here is where he changes his words....] Jason, until you email me as I requested, I will merely comment on what you post, and not engage in discussion with you. |
#83
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Elimination of mercury
"Jason Johnson" wrote in message ... In article .com, "cathyb" wrote: Jason Johnson wrote: In article .com, "cathyb" wrote: Jason Johnson wrote: In article , "Vernon" there@atthere wrote: "Jason Johnson" wrote in message ... In article , "Vernon" there@atthere wrote: "Jason Johnson" wrote in message ... In article , Mark Probert wrote: Jason Johnson wrote: In article , Mark Probert wrote: Jason Johnson wrote: In article , Mark Probert wrote: http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/art...gi?artid=3D12= 80342 Abstract Thimerosal is a preservative that has been used in manufacturi= ng vaccines since the 1930s. Reports have indicated that infants = can receive ethylmercury (in the form of thimerosal) at or above t= he U.S. Environmental Protection Agency guidelines for methylmercury exposure, depending on the exact vaccinations, schedule, and size of the infant. In this study we compared the systemic disposition and brain distribution of total and inorganic mercury in infant monkeys after thimerosal exposure with those exposed to MeHg. Monkeys were exposed to MeHg (via oral gavage) or vaccines containing thimerosal (via intramuscular injection) at birth and 1, 2, and 3 weeks of age. Total blood Hg levels were determined 2, 4, and 7 days after each exposure. Total and inorganic brain Hg levels were assessed 2, 4, 7, or = 28 days after the last exposure. The initial and terminal half-life of= Hg in blood after thimerosal exposure was 2.1 and 8.6 days, respectively, which are significantly shorter than the elimination half-life= of Hg after MeHg exposure at 21.5 days. Brain concentrations of tota= l Hg were significantly lower by approximately 3-fold for the thimerosal-exposed monkeys when compared with the MeHg infants, whereas the avera= ge brain-to-blood concentration ratio was slightly higher for the thimerosal-exposed monkeys (3.5 =B1 0.5 vs. 2.5 =B1 0.3). A hi= gher percentage of the total Hg in the brain was in the form of inorganic Hg for the thimerosal-exposed monkeys (34% vs. 7%). The results indicate that MeHg is not a suitable reference for risk assessment from exposure to thimerosal-derived Hg. Knowledge of the toxicokinetics and developmental toxicity of thimerosal is needed to afford a meaningful assessment of the developmental effects of thimerosal-containi= ng vaccines. -------------------- Clearly, the claim by the Mercury Militia that it accumulates after each vaccination is not supported by this research. Ethyl Mercury, = the byproduct of thimerosal metabolism is eliminated rapidly, and = is gone before the next vaccination. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ How was this study funded? Is that the best you can do? Whine about funding. Obviously, you = did not bother to even attempt to read it. You answer is at the link I posted. Do your own homework. Read the study and try to find fault with methodology, etc. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Mark, I read the study that is posted above and have read other research studies that have had similar conclusions. I have also read other research studies that have had different conclusions. I posted the link since the entire study is available. Now, specify what other *studies*, with references, have different findings? I cannot find fault with this studies methodology. Chemistry does not change. Completely independant of taking any side here, Chemistry (the observation of elemental constructs and reactions) always changes. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Vernon, It depends on what Mark meant when he used the term "chemistry". Mark should explain what the meant. Perhaps he was referring to "natural la= ws". No, he was referring to chemistry, which doesn't change. Vernon appears to be incapable of saying that our understanding of chemistry certainly progresses without redefining chemistry. Chemistry, however, does not change. It's been over 25 years since I have taken any science classes but see= m to recall learning that natural laws never change. Jason ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Sort of my point. No, not really. Add what I posted to a constant change in what people, especially college professor book writers define as "Natural laws". Add to that the basic = fact that very few professors have a clue about the various elemental (not chemistry) effects on statistics. Good lord, Vern, you're certainly good at saying nothing. Your link MAY be 100% accurate, but still mostly opinion. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Vernon, Good points. There weren't any points, Jason. Do try and explain what vern's point's were. Because it certainly looked to me as though our little Walter Mitty was just trying to say that people with more education than him simply don't know anything. Again. Many college science professors are teaching lots of false information to their students. Really? They want to be politically correct so teach students that global warming is caused by pollution. Of course, pollution may play a role. However, anyone that has a degree in natural science knows that global warming happened several times in the history of the earth even before mankind was on the earth. Global warming could very well be the result of those same factors that caused global warming before mankind was on this = earth. Any science professor employed by a state university would be fired (by his politically correct bosses) if he taught his or her students that global warming was NOT caused by pollution. Really? If a science professor in a state university developed a theory that conflicted with evolution theory, that professor would be fired by his politically correct bosses. Only if he couldn't back it up with some evidence, Jason. Which, to date, hasn't been done. Academic freedom is no longer a reality. I'm sorry that you feel that people actually having to back up their hypotheses with evidence indicates a lack of academic freedom, Jason. Or more precisely, I'm sorry for you. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ And I also feel sorry for you. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Well, that's nice, but I note you couldn't explain Vincent's "points", or come up with any examples of alleged lack of academic freedom. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Two examples If a college biology professor stated that a "creator" created mankind and lots of plants and animals, I doubt that his political correct bosses and fellow professors would treat him with much respect. I should note that Darwin mentioned that he believed that a creator was involved in the creation of life on this earth in the last paragraph of his famous book. Some high school science teachers have been fired for telling their students that God created life. If a chemistry professor stated that mercury was the cause of autism, I doubt that he would be treated with the same respect that they treated other professors and his bosses. The reason that professors are not fired is usually because of tenure (sp ??). What is your opinion of Dr. Boyd Haley? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Jason ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Wow! Get updated to her repeating of the LIES on her buddy [who lies for her] websites. Then the LIES of the *mad cow disease* |
#84
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Elimination of mercury
Oh, dear, another anecdote. And diversion.
"Peter Bowditch" wrote in message ... "Jan Drew" wrote: Hmm. The WHO A great band when I saw them in 1966, but not so good on their latest tour. I saw a video and I'm glad I didn't waste my money on tickets. Roger's voice has gone off and all that cocaine that Pete is supposed to have inhaled over the years have probably taken its toll as well. It would have been good to see Zak Starkey, though, because I'm still a great fan of his old man. snip irrelevancy Restored what Peter would like to igno Source Average Human Daily Dose of MercuryDental Amalgam 3.0-17.0 ug/day (hgvapor) -- Peter Bowditch Deleted LIES + SPAM. That Peter LIED about. |
#85
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Elimination of mercury
How typical for the HarASSer.
http://www.holisticmed.com/dental/amalgam === http://www.y2khealthanddetox.c*om/mercuryinfo.html [not surprised this disappeared] 14. Both Health Canada (1996) and world Health Organization (1991) consider dental amalgams to be the single largest source of mercury exposure for the general public, with amalgam potentially contributing up to 84% (WHO, 1991) or total daily intake of all forms of mercury from all sources, http://www.valleyadvocate.com/*articles/dental.html [ditto to the above] Autopsy studies in Sweden, Germany and the United States have also established that people with amalgams have significantly more mercury in their brains and kidneys than those without, and the mercury concentration increases with the number of amalgams. Furthermore, the World Health Organization has stated that amalgam fillings constitute the majority of mercury exposure for people with amalgams -- more than every other mercury source combined. This finding has been independently verified by the national insurance program Health Canada and by the National Institutes of Dental Research. === http://www.icnr.com/uam/hgcourse/M4/SciLit5.html The mercury vapor from dental amalgam alone is a bigger source than all the other sources together. "Mark Probert" wrote in message news Max C. wrote: Mark Probert wrote: Hi Maxie....still clueless after months at the rest home? How sad. Do get your money back. Heh... and you're still the same insulting jerk you were when I left. Being wrong all the time must take its toll on your civility. I am sorry that you are offended by my repeating the tone of your post. It's unclear to me how the pro-vaccine group could use this information to their advantage. Here's what I see when I read the above info. Since you possess a homeopathic intellect, let me explain. The study demonstrates: 1. The use of MeHg to determine toxicity of EHg is inappropriate. It doesn't "demonstrate" it... is *SAYS* it. "The results indicate that MeHg is not a suitable reference for risk assessment from exposure to thimerosal-derived Hg." Yes, it says it, because the study demonstrated it. And somehow that means to you that there are no problems with it being in the primates' brains. That is unsafe to assume, given the data in this study. Actually, you ASSumed you know what is means to me. 2. Primates, the order that is above you in evolution, do not store EHg, but rapidly dispose of it, so that by the time the next monthly injection is administered, the remaining thimerosal is at homeopathic levels. In fact, most of it was gone in a flash. So, why is it that you feel the need to insult me to make your point? You deserve it? You initiated it? You do not like getting it back? If you're right, it should be obvious to everyone. Of course, you're wrong, so I guess that's my answer. If that is the best you can do, back to school. Most of it in THE BLOOD was gone in a flash. That's never been up for debate. The problem is the amount that stays in the brain. This study just measured amounts in the blood and assumed that since it dropped quickly that all the mercury had been eliminated. That assumption is, of course, ridiculous. Why is it ridiculous? OK, so they were lower. How would those infants otherwise be exposed to MeHg in the real world? Breathing. Breast milk. etc. Infants are a bit young to want to eat a salmon. I suppose I should have worded my question so even the simplest of minds could understand. I assumed that it was simply worded, since it was your question. The issue is that historically, humans had *very little* natural contact with mercury. Care to prove it? It has only been over the past 150 years or so that direct exposure to mercury has risen due to industry and medical and dental use thereof. So the real question is, how would humans *naturally* have come in contact with the levels of mercury seen today? The problem is industrial exposure and the result of forest fires. The point is that this comparison is ridiculous. No, silly, it is very valid. You can't even read your own post and I'm the silly one? Let me post it again: "The results indicate that MeHg is not a suitable reference for risk assessment from exposure to thimerosal-derived Hg." The point is, I read my own post, and I highlighted the valid and important points. You disagree with the level of importance. The fact that brain concentrations were lower in the thimerosal group means nothing. You would like to have it that way, but, not everyone gets what they like. Feel free to prove me wrong using real data. Your opinion on the matter is meaningless. Same for you. They're STILL HIGHER if you compare them to a group that received no mercury at all. Why in the world would this stuy compare a thimerosal group with a MeHg group when their shouldn't be any MeHg groups in the real world? Because current toxicological standards are based on MeHg, and knowing what the toxicology of other compounds is important. It is called knowledge. You can look that up in the dictionary. It is an English word. Basically what you're saying here is that you've posted information that isn't real information. It is real information. Sorry that you do not see it. In the words of the very people that posted the study, "The results indicate that MeHg is not a suitable reference for risk assessment from exposure to thimerosal-derived Hg." So, feel free to post data the DOES provide EHg data. See if it exists. Go find it. Shouldn't the point of the study be to compare real world scenarios? Since both EHg and MeHg exist in the real world, that is what was done. But MeHg isn't what's being injected into people now is it? This study was a waste of funding and primates. No, silly. It was to disprove the whining of the Bozo Brigade of the Mercury Militia. It is not funny if you stop to think about it for a few minutes. I would suggest that you call the researchers and ask to borrow some of the primate brains that were homogenized. You're the one trying to make a point here. I would suggest *YOU* call the researchers. You are the one in need. Could that be because the brain has a much harder time getting rid of the mercury than the blood? Also, shouldn't the fact that the mercury in the brains of the thimerosal group was mostly inorganic be a concern? I thought you pro-vaccine guys were constantly saying that the end Hg product from thimerosal was all organic. I do not recall that. However, you are missing a fundamental idea. Try reading the entire study at the link I posted. You may even be able to figure it out for yourself. Already did... long before you posted it here. You see, unlike you, I have an open mind on this issue. So do I. However, my mind is not as open as yours. Yours is so open, your brain fell out. That's why I was surprised that you'd try to post this study *in support* of vaccines, when it has no relevance on the subject. You're just grasping for something to be right about. It's quite humorous. To you. Intelligent people think otherwise. Incorrect. You did not take that remedial reading comprehension course at the rest home while you were gone. Feel free to "prove" me incorrect with real data. Your opinion is meaningless. I have proven you wrong. You have been proven consistently wrong. You should pick apart your studies a little better before posting them. I know what the study says and fully understand it. Sad that you don't. LOL!!!!!!!!!! You funny guy! |
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Elimination of mercury
Funny. How Mark goes the round about way to respond to Jason.
Poor Mark. "Mark Probert" wrote in message ... Vernon wrote: "Jason Johnson" wrote in message ... In article , Mark Probert wrote: Jason Johnson wrote: In article , Mark Probert wrote: Jason Johnson wrote: In article , Mark Probert wrote: http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/art...?artid=1280342 Abstract Thimerosal is a preservative that has been used in manufacturing vaccines since the 1930s. Reports have indicated that infants can receive ethylmercury (in the form of thimerosal) at or above the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency guidelines for methylmercury exposure, depending on the exact vaccinations, schedule, and size of the infant. In this study we compared the systemic disposition and brain distribution of total and inorganic mercury in infant monkeys after thimerosal exposure with those exposed to MeHg. Monkeys were exposed to MeHg (via oral gavage) or vaccines containing thimerosal (via intramuscular injection) at birth and 1, 2, and 3 weeks of age. Total blood Hg levels were determined 2, 4, and 7 days after each exposure. Total and inorganic brain Hg levels were assessed 2, 4, 7, or 28 days after the last exposure. The initial and terminal half-life of Hg in blood after thimerosal exposure was 2.1 and 8.6 days, respectively, which are significantly shorter than the elimination half-life of Hg after MeHg exposure at 21.5 days. Brain concentrations of total Hg were significantly lower by approximately 3-fold for the thimerosal-exposed monkeys when compared with the MeHg infants, whereas the average brain-to-blood concentration ratio was slightly higher for the thimerosal-exposed monkeys (3.5 ± 0.5 vs. 2.5 ± 0.3). A higher percentage of the total Hg in the brain was in the form of inorganic Hg for the thimerosal-exposed monkeys (34% vs. 7%). The results indicate that MeHg is not a suitable reference for risk assessment from exposure to thimerosal-derived Hg. Knowledge of the toxicokinetics and developmental toxicity of thimerosal is needed to afford a meaningful assessment of the developmental effects of thimerosal-containing vaccines. -------------------- Clearly, the claim by the Mercury Militia that it accumulates after each vaccination is not supported by this research. Ethyl Mercury, the byproduct of thimerosal metabolism is eliminated rapidly, and is gone before the next vaccination. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ How was this study funded? Is that the best you can do? Whine about funding. Obviously, you did not bother to even attempt to read it. You answer is at the link I posted. Do your own homework. Read the study and try to find fault with methodology, etc. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Mark, I read the study that is posted above and have read other research studies that have had similar conclusions. I have also read other research studies that have had different conclusions. I posted the link since the entire study is available. Now, specify what other *studies*, with references, have different findings? I cannot find fault with this studies methodology. Chemistry does not change. Completely independant of taking any side here, Chemistry (the observation of elemental constructs and reactions) always changes. Funny. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Mark, I read various research studies but only saved one report which mentioned various studies showing that thimerosal was the cause of autism. I seem to recall that you read that report which I have posted in this newsgroup several different times and you discounted every one of those studies. Upon request, I will post it again since I saved it. I read the study results that you posted above and I will NOT discount it since I have NEVER done any research related to the genes of monkeys. It's my opinion that children that develop autism have some defective genes. Upon request, I can post a research study that mentions that subject. I believe that the defective genes make it impossible for children to process mercury which is the reason they develop autism when exposed to mercury. I don't know whether monkeys have those same defective genes. I do believe that some of the studies that indicate that thimerosal does NOT cause autism did NOT include any children in those studies that had the defective genes. Only a small number of children have the defective genes. jason ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
#87
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Elimination of mercury
In article , "Jan Drew"
wrote: "Jason Johnson" wrote in message ... In article .com, "cathyb" wrote: Jason Johnson wrote: In article .com, "cathyb" wrote: Jason Johnson wrote: In article , "Vernon" there@atthere wrote: "Jason Johnson" wrote in message ... In article , "Vernon" there@atthere wrote: "Jason Johnson" wrote in message ... In article , Mark Probert wrote: Jason Johnson wrote: In article , Mark Probert wrote: Jason Johnson wrote: In article , Mark Probert wrote: http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/art...gi?artid=3D12= 80342 Abstract Thimerosal is a preservative that has been used in manufacturi= ng vaccines since the 1930s. Reports have indicated that infants = can receive ethylmercury (in the form of thimerosal) at or above t= he U.S. Environmental Protection Agency guidelines for methylmercury exposure, depending on the exact vaccinations, schedule, and size of the infant. In this study we compared the systemic disposition and brain distribution of total and inorganic mercury in infant monkeys after thimerosal exposure with those exposed to MeHg. Monkeys were exposed to MeHg (via oral gavage) or vaccines containing thimerosal (via intramuscular injection) at birth and 1, 2, and 3 weeks of age. Total blood Hg levels were determined 2, 4, and 7 days after each exposure. Total and inorganic brain Hg levels were assessed 2, 4, 7, or = 28 days after the last exposure. The initial and terminal half-life of= Hg in blood after thimerosal exposure was 2.1 and 8.6 days, respectively, which are significantly shorter than the elimination half-life= of Hg after MeHg exposure at 21.5 days. Brain concentrations of tota= l Hg were significantly lower by approximately 3-fold for the thimerosal-exposed monkeys when compared with the MeHg infants, whereas the avera= ge brain-to-blood concentration ratio was slightly higher for the thimerosal-exposed monkeys (3.5 =B1 0.5 vs. 2.5 =B1 0.3). A hi= gher percentage of the total Hg in the brain was in the form of inorganic Hg for the thimerosal-exposed monkeys (34% vs. 7%). The results indicate that MeHg is not a suitable reference for risk assessment from exposure to thimerosal-derived Hg. Knowledge of the toxicokinetics and developmental toxicity of thimerosal is needed to afford a meaningful assessment of the developmental effects of thimerosal-containi= ng vaccines. -------------------- Clearly, the claim by the Mercury Militia that it accumulates after each vaccination is not supported by this research. Ethyl Mercury, = the byproduct of thimerosal metabolism is eliminated rapidly, and = is gone before the next vaccination. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ How was this study funded? Is that the best you can do? Whine about funding. Obviously, you = did not bother to even attempt to read it. You answer is at the link I posted. Do your own homework. Read the study and try to find fault with methodology, etc. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Mark, I read the study that is posted above and have read other research studies that have had similar conclusions. I have also read other research studies that have had different conclusions. I posted the link since the entire study is available. Now, specify what other *studies*, with references, have different findings? I cannot find fault with this studies methodology. Chemistry does not change. Completely independant of taking any side here, Chemistry (the observation of elemental constructs and reactions) always changes. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Vernon, It depends on what Mark meant when he used the term "chemistry". Mark should explain what the meant. Perhaps he was referring to "natural la= ws". No, he was referring to chemistry, which doesn't change. Vernon appears to be incapable of saying that our understanding of chemistry certainly progresses without redefining chemistry. Chemistry, however, does not change. It's been over 25 years since I have taken any science classes but see= m to recall learning that natural laws never change. Jason ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Sort of my point. No, not really. Add what I posted to a constant change in what people, especially college professor book writers define as "Natural laws". Add to that the basic = fact that very few professors have a clue about the various elemental (not chemistry) effects on statistics. Good lord, Vern, you're certainly good at saying nothing. Your link MAY be 100% accurate, but still mostly opinion. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Vernon, Good points. There weren't any points, Jason. Do try and explain what vern's point's were. Because it certainly looked to me as though our little Walter Mitty was just trying to say that people with more education than him simply don't know anything. Again. Many college science professors are teaching lots of false information to their students. Really? They want to be politically correct so teach students that global warming is caused by pollution. Of course, pollution may play a role. However, anyone that has a degree in natural science knows that global warming happened several times in the history of the earth even before mankind was on the earth. Global warming could very well be the result of those same factors that caused global warming before mankind was on this = earth. Any science professor employed by a state university would be fired (by his politically correct bosses) if he taught his or her students that global warming was NOT caused by pollution. Really? If a science professor in a state university developed a theory that conflicted with evolution theory, that professor would be fired by his politically correct bosses. Only if he couldn't back it up with some evidence, Jason. Which, to date, hasn't been done. Academic freedom is no longer a reality. I'm sorry that you feel that people actually having to back up their hypotheses with evidence indicates a lack of academic freedom, Jason. Or more precisely, I'm sorry for you. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ And I also feel sorry for you. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Well, that's nice, but I note you couldn't explain Vincent's "points", or come up with any examples of alleged lack of academic freedom. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Two examples If a college biology professor stated that a "creator" created mankind and lots of plants and animals, I doubt that his political correct bosses and fellow professors would treat him with much respect. I should note that Darwin mentioned that he believed that a creator was involved in the creation of life on this earth in the last paragraph of his famous book. Some high school science teachers have been fired for telling their students that God created life. If a chemistry professor stated that mercury was the cause of autism, I doubt that he would be treated with the same respect that they treated other professors and his bosses. The reason that professors are not fired is usually because of tenure (sp ??). What is your opinion of Dr. Boyd Haley? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Jason ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Wow! Get updated to her repeating of the LIES on her buddy [who lies for her] websites. Then the LIES of the *mad cow disease* ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Jan, I try to avoid getting distracted from subjects other than mercury, aluminum and vaccines. I was distracted when someone confused me by making use of a three dollar word for rain water and discussing pure sodium. I should not have even mentioned academic freedom in a post. Question: Is Dr. Boyd Haley a chemistry professor in a state college? Is he the person that believes that mercury is the cause of autism? Don't let anyone distract you. Check your most recent posts to determine whether or not mercury, aluminum or vaccines are mentioned in any of those posts. Have you been distracted? Have a great week. Jason ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Jason |
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Elimination of mercury
"Mark Probert" wrote in message ... cathyb wrote: Notice how it does not see Mark responding to Jason What are you gibbering on about now, Jan? I was out on the beautiful Atlantic Ocean all day yesterday, from just after sun up to late night. There a couple people here who wish you would go out on the Atlantic off the Florida coast. |
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Elimination of mercury
In article , "Vernon"
there@atthere wrote: "Mark Probert" wrote in message ... cathyb wrote: Notice how it does not see Mark responding to Jason What are you gibbering on about now, Jan? I was out on the beautiful Atlantic Ocean all day yesterday, from just after sun up to late night. There a couple people here who wish you would go out on the Atlantic off the Florida coast. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Vernon, Not me. I enjoy discussing mercury, aluminum and vaccines with Mark. I love the way he discounts research studies that do not support his point of view. I try to keep an open mind related to research studies regardless of whether they support my point of view. To be honest: I don't trust research studies that are funded by drug companies in relation to medications or vaccines by that same drug company. Jason ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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Elimination of mercury
Jason Johnson wrote: In article .com, "cathyb" wrote: Jason Johnson wrote: In article .com, "cathyb" wrote: Jason Johnson wrote: In article , "Vernon" there@atthere wrote: "Jason Johnson" wrote in message ... In article , "Vernon" there@atthere wrote: "Jason Johnson" wrote in message ... In article , Mark Probert wrote: Jason Johnson wrote: In article , Mark Probert wrote: Jason Johnson wrote: In article , Mark Probert wrote: http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/art...gi?artid=3D12= 80342 Abstract Thimerosal is a preservative that has been used in manufacturi= ng vaccines since the 1930s. Reports have indicated that infants = can receive ethylmercury (in the form of thimerosal) at or above t= he U.S. Environmental Protection Agency guidelines for methylmercury exposure, depending on the exact vaccinations, schedule, and size of the infant. In this study we compared the systemic disposition and brain distribution of total and inorganic mercury in infant monkeys after thimerosal exposure with those exposed to MeHg. Monkeys were exposed to MeHg (via oral gavage) or vaccines containing thimerosal (via intramuscular injection) at birth and 1, 2, and 3 weeks of age. Total blood Hg levels were determined 2, 4, and 7 days after each exposure. Total and inorganic brain Hg levels were assessed 2, 4, 7, or = 28 days after the last exposure. The initial and terminal half-life of= Hg in blood after thimerosal exposure was 2.1 and 8.6 days, respectively, which are significantly shorter than the elimination half-life= of Hg after MeHg exposure at 21.5 days. Brain concentrations of tota= l Hg were significantly lower by approximately 3-fold for the thimerosal-exposed monkeys when compared with the MeHg infants, whereas the avera= ge brain-to-blood concentration ratio was slightly higher for the thimerosal-exposed monkeys (3.5 =B1 0.5 vs. 2.5 =B1 0.3). A hi= gher percentage of the total Hg in the brain was in the form of inorganic Hg for the thimerosal-exposed monkeys (34% vs. 7%). The results indicate that MeHg is not a suitable reference for risk assessment from exposure to thimerosal-derived Hg. Knowledge of the toxicokinetics and developmental toxicity of thimerosal is needed to afford a meaningful assessment of the developmental effects of thimerosal-containi= ng vaccines. -------------------- Clearly, the claim by the Mercury Militia that it accumulates after each vaccination is not supported by this research. Ethyl Mercury, = the byproduct of thimerosal metabolism is eliminated rapidly, and = is gone before the next vaccination. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ How was this study funded? Is that the best you can do? Whine about funding. Obviously, you = did not bother to even attempt to read it. You answer is at the link I posted. Do your own homework. Read the study and try to find fault with methodology, etc. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Mark, I read the study that is posted above and have read other research studies that have had similar conclusions. I have also read other research studies that have had different conclusions. I posted the link since the entire study is available. Now, specify what other *studies*, with references, have different findings? I cannot find fault with this studies methodology. Chemistry does not change. Completely independant of taking any side here, Chemistry (the observation of elemental constructs and reactions) always changes. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Vernon, It depends on what Mark meant when he used the term "chemistry". Mark should explain what the meant. Perhaps he was referring to "natural la= ws". No, he was referring to chemistry, which doesn't change. Vernon appears to be incapable of saying that our understanding of chemistry certainly progresses without redefining chemistry. Chemistry, however, does not change. It's been over 25 years since I have taken any science classes but see= m to recall learning that natural laws never change. Jason ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Sort of my point. No, not really. Add what I posted to a constant change in what people, especially college professor book writers define as "Natural laws". Add to that the basic = fact that very few professors have a clue about the various elemental (not chemistry) effects on statistics. Good lord, Vern, you're certainly good at saying nothing. Your link MAY be 100% accurate, but still mostly opinion. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Vernon, Good points. There weren't any points, Jason. Do try and explain what vern's point's were. Because it certainly looked to me as though our little Walter Mitty was just trying to say that people with more education than him simply don't know anything. Again. Many college science professors are teaching lots of false information to their students. Really? They want to be politically correct so teach students that global warming is caused by pollution. Of course, pollution may play a role. However, anyone that has a degree in natural science knows that global warming happened several times in the history of the earth even before mankind was on the earth. Global warming could very well be the result of those same factors that caused global warming before mankind was on this = earth. Any science professor employed by a state university would be fired (by his politically correct bosses) if he taught his or her students that global warming was NOT caused by pollution. Really? If a science professor in a state university developed a theory that conflicted with evolution theory, that professor would be fired by his politically correct bosses. Only if he couldn't back it up with some evidence, Jason. Which, to date, hasn't been done. Academic freedom is no longer a reality. I'm sorry that you feel that people actually having to back up their hypotheses with evidence indicates a lack of academic freedom, Jason. Or more precisely, I'm sorry for you. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ And I also feel sorry for you. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Well, that's nice, but I note you couldn't explain Vincent's "points", or come up with any examples of alleged lack of academic freedom. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Two examples If a college biology professor stated that a "creator" created mankind and lots of plants and animals, I doubt that his political correct bosses and fellow professors would treat him with much respect. I should note that Darwin mentioned that he believed that a creator was involved in the creation of life on this earth in the last paragraph of his famous book. Some high school science teachers have been fired for telling their students that God created life. If the professor came up with some evidence for his contention, he would be treated with respect; this hasn't so far happened. He would, quite rightly, be treated with derision in any science department if he tried to make such a claim without evidence. If a chemistry professor stated that mercury was the cause of autism, I doubt that he would be treated with the same respect that they treated other professors and his bosses. If the professor came up with some evidence for his contention, he would be treated with respect; this hasn't so far happened. He would, quite rightly, be treated with derision in any science department if he tried to make such a claim without evidence. The reason that professors are not fired is usually because of tenure (sp ??). Oh, I see. You have no example of anyone being fired for teaching that pollution doesn't cause global warming. Not surprising; it's not a done deal and there are arguments and research showing that it does, and that it's negligible in the big scheme of climate change. I know little about it, but the consensus seems to be moving steadily towards pollution being a major problem. But basically, you were bull****ting when you wrote that someone would be fired for disagreeing with that consensus. What is your opinion of Dr. Boyd Haley? Very low indeed. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Jason ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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