yeah I try to avoid aluminum when I can but you have to realize it's like the 5th or 6th most common element on earth. It's the most common metal on the earth's crust, even more common than iron and yes, it's usually in the oxide form so I mean, why all the talk? I do try to avoid it. I don't wrap my food in AL foil but can't be too much about it. If you just take dirt from the forest 1000 years ago there would have been plenty of aluminum salts in that too,
How did we get here? The original conversation was about aluminum toxicity. That's really the question here. I take colloidal minerals having some 92 minerals in it. These are all trace minerals needed by the body for 'Optimal Balance' of the immune system. All people die from mineral deficiency by one means or another leading to disease in many forms.
You mentioned aluminum as the "5th or 6th most common element on Earth". Let's test your premise with another common substance. I'm only doing so to make the point that for all substances there's a threshold when it becomes unsafe and toxic. We could use the example of 'water' as a common substance. Even with water at some point it becomes excessive and toxic. I read a story about a woman in Florida, who thought consuming water would purge her of evil spirits. She drank so much water, her lungs filled with fluid and she died. It's a head-scratcher to me, but it does demonstrate that even water can become unsafe and toxic at some threshold. I've taken colloidal minerals for over 25 years now. One of the 92 trace minerals in it is arsenic. No one disputes arsenic as being toxic. However, as a trace minerals it is actually required by the human body. Iodine is another example. At a certain threshold iodine is also toxic to the human body.
The point being made about aluminum is that our exposure to it has long past the threshold of what is safe.
yeah I try to avoid aluminum when I can but you have to realize it's like the 5th or 6th most common element on earth. It's the most common metal on the earth's crust, even more common than iron and yes, it's usually in the oxide form so I mean, why all the talk? I do try to avoid it. I don't wrap my food in AL foil but can't be too much about it. If you just take dirt from the forest 1000 years ago there would have been plenty of aluminum salts in that too,
How did we get here? The original conversation was about aluminum toxicity. That's really the question here. I take colloidal minerals having some 92 minerals in it. These are all trace minerals needed by the body for 'Optimal Balance' of the immune system. All people die from mineral deficiency by one means or another leading to disease in many forms.
You mentioned aluminum as the "5th or 6th most common element on Earth". Let's test your premise with another common substance. I'm only doing so to make the point that for all substances there's a threshold when it becomes unsafe and toxic. We could use the example of 'water' as a common substance. Even with water at some point it becomes excessive and toxic. I read a story about a woman in Florida, who thought consuming water would purge her of evil spirits. She drank so much water, her lungs filled with fluid and she died. It's a head-scratcher to me, but it does demonstrate that even water can become unsafe and toxic at some threshold. I've taken colloidal minerals for over 25 years now. One of the 92 trace minerals in it is arsenic. No one disputes arsenic as being toxic. However, as a trace minerals it is actually required by the human body. Iodine is another example. At a certain threshold iodine is also toxic to the human body.
The point being made about aluminum is that our exposure to it has long past the threshold of what is safe.