slayadragon
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Hi,
In his current newsletter, Dr Cheney mentions Noble Prize winner Professor Luc Montagnier and that he believes that "water is key." Meaning our immune systems can fight anything, including HIV (and infering XMRV) if it is properly nourished (and there is no prexisting immune deficit). Here is a youtube video of Professor Luc Montagnier:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WQoNW7lOnT4
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X_N4zgjF0K0
So I am wondering if he is saying that CFS and or XMRV is only possible with an immune defect?
Elisabeth
One thing that interests me about the water is the idea not that some water is particularly good for us, but that some is particularly bad for us.
About two months ago, I had a very bad experience drinking some tap water (made into tea in a nice restaurant) here in the north suburbs of Chicago. I thus spent a good amount of time looking into issues related to water.
What I found was that cyanobacteria contamination is a potential problem in the water supply even for normal people. For people like me, who are extreme responders to tiny amounts of biotoxins, the idea that it could make me sick in the same way that a bad building makes me sick is wholly unsurprising.
In looking at the web sites for the community where I got sick on the water, I found that the water is always taken from Lake Michigan. However, sometimes it is taken from a relatively clean source way out on the lake. At other times, on maintenance days, it is taken from a source closer to shore where (they admit) contamination with cyanobacteria and zebra mussels is high.
They discuss the cyanobacteria only in terms of taste and odor issues. However, the booklet at the following address discusses the potential for toxins to be present in the drinking water supplies as well:
http://www.HABlegislation.com/system/files/FreshwaterReport_final_2008.pdf
This book was developed to support the renewal of legislation related to toxic cyanobacteria in U.S. waters. Cyanobacteria is considered to be a major hazard even by U.S. government standards, with the ability to harm and kill people as well as animals.
There are no standards regarding cyanobacteria toxin levels in US drinking water supplies, and suppliers are not required to monitor its levels. The World Health Organization does have such standards.
In the early 1990s, a study was done to monitor levels of toxin in various drinking water supplies in various places. Most came up as below WHO levels. More recently, only a few studies have been done, and some of those have come up as above WHO levels. The problem of cyanobacteria in waters has increased dramatically in recent years, and so the possibility that levels in drinking water are higher than the WHO levels in some places is likely, these materials suggest.
Unfortunately, these toxins are not filtered out of water by conventional technology.
My experience here in Chicago suggests that sometimes the drinking water is fine and sometimes it is horrific, in terms of its effects on me. If I were unaware of the fact that I was being affected by it, I would attribute my health effects as random "flares" and never suspect the water.
Summary point: the idea that structured waters can cure CFS or keep XMRV in check is nonsense, obviously.
The idea that bad water can keep XMRV from remaining in check seems to me wholly plausible, based on my own experience.
Takeaway: Unless people are living in places where they are sure that the water is never contaminated with cyanobacteria, choosing a good source of bottled water and avoiding all products made with tap water (in restaurants and at home) may be a smart thing to do.
I concede that not everyone is in a position to move out of moldy homes. But switching to bottled water is something that most people can do, I think.
Best, Lisa