Ebola and Colloidal Silver Coverup

During the Ebola crisis, it was claimed that certain organizations in the United States had rushed emergency supplies of colloidal silver to Ebola-stricken countries, only to have those supplies stopped at the border and turned back by international authorities acting at the behest of the World Health Organization (WHO), the CDC and the FDA.

This claim turned out to be true. And a public uproar ensued over the audacity of western medical bureaucrats stopping foreign countries suffering under a dire infectious disease crisis from trying a safe, natural remedy against the Ebola virus – especially since conventional western medicine was failing spectacularly against the virus.

As a result of the public uproar, almost overnight, a major news media campaign was launched labeling colloidal silver a “quack remedy with no proven efficacy.”

Immediately, newspapers from Britain to America picked up and spread the story that people were trying to “take advantage of poor Ebola victims” by selling them a “snake oil cure.” Over a period of several weeks an unprecedented scorched earth campaign was conducted by the world news media, vilifying and ridiculing anyone who advocated the use of colloidal silver for Ebola in West Africa, labeling them “unscrupulous profiteers.”

But the reality was that no one was trying to sell colloidal silver to Ebola victims. No one at all. In fact, the massive supply of colloidal silver that was sent to Ebola-stricken countries was donated at no cost by several charitable groups whose proprietors were knowledgeable in colloidal silver usage, and who were acting out of the goodness of their own hearts to help save people who were clearly dying in droves in spite of being treated by some of western medicine’s best infectious disease specialists.

The colloidal silver was sent free to doctors from Ebola-stricken countries who had specifically requested it for themselves and for their Ebola-stricken patients. But U.S. and global medical authorities did their best to block the delivery of the donated colloidal silver, and then use the corporate news media to ridicule the idea of even thinking about using colloidal silver against Ebola.

Fortunately, however, some of the colloidal silver actually made it through the blockade. And while western news sources continued to report on the supposed futility of trying to use colloidal silver to heal Ebola patients, newspapers from the Ebola-stricken countries were telling a completely different story – indeed, a quite amazing story. They claimed the colloidal silver was actually working against Ebola.

In fact, according to preliminary reports from the region, not only did the silver treatment work — with as many as 500 Ebola patients getting better after using the small amount of donated colloidal silver that made it through the blockade — but the government of Sierra Leone was so impressed with the results they actually approved the colloidal silver as an official Ebola treatment!