Hulda R. Clark - The Cure For All Diseases (1995)

(pavlina) #1
THE CURE FOR ALL DISEASES

tect as little as 100 fg/ml (femtograms per milliliter). A milliliter
is about as big as a pea, and a femtogram is
1/1,000,000,000,000,000th (10-15) of a gram!



  1. Rinse the glass cup measure with filtered water and put one
    half teaspoon of table salt in it. Fill to one cup, stirring with
    a plastic spoon. What concentration is this? A teaspoon is
    about 5 grams, a cup is about 230 ml (milliliters), therefore
    the starting concentration is about 2½ (2.5) gm per 230 ml,
    or .01 gm/ml (we will discuss the amount of error later).

  2. Label one clean plastic spoon “water” and use it to put nine
    spoonfuls of filtered water in a clean glass bottle. Use
    another plastic spoon to transfer one spoonful of the .01
    gm/ml salt solution in the cup measure to the glass bottle,
    stir, then discard the spoon. The glass bottle now has a 1 in
    10 dilution, and its concentration is one tenth the original,
    or .001 gm/ml.

  3. Use the “water” spoon to put nine spoonfuls of filtered
    water in bottle #2. Use a new spoon to transfer a spoonful
    of salt solution from bottle #1 to bottle #2 and stir briefly
    (never shake). Label bottle #2 “.0001 gm/ml”.

  4. Repeat with remaining bottles. Bottle #13 would therefore
    be labeled “.000000000000001 gm/ml.” This is 10-15
    gm/ml, or 1 femtogram/ml.

  5. Do the skin test with water from bottle #13 as in Lesson
    Five. If you can detect this, you are one hundred times as
    sensitive as an ELISA assay (and you should make a bottle
    #14 and continue if you are curious how good your
    sensitivity can get). If you can not, try to detect water from
    bottle #12 (ten times as sensitive as ELISA). Continue until
    you reach a bottle you can detect.


Calculate the error for your experiment by assuming you
could be off by as much as 10% when measuring the salt and

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