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#22. Quinton Marine Plasma
If I had cancer, I would be sure to take Quinton Marine Plasma. It’s one of the
most nurturing and healing fluids on God’s Earth.
What is Quinton?
Sea water!
Well, not just any old sea water. It’s special vortex water from certain blooms in
the oceans, that are very rich in nutrients. It seems to have energetic properties
too, above and beyond the mere presence of rare minerals etc.
Let me back up a tad, before we come to the product. The floor of our oceans is
indescribably rich in minerals. Think about this: EVERYTHING that ever lived and
died goes into the water system, down the rivers and ultimately finds it way to
the ocean. Added to that is all the ocean life which lives, dies and is recycled, all
the plankton, corals, fish, feces, EVERYTHING, which falls to the ocean floor as
organic debris.
There is thick mud at the bottom of the ocean that contains dense nutrients and
some minerals that are otherwise incredibly rare, like iridium, osmium, yttrium
and so on.
But it doesn’t just stay on the ocean bed, lost to the biosystem. Quite the
contrary. This nourishing mud is carried around the ocean floor by submarine
currents which have only recently begun to be understood. There are certain
places where this nutrient deposit wells up to the surface. Giant surges of ocean
currents that we call convergences stir up the seas and bring the nutrients back
to the bio system.
The polar oceans are classic sites for this. The huge bloom of algae that takes
place in the Arctic and Antarctic every year yields a staggering abundance of
life where the ocean, literally, changes color due to the density of life it carries.
Waters turn red with krill and other plankton.
This bloom is so rich it feeds the greatest animals of all: the whales. So much
nutrition is absorbed into the biosystem at these sites in the summer time that
whales can double their weight and deposit enough fat or blubber to live on it
through the winter months.
But there are the birds, fishes and other animals too, so that the polar oceans