Quite right, so is copper. No sense of using that silver up when far cheaper antibacterial agents like CDS can be used.
Speaking of silver, silver is more rare than gold is. However, gold is regulated to artificially control the price of it. I worked for a start-up company searching for investment money. A gold mining firm wanted to invest in our start-up with gold they had stockpiled that the government forbade them from selling on the market. This is when I learned that there were actual laws/regulations of this type on gold. The investment was a hedge on this stockpile. The investment monies was really a 'fiction' until the stockpile could actually be put on the mark. At the time, gold value was really suppressed and it didn't look like this stockpile would be on the market any time soon.
Do you have a source for silver being more rare than gold?
I couldn't remember off hand where I read this, but I did a cursory search and I .
Maybe this help you.
From the article:
Silver is 17.5 times more abundant in the Earth's crust than gold. But the amount of above-ground gold available far exceeds that of silver.
By "above ground" the author of the article apparently means, stacked in a pile in some vault somewhere. Silver is far more abundant than gold -- it just hasn't been stockpiled in vaults to the same degree.
Chlorine dioxide Solution. It has even a better efficacy and safety record than HCQ, which has long been recognized as one of the safest medicines for over 75 years. HCQ is very inexpensive and CDS is even less expensive than HCQ. See and .
It comes out of your tap for practically free.
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