MMS and Pepsi Therapy? Not At All!

It was with great enthusiasm that I recently learned that the Nesara Status Report, an email periodical whose writer goes by pen name Dove of Oneness with over 26,000 subscribers, planned to devote an entire edition to MMS. Each day more people are learning of this protocol that introduces the chemical compound chlorine dioxide internally to “disinfect” or effectively reduce the human body’s toxic, bacterial, and viral load.

The buzz that was started with Jim Humble’s book has turned into a cacophony, and is steadily progressing to a roar. But given the protocol’s present novelty status, it is of utmost importance that anyone who is disseminating information about it be factual, even in the relaying of others’ facts.

I read the Dove Report with great interest. It quickly sounded like a recap of conversations I had with Jim Humble, culled from two of the four interviews we’ve recorded for my radio show, Talk for Food. However, the instruction below from our second interview “MMS: Simplified”, warranted a double-take:

MMS removes plaque in tiny, tiny bits, much smaller bits than other chelating processes ­which ACCOMPANIED BY A DAILY GLASS OF REGULAR PEPSI results in NO blood clots. Blood tests have proven that drinking one glass of regular Pepsi everyday keeps the blood free of blood clots. Pepsi does this better than any kind of water or Coca Cola. Do NOT use “diet” Pepsi which contains the neuron-toxin aspartame unless you must because of diabetes.

Using MMS and Pepsi can be an extremely important therapy to PREVENT strokes and heart attacks and can be utilized in adults of all ages and especially the middle-aged and elderly.

There was a conversational sequence about Pepsi. However, the above conclusion does NOT reflect Jim Humble’s intention, or advice with respect to using chlorine dioxide (MMS).

While it may be well-meaning, this perception and statement, if not promptly corrected, could be fodder for anyone who would want to discredit the genuine efficacy of internal chlorine dioxide use.

This is not to say that the Dove Report misrepresented the information. It did not. It misinterpreted a passage that was spoken tongue-in-cheek. In spite of Jim’s statement that “blood clots” were most effectively removed (from urine samples) with Pepsi (better than Coke or water), its use was never suggested, and is NOT suggested as a hydration or clot clearing therapy. Adequate hydration was, and is the only answer to adequate hydration, which is even more important during detoxification protocols. Even more important to hydration is the quality of the water that we drink, the more alkaline and smaller the molecular structure, the better.

After listening to the conversation once again, I can see how and why the misinterpretation may have been made, but the implications of not correcting it can be anything but innocent.

For the record, here is a transcript of the actual dialogue.

Abraham: Here’s one thing about the nausea and the (issue of) “die off” if you will. When we’re feeling that nausea, is that meaning that toxins are again released, and are free in the body to settle someplace else, or are they coming out? What’s really happening there?

Humble: Well, all evidence points to the fact that they’re coming out. When the chlorine dioxide oxidizes bacteria or viruses or various different poisons, it changes the characteristics of the poison by a tremendous amount. Evidently the body has the ability to handle oxidized poisons one hell of a lot better than it has the ability to handle the poisons that are there for other reasons, and the evidence is all the people who are getting well.

Whenever you oxidize those poisons, whatever they are, they still seem to be poisons because they make you real nauseous, BUT the body is able to get rid of them. In other words they wash out of the body now, rather than being stuck in various different places where they’re causing damage.

Abraham: Is hydration a specific consideration in terms of flushing, or getting more fluids in to help facilitate the removal of those poisons?

Humble: I think so, you should always be sure to drink plenty of water while you’re doing it but you should always be sure to drink plenty of water anyway.

Abraham: That’s true.

Humble: …and of course, a lot of people have trouble with drinking a lot of water but you need to force it. Take plenty of water! Make sure you get your eight glasses because you need to flush that stuff out and without the eight…

You know we measure people’s urine here (at Dr. Romero’s clinic) and look at it under the dark field microscope; we happen to have one of the best dark field microscopes that’s ever been developed. We can tell you that if you don’t have enough water in your system, your urine shows that you’re getting… you’re having material in it that will cause blood clots.

We verified that because when we went to the blood and took the blood out we could see the small blood clots all over the place when you weren’t drinking enough water. And those small blood clots, whenever they formed into a larger blood clot can cause a stroke and lots and lots of strokes are caused just by people not drinking enough water.

You’ve got to have enough water in your system to keep all of those blood clots dissolved. You’ve got to have plenty of water to keep it dissolved, and if you don’t have enough water in your blood the blood clots start to form. And we proved that time and again by taking the blood out and checking it and drinking plenty of water and then checking it and the clots go away if you’ve got plenty of water in your system. So you’re being dangerous just by not drinking enough water.

Abraham: …and also drinking other liquids that tend to sabotage the body’s ability to actually assimilate the water essentially, so…

Humble: I’ve got some bad news for the “purists” in the crowd.

Abraham: Yes?

Humble: We checked Pepsi and Coke, and all of those. We drank Pepsi and then checked our blood, and then drank Coke and then checked our blood, and then drank water and checked our blood, and believe it or not, the Pepsi dissolved more of the blood clots than anything else. Coke didn’t do very good, but Pepsi really did good, so I found that if I checked my blood and I was taking plenty of water or not getting quite enough water, I could drink a glass of Pepsi and wow (laughing) the clots went away! (Laughing)

Abraham: That’s going to go into the annals for the “Coke vs. Pepsi” crowd big time! (From as far as I can remember there has been a “rivalry” of sorts between people who preferred Coca-Cola and those who preferred Pepsi-Cola, in the same way that there are those who prefer Fords vs. Chevy’s.)

Humble: I don’t know what it is in Pepsi… and it wasn’t just for me but a whole bunch of us checked it to see if that was true and it worked out for everybody.

Abraham: Maybe that’s why, maybe it was “the Pepsi Generation” after all, huh? (Laughing, referring to an advertising campaign for Pepsi Cola of the 1960’s.)

Humble: (Laughing) Maybe so…

I can imagine how an editor, not wanting to “judge” what is already an unorthodox modality, may have chosen to accept everything that was said here on face value. That is admirable. But the noteworthy point about the final exchange about Pepsi use was the high degree of irony, not its use as therapy.

Before writing this reply I spoke to Jim Humble about this on New Year’s morning (2008). He recalled the exchange, and was as amazed at the Dove Report’s interpretation as I was.

In no way did he mean to suggest the use of Pepsi in any form of healing modality. He only pointed out the irony in this very specific instance, which we both recognized and had a nice laugh over. Earlier in the conversation he used irony in another humorous statement that taking MMS would make it easier for us to handle the effects of eating Big Macs. He was not suggesting that people rely on Big Mac diets just because the effects can be counteracted with MMS.

The Dove Report editors are to be commended for seeing the value of MMS and informing their audience. I hope they will also correct this particular misconception.

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7 Thoughts to “MMS and Pepsi Therapy? Not At All!”

  1. well i no that pepsi make tiny holes in the bone and the bone become week and it will break easyly and canot wisk again if its strong it can ficks but to late its week ok

  2. Bill, I have answered your question in my next post. It’s not that the words you’re reading aren’t true. They are. The question is whether drinking Pepsi is an effective approach to address debris in the urine that could become blood clots. It is not.

    http://phaelosopher.wordpress.com/2008/01/03/more-mms-and-pepsi-thoughts/

    Jim Humble never suggested drinking Pepsi. He strongly suggested drinking more water. He simply found irony in that specific Pepsi result.

    Regards,

    Adam…

  3. Barker

    “Humble: We checked Pepsi and Coke, and all of those. We drank Pepsi and then checked our blood, and then drank Coke and then checked our blood, and then drank water and checked our blood, and believe it or not, the Pepsi dissolved more of the blood clots than anything else. Coke didn’t do very good, but Pepsi really did good, so I found that if I checked my blood and I was taking plenty of water or not getting quite enough water, I could drink a glass of Pepsi and wow (laughing) the clots went away! (Laughing)…..
    I don’t know what it is in Pepsi… and it wasn’t just for me but a whole bunch of us checked it to see if that was true and it worked out for everybody.”

    I don’t understand. Is the above true or false?

    Thx,
    Bill

  4. Hello Dawn,

    I responded to your question as a full post. Pepsi should not be considered a viable alternative for adequate hydration. However, we should be more circumspect in the kind and quality of water that we drink.

    Regards,

    Adam…

  5. Dawn Alvarez

    Hi Adam,
    I’m having trouble trying to discern what’s factual and what you’re trying to get across.Is it factual that after drinking Pepsi the clots went away?That’s what I’m reading. If this is true you can’t imagine what a help it would be to the many, many people who suffer from blood clots.
    There is a little known study that was done about using Gatorade to negate blood clots while flying. The Gatorade somehow affects the blood viscosity in the lower extremities.
    Perhaps Pepsi would be an added alternative.
    Regards,Dawn

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