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Episode 4: Spoiled Rotten<br />

Mike Adams: I can take strawberries, I can put <strong>the</strong>m, mix nitric acid.<br />

We’re talking like 70 percent nitric acid, very strong oxidizer that would<br />

burn <strong>the</strong> skin right off your hand. It will not digest <strong>the</strong> fibers in <strong>the</strong><br />

strawberry. The fibers survive human digestion which is far weaker than<br />

nitric acid digestion. I mean in orders of magnitude.<br />

Ty: Sure.<br />

Mike Adams: The strawberries <strong>the</strong>n will bind to <strong>the</strong> dietary mercury<br />

with <strong>the</strong>se fibers and that gets pushed out of your system through bowel<br />

movements. The mercury is gone. it’s out. It never gets pulled into your<br />

blood stream through intestinal walls. So many different types of fruits<br />

and vegetables have very interesting affinities to heavy metals. And this<br />

is what our research has really uncovered. The only thing that we found<br />

better than strawberries, by <strong>the</strong> way, is chlorella, which is <strong>about</strong> 98 – 99<br />

percent efficacy. But chlorella doesn’t work for o<strong>the</strong>r things such as<br />

uranium. Chlorella doesn’t absorb much uranium, spirulina does, but not<br />

strawberries. So one of <strong>the</strong> things that I’ve done in <strong>the</strong> lab is whe<strong>the</strong>r it’s<br />

radioactive elements such as cesium-137 or customary heavy metals<br />

like mercury, arsenic, things that cause <strong>cancer</strong>—arsenic is linked to<br />

<strong>cancer</strong>, right. Oh, and by <strong>the</strong> way, you know what tends to absorb<br />

arsenic<br />

Ty: Uh-uh<br />

Mike Adams: Fruit seeds.<br />

Ty: Fruit seeds <br />

Mike Adams: Fruit seeds…<br />

Ty: Okay.<br />

Mike Adams: …which is why some fruit seeds contain arsenic<br />

naturally. There was arsenic in apple juice, remember that scare…<br />

Ty: Yeah, I remember that.<br />

Mike Adams: …because <strong>the</strong> apples that—apple plants, apple trees,<br />

tend to take up arsenic in <strong>the</strong> soil which came from <strong>the</strong> lead arsenic<br />

pesticides that we already talked <strong>about</strong>. They tend to concentrate it in<br />

<strong>the</strong> seeds because <strong>the</strong> seeds have a natural affinity to arsenic. But if<br />

you can get apple seeds, grape seeds, raspberry seeds, blueberry<br />

seeds--believe it or not, we’ve tested all <strong>the</strong>se things. If you can get your<br />

hands on <strong>the</strong>se seeds, which by <strong>the</strong> way are removed from almost all<br />

<strong>the</strong> foods that’s sold in <strong>the</strong> grocery store. If you buy grape jam you don’t<br />

The Quest for The Cures Page 97

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