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Chlorine dioxide: Who sells this illegal and toxic substance in Argentina and other countries in the region?

Chlorine dioxide: Who sells this illegal and toxic substance in Argentina and other countries in the region? Ilustración: Alina Najlis y Santiago Quintero. Lucía Gardel | Tiempo de lectura: 14 minutos 26 Abril, 2021 18:22 pm | Tiempo de lectura: 14 minutos Although chlorine dioxide is not authorized as a medication in Argentina or any regulatory agency in the world, this substance is promoted as a “miraculous cure” for many illnesses, including coronavirus. It is promoted by people that consider themselves to be prominent church members, who have open court cases, politicians, influencers, fans of Andreas Kalcker and even dietitians. Despite some platforms have fixed policies to remove content harmful to health, Chequeado identified tens of posts that recommend this substance and sell it on WhatsApp.

Miracle Covid cure sold in church turns out to be commercial bleach

‘Miracle Covid cure’ sold in church turns out to be commercial bleach (Getty Images) A family that sold more than 28,000 bottles of a ‘cure’ for Covid-19 has been arrested after it turned out the substance was in fact a sodium chlorite solution that they mixed with an acidic activator so it became chlorine dioxide, in other words: bleach. Marketed as a ‘miracle mineral solution’, Mark Grenon and his sons Jonathan, Jordan and Joseph made reportedly more than £700,000 since they started selling the substance in March of last year, when the pandemic started. They reportedly convinced fellow church-goers the substance could cure illnesses such as Covid-19, diabetes, cancer and malaria.

In Bolivian city, people buy fake - and toxic

MSN exaggerates MMS risks with false headline but downplays COVID-19 vaccine dangers

https://www.afinalwarning.com/514648.html (Natural News) When MSN recently reported on a family who ran into legal trouble after selling an alternative health product known as Miracle Mineral Solution, or MMS, they used a headline that falsely claimed the treatment was bleach and spent part of the article warning about how risky it is. They claim it killed seven people, which is tragic, and yet the same outlet doesn’t feel the need to tell the public about the thousands of people who are dying at the hands of COVID-19 vaccines. The article reports on Mark Grenon and his sons, Jonathan, Jordan and Joseph, who sold MMS to customers through their Genesis Church II, even after a court ordered that sales be halted. When Jonathan and Jordan Grenon were arrested in July, federal agents raided their home and found 10,000 pounds of sodium chlorite powder and thousands of bottles of MMS.

Florida men allegedly using church as front to sell miracle cure in court - CHVNRadio: Southern Manitoba s hub for local and Christian news, and adult contemporary Christian programming

Florida men allegedly using church as front to sell miracle cure in court - CHVNRadio: Southern Manitoba s hub for local and Christian news, and adult contemporary Christian programming
chvnradio.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from chvnradio.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

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