As I write this, I’m currently just absolutely crushing a FIJI brand 1.5 liter bottle of water I obtained at Fred Meyer. While I would never scoff at drinking a good bottle of water from the store, I would never have assumed that I’d be buying up Fiji water to drink almost daily. I always put FIJI water in the “7-11 water” category, or “gas station convenience store” bin — along with Muscle Milk, Clif Bars, and other iconic brands. Not necessarily associated with cutting-edge health modalities.
Life has a way of surprising you. I love when something is hiding in plain sight. Let me explain what makes FIJI water special. On the back of the bottle, it lists “typical analyisis” of the mineral content of the water: 93mg/L silica, 18mg/L calcium, 15 mg/L magnesium, 152 mg/L bicarbonates, with a pH of 7.7. Now, calcium and magnesium are common in most mineral waters. Silica, however, is harder to come by, especially in the form of orthosilicic acid dissolved in water as a solution. Apparently, the slow volcanic filtration of this water provides these minerals.
Orthosilicic acid is special because it detoxifies aluminum from the body. More specifically, it converts Al³⁺ ions in the body to a safely excreted non toxic form called an aluminosilicate, usually Al(OH)₃·Si(OH)₄ — but other forms can be created as well. These molecules are passed from the body through urine or bound in the GI tract. They are usually insoluble in biological fluids, and strongly resist re-releasing their aluminum ions into biological tissues where they wreak havoc.
For all you science trusters, the World Health Organization claimed as much in 1996.
But Reddit is certain that this is all a scam, they don’t trust it.
Aluminum is more ubiquitous in our environment than ever before. The toxic load of aluminum is steadily increasing in the average human body, confirmed by blood and hair tests, and autopsy tests of autistic brains show absolutely incredible levels of aluminum poisoning. Much of this research was done by Dr. Chris Exley, an English chemist whose expertise in biological/aluminum interactions is so widely regarded, he’s been dubbed “Mr. Aluminum” by his scientific peers. Yet he is, of course, a pseudoscientist, because he questions the sanity of vaccines containing aluminum adjuvants given to infants and toddlers.
Exley has also conclusively demonstrated that FIJI water in particular removes aluminum from practically every tissue in the body, including the brain. He’s measured aluminum excretion in the urine of older dementia patients, and three months of FIJI water consumption triggered an absolutely massive release of aluminum from the body. Exley is also the author of the book Imagine You Are An Aluminum Atom. His colleague, Harvard biochemist Dennis Crouse, wrote another fascinating book Silica Water: The Secret Of Healthy Longevity In The Aluminum Age. Both are worth a read to dig further into these topics.
FIJI water seems particularly special because it has an incredibly high concentration of orthosilicic acid (OSA) while remaining stable. It seems that OSA polymerizes into other forms, useless for aluminum detox, above 100 mg/L. FIJI is at 93 mg/L. It’s concentrated enough to produce a profound detox effect, while remaining under the polymerization threshold.
Dr. Crouse has a recipe for “silicade”, using food/lab grade sodium metasilicate alongside with pH buffers to create stable OSA for pennies per liter. Based on my calculations, 230 mg of sodium metasilicate nonahydrate combined with 1L of filtered water and 105 mg of citric acid will produce stable OSA north of 80 mg/L, on par with FIJI. Please take care and do your own research if you decide to make your own silica water.
The keen Bob’s Red Pill reader will note that I previously noted that diatomaceous earth (amorphous silica) can also detox aluminum. Is this true? Some sources insist “no”, that amorphous silica is highly insoluble, and does not break down into OSA efficiently. Other sources insist “yes”, and they often recommend leaving a jar of filtered water with 1 tablespoon of food grade DE sitting overnight, then drinking the cloudy water that floats to the top. Of course, DE’s effects on removing overt parasitic infections in the gut are proven. However, people regularly consuming DE report anecdotes of dramatically increased hair and nail growth, mental improvements, and other health improvements. The increased growth of hair and nails strongly implies that OSA is indeed converted in meaningful amounts from the bulk silica. Perhaps our stomach acid is able to make the conversion. I believe that a high quality DE will detox aluminum and other nefarious metals from the body, based on these inferences.
However, DE is a bit more hands on than just grabbing a bottle of water. It’s chalky, dangerous if inhaled in dust form, and most normies are simply going to reject regular DE consumption. Everyone can find FIJI water in any convenience store all over the country/globe. You can safely give young children FIJI water. Don’t worry though, I’m sure that’s never been tried with success for any kind of childhood neurological issue — the point is, they will think it’s just water!
Between a good form of silica water, a good clean micronized zeolite powder or zeolite spray, and semi-regular consumption of tamarind concentrate, you can probably safely excrete a huge amount of toxic elements from your entire body, including your brain, including aluminum, mercury, cadmium, lead, tungsten, fluoride, arsenic, and more.
Look at this insane final paragraph of Dr. Chris Exley’s wikipedia page. Keep in mind, this is the scientist that proved autistic brains have up to 10+ times the aluminum of non autistic brains, and that aluminum can be safely excreted from the brain using 7-11 tier brand water (lmfao!) — we as a society truly don’t want solutions to health problems. Aluminum, of course, replaced mercury as a vaccine adjuvant (although not totally, despite insistence from vaccine proponents) back in the early 2000s, when the CDC read the writing on the wall. I love that this is a defense of vaccines: we replaced one poisonous metal with another one! It’s clear that autistic children have a difficult time detoxifying metals from their bodies and brains, perhaps due to MTHFR gene polymorphisms, issues with glutathione/SOD, leaky gut or other microbiome imbalances, or other anomalies. In this sense, autism is genetic, in a certain sense — and also completely avoidable and largely treatable. A good first step would be not injecting infants and toddlers with heavy metals, or at the very least, determining which of these infants and toddlers are genetically susceptible to bioaccumulation of toxins, or providing simple detoxification protocols simultaneously. Of course, this will never happen in mainstream circles, because it forces an admission of error.
Reddit
And then there’s Reddit. “Front page of the Internet”. Any listener of Rare Candy will note our adjective-ification of the proper noun Reddit: that place’s menu is reddit, this album is reddit … and of course, everyone appreciates a well-timed Glen Rockney meme drop of “Reddit is down the hall and to the left”:
Beyond being incredibly corny, Reddit is an extremely dangerous place to research such health claims as “does OSA water detox aluminum?” … the actual scientific truth being yes, as supported by multiple peer reviewed studies in the scientific literature (ironic), while the Reddit consensus is no, you’re a fool, detoxification itself is a scam, you’re listening to quacks.
I realized Reddit was completely gone when I saw r/psychonaut members decrying those refusing to get the Pfizer COVID mRNA vaccine. Sure, if there’s one thing we all know, it’s that hippies tripping on shrooms hate when someone rejects a Pfizer product.
However, I must confess, I find Reddit useful for very niche topics, usually spiritual in nature, or those focused on very technical engineering or computer problems. However, any “consensus” topic is completely useless to anyone with a brain. Have you seen anything as stupid as this r/science header?
Aaron Swartz, the coding prodigy who merged his startup with Reddit in the early days, took his own life after being threatened with decades of prison time for downloading academic articles en masse. What a crime, downloading results of taxpayer-funded scientific research for free, as an American citizen. Of course, it’s ironic that major lawsuits have exonerated Facebook and other tech giants for doing the exact same thing — training their AI/LLM models on pirated books from websites like libgen or Anna’s Archive.
Reddit actually started as a haven for free speech, with a largely libertarian-leaning user base. Many of us saw the takeover of Reddit in real time, starting around 2015. Even I am shocked at how complete the shift has been.
Of course, the health crackdown of the entire internet goes far beyond just Reddit. Google, Wikipedia, and every other major information provider aligned completely with modern allopathic medicine while completely maligning even verified and peer reviewed naturopathic treatments.
It’s ironic that the aluminum detoxification hypothesis for dementia and Alzheimer’s disease is treated with such suspicion and skepticism by “redditors” (placeholder term for any online square), while the actual “respected” Alzheimer’s research — all peer reviewed, all confirmed by experts — was rife with fraud and deceit for decades.
Of course, everyone is “shocked” by revelations like these, yet the root cause is never addressed. Scientists like Exley get their funding cut for trying to help Alzheimer’s patients and kids with autism, quite effectively I might add, while literal con artists get to travel the world going to conferences and speaking engagements (largely on the taxpayer’s dime), based on complete fabrications.
Imagine a hypothetical where everyone completely stopped taking every mainstream dementia drug, and silica water just became the normal drinking water. I’m willing to bet we’d make more progress with neurodegenerative diseases in four years than we’ve made in four decades.
Sometimes, the solution is as simple as buying a bottle of water from a convenience store. To your health!
hail Fiji water, hail our people, hail victory
Had been steering clear of Fiji due to fluoride content but will reconsider. Really interesting, thx