Sodium Is An Explosive and More Salt

Tags

salt

sodium

epsom salt

magnesium

[2011]

[Aajonus]

Salt is an explosive. Sodium isolated is an explosive. It's more volatile than nitroglycerin. One football size of pure sodium will take out New York City and all the buildings, one football size.

And my father worked with General Electric trying to make it into a weapon, a bomb, and it was so volatile that 1.5° temperature change could set it off.

They spent 60 years trying to make it into a weapon and still have not been able to in $2 billion. So it is volatile, if you wanna see how volatile it is. There were three guys that went on the internet were going to ridicule me about salt, and they got three frog legs that had been killed within 24 hours and they salted them and they're giggling and laughing, expecting nothing to happen.

Within about 15 seconds of salting these things, these legs started jumping, just jumping Now these are dead. They've been off of these frogs for a while, hours, and they are jumping. You cannot stop it. It is volatile as an explosive, and it only took about 15 seconds or less for the salt to touch not the skin, but the peeled leg of the frog that was peeled, so it was open flesh to isolate the sodium from the potassium, from the potassium or iodide, whatever table salt they were using and causing the explosion.

And I they, "Now what do you think will happen if you use pepper on it? Cause it's very caustic, it's hot".

And I said, "Won't do a thing". So, they take just one leg and they pepper it. And I mean, they're putting probably 10 times more pepper than they put salt. And, the leg jumps once. But with the salt, I mean, it was just a few sprinkles. Those legs were jumping. Now they only leave it on for 30 seconds, but it went on for almost two and a half minutes.

[Attendee]

That on YouTube?

[Aajonus]

Yeah, it's on YouTube. You put "frog legs, YouTube, salt", watch video and you'll come up with it.

[Attendee]

But the bodies, they want salt.

[Aajonus]

You don't want salt. You want sodium in form of food.

[Attendee]

Yeah, but you still put salt in bath water.

[Aajonus]

Yeah, but that doesn't get absorbed into the body. If you put two cups of salt in that water, you're going to absorb it in probably 1 cup of salt into 34, 35 gallons.

You will absorb salt.

[Attendee]

What about the ocean?

[Aajonus]

In the ocean, you will absorb salt, sodium. That's why you can't drink ocean water. right?

[Attendee]

Is epsom salt better?

[Aajonus]

Yeah, epsom salt is a little bit better. It's not so concentrated in just mainly sodium. But you know, if you're using sea salts, you're getting a variety of of nutrients.

But in epsom salts, you're getting a higher ratio of calcium, magnesium, rather then just sodium being the highest.

[Attendee]

Could you do one, one time and then one the other time? You know, vary it.

[Aajonus]

Sure. You can do anything you want.

[Attendee]

I mean, would that be good or not?

[Aajonus]

I think it would be good. Epsom salt is probably less expensive than sea salt.

[Attendee]

It's way less expensive.

Yeah, like 1/10th expensive.

[Aajonus]

Well, it's got magnesium content, but it's just not magnesium.

It's supposed to have all those minerals in it. They just accentuate because it's the higher ratio of sulfur and magnesium.

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