Chinese Dairy Products with Melamine will Shut Down Your Kidneys
posted October 31, 2008 - 11:33amThere has been a great concern lately about the MELAMINE that is mixed up with Chinese milk and dairy products, and for good reason.
This is what powder Melamine looks like:

It almost looks like milk powder, doesn’t it?
But it is an B>INDUSTRIAL PRODUCT used to manufacture kitchen ware, walls and closets.
This is what you are ACTUALLY EATING when you consume any product that contains Melamine:
Plastic dinnerware:
Construction materials:

So what happens to Melamine once it enters your body?
It CLOGS your kidneys:

This is what needs to be done to clean up your kidneys and blood:

Also see: http://www.ivy-rose.co.uk/Topics/Urinary/Kidney_Dialysis_cIvyRose.jpg
If you are lucky, you’ll survive.
Why do Chinese manufacturers use Melamine? Because it looks like milk, it has no taste, and it is much cheaper than the real thing. So they make more profit while your kidneys are clogged and shot to hell.
That’s why in September 2008 50,000 Chinese babies were diagnosed with an abnormal increase in kidney problems – duh!
That is one month after Melamine was found in Chinese Sanlu Milk Powder. At the end of September 2008, many other dairy products originating from Taiwan was tested positive for Melamine.
Be safe.
Do not consume any milk or dairy products that originate from China – that includes both People’s Republic of China and the Republic of Taiwan.
I wouldn’t bet my and my family’s life on it.
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A time-line of the 2008 Melamine Milk Scandal developments from BBC:
10 Sept: 14 babies reported ill in Gansu province, cases reported around China
13 Sept: 19 people arrested
15 Sept: Beijing confirms first deaths from the contamination
22 Sept: Toll of ill babies rises to more than 50,000; head of China's quality watchdog resigns
23 Sept: Other countries start to test Chinese dairy products or remove them from shops
14 Oct: China orders the withdrawal of all milk produced more than a month ago
22 Oct: Hong Kong scientists find excessive levels of melamine in a brand of mainland eggs
31 Oct: Chinese media suggest melamine is routinely added to animal feed

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