Lots of assumptions here, but my research into other things, namely composition of vaccines, has led me down a pretty important tangent.
I'm gonna lay out what I found, it is up to you guys to verify accuracy and finalize my assumptions.
Conclusions/Assumptions from my research:
Allergies are the result of an over-active immune response to foreign pathogens.
Allergies are possible side-effects of vaccines. Maybe even intentional, considering the cabal.
Vaccines have been used to weaken our immune system by over-stimulating response cells, effectively burning them out and resulting in semi-permanent damage to immune system health. This primes us for their Plandemic.
The virus on its own is very weak and has limited ability to cause serious damage to those who aren't susceptible. Those who are susceptible are actually those who more often get vaccinated. Vaccines overstimulate the immune system, training cells to attack the body more frequently while also limiting the saturation of immune cells.
So, to put it plainly; all vaccines overstimulate the immune system. They train cells to be over-active when pathogens are encountered, increasing inflammation and friendly-fire in our bodies. Covid-19 enters the body, triggering massive allergic reactions to the pathogen for those who are primed. Now, after the immune system has blown its load, no resources are left to fight off infection. The lungs fill with plasma from inflammation, infection sets in, and pneumonia finishes the patient off.
HQC works because it suppresses the immune system, preventing the body from destroying itself in the rush to eliminate the virus. If the immune system doesn't blow its load, it will be capable enough to fight off infection. At that point, Covid-19 does resolve to being a simple cold.
Any immunosuppressants can fit the bill. Some are better than others. Ivermectin for example has had success in Asia, notably South Korea and Japan.
The problem for us is all the good ones are prescription. Enter, Glucosamine. It is still OTC.
Check this study out: https://www.jbc.org/article/S0021-9258(19)72291-1/fulltext
I'm no medical expert, so use your own judgement. If what I said makes sense, shop around and get a bottle just in case.
As far as the new "vaccine" AKA gene therapy goes, there is a reason anaphylactic shock is a side-effect. The new "vaccine" hyper-drives the immune response. This is intentional. The goal is to further prime for a second strain, that they also made, to finish off anyone who doesn't get the "vaccine". Sounds backwards, I know, but that's how it lays. Those who get the "vaccine" are now primed to constantly get it or their immune system will go hyperdrive on the new strain. The "vaccine" is more like an immune retardant rather than a suppressant.
Sources:
Allergy shot treatment (work as vaccines) actually make allergies worse.
Glucosamine as an immunosuppressant.
Quercetin and Zinc. 20$ on amazon.
Quercetin is the immunosuppressant component of HCQ.
The HC part is what interacts with the Zinc, from what I remember.
Not that having Zinc is a bad thing, it is very much a good thing.
In the event Quercetin is sold out, Glucosamine might be a good fall-back.
Quercetin is a zinc ionophore, like HCQ, it isn't a component of HCQ,
HCQ is Hydrochloroquine, It's related to quinine. The Q in quinine and quercetin is just a coincidence.
I don't think glucosamine is a zinc ionophore. It is something else.
We've got to be accurate
Strange. What I read is that Quercetin functions highly as an immunosuppressant. I haven't spotted much on zinc ionophore side of it.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20483746/
I remember reading way back when that Quinine and Quercetin are derived from the same base. You find it in a lot of green vegetable skins, like cucumber skins. I could be wrong.
Please don't kill me for this, once you take a look at the listed functions of quercetin!! https://www.excli.de/vol17/Park_27082018_proof.pdf
Here's just a title of an article that seems not to be free on the internet:
Zinc ionophore activity of quercetin and epigallocatechin-gallate: from Hepa 1-6 cells to a liposome model Husam Dabbagh-Bazarbachi 1, Gael Clergeaud, Isabel M Quesada, Mayreli Ortiz, Ciara K O'Sullivan, Juan B Fernández-Larrea
J Agric Food Chem. 2014 Aug 13;62(32):8085-93. doi: 10.1021/jf5014633
Here's quercetin acting as a zinc ionophore.
https://gilbertlab.com/neutraceuticals/quercetin/antiviral-effects-of-quercetin-zinc-ionophore/
This article mentions it as an immunosuppressant,
https://www.salubrainous.com/quercetin-for-neuropathy/
I know this is wikipedia, but it shows the molecule structure
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quercetin
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydroxychloroquine
I don't think they are at all related.