The amount of quinine is tonic water is incredibly low dose and used as a bitter
A liter of tonic water contains 84 mg of quinine. @300 mg of HCQ(or quinine) per week is used as a prophylactic against COVID. Logically, if you drink 4 liters a week, that would account for the same dosage, correct?
Wiki is an awesome tool, everything is very well documented and sourced.
There are literally thousands of legal affidavits alleging fraud in the 2020 election, much which has been posted ON THIS WEBSITE, so I did a search on wikipedia and this came up:
The 2021 Maricopa County presidential ballot audit is an examination of ballots cast in Maricopa County during the 2020 United States presidential election in Arizona contracted by the Arizona Senate Republican caucus and carried out by private firms. The audit stirred controversy due to the involvement of vocal supporters of losing candidate Donald Trump, and due to assertions of rule violations and irregularities in the conduct of the count. In June 2021, it was reported that Trump had told associates that based on the results of the audit, he would be reinstated as President in August 2021.[1] By late June 2021, it was reported by CNN that the audit "hasn't uncovered evidence suggesting widespread voter fraud".[2]**
How the fuck can it be reported BY CNN that they haven't "uncovered evidence suggesting widespread voter fraud" WHEN THERE HASN'T EVEN BEEN A REPORT ISSUED ABOUT ANYTHING YET!!!"
I expect this from CNN, but not a well "documented and sourced" platform.
Read the whole wikipedia page. It's trash.
Here's some high(low)lights:
Patrick Byrne, the former CEO of Overstock.com and promoter of 2020 election conspiracy theories, donated one million dollars to the effort and created a website to raise further funds
The process involves an audit to search for evidence of fraud, and a hand recount of the 2.1 million ballots cast in Maricopa County.[3] The hand recount is managed by Wake Technology Services, which reportedly had been hired for a previous audit in a rural Pennsylvania county by Trump attorney Sidney Powell, who has promoted numerous conspiracy theories about the election. The firm works primarily in the healthcare sector with little to no experience with elections.[7][8]
The Arizona Republic reported in May that because Senate Republicans had given private companies and individuals unfettered and **unmonitored **access to voting machines,
"Unmonitored"? There were LITERALLY 9 FUCKING CAMERAS pointed at the audit 24/7.
The objectivity of the audit has been called into question due to the involvement of Logan.[28] Additionally, Anthony Kern, a former Republican state lawmaker who was present at the 2021 storming of the United States Capitol, has been seen tallying votes.[3] Kern, who was himself named on the ballots as a would-be Trump presidential elector as well as running for re-election to the Arizona House of Representatives, has since been removed from the group with access to the ballots.[29] Former Arizona Secretary of State Ken Bennett, a Republican, is advising the audit. Hobbs, the current Secretary of State, has criticized Bennett's efforts, saying he needs to "either do it right, or don't do it at all."[18]
Conspiracy theory issues
As part of the audit, auditors have been looking for secret watermarks, machine-markings, and bamboo fibers within the ballots. The testing for bamboo fibers was intended to prove a conspiracy theory that counterfeit ballots were shipped from South Korea or mainland China to be counted in the election. The audit was supposed to have concluded on May 14, but as of May 9, only 12% of the ballots were counted. The audit was being conducted at the main floor of the Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum, which was not available for this activity beyond the original target date.[3][30] Consequently, the audit went on hiatus on May 14 and resumed on May 24.[39]
Karen Fann made an allegation, later amplified by Trump in a May 15 post on his blog, asserting that Maricopa County election officials deleted the voting database after the election.[40][41] Maricopa County Recorder Stephen Richer, a Republican who oversees elections, tweeted that Trump's post was "unhinged", noting he was looking at the database on his computer at that moment. Richer added, "We can't indulge these insane lies any longer." The auditors later acknowledged they had been examining hard drives the wrong way and the database had not been deleted, though the CEO of a Cyber Ninjas subcontractor, Ben Cotton, later said he was "able to recover all of those deleted files." After he continued to repeatedly characterize the data as "deleted" during a Senate hearing, Fann said she stood by that characterization but said she would not refer the matter to law enforcement because "we never said there was any wrongdoing."[42][43][44]
In June 2021, it was reported that Trump had told associates that based on the results of the audit, he would be reinstated as president by August 2021.[1]
Wikipedia is full of commies. If you want advice on how to build a sand castle or rake your leaves, then by all means, have at it, but NEVER count on them to be neutral or non partisan in their reporting of history or politics. And quinine/HCQ have been made political.
4 Liters of Tonic Water per week?? Have you ever had tonic water lol?
As for the rest, I get what you're saying, but I will keep using wikipedia. I really don't think it's a corrupt source for normal things like this. Sure I wouldn't trust a section about HCQs efficacy against COVID since that's politicized...
...but the section I read was promoting the use of Chloroquine OVER quinine, so it is a pro-HCQ section... so this kind of contradicts your claim, if it was being edited to attack HCQ due to HCQ's now political nature, why would the section on quinine's side effects promote an HCQ precursor and demote quinine which is not in HCQ? Your stance is contradicting itself here. "If Satan casts out Satan, he is divided against himself."
I have written several times in the past about quinine, chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine. Quinine is the natural herbs that was analyzed and then synthesized in a lab. This was patented and distributed as chloroquine. There were some bad side effects from chloroquine, so they redesigned and patented HCQ to be safer. Make no mistake, natural quinine is far safer than either of the synthetics. Quinine has been used in Central and South America where the trees grow natively long before recorded history. The natives still use quinine tea and parts of leaves and bark for a myriad of health benefits, especially as an antimalarial
A liter of tonic water contains 84 mg of quinine. @300 mg of HCQ(or quinine) per week is used as a prophylactic against COVID. Logically, if you drink 4 liters a week, that would account for the same dosage, correct?
There are literally thousands of legal affidavits alleging fraud in the 2020 election, much which has been posted ON THIS WEBSITE, so I did a search on wikipedia and this came up:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Search?search=fraud+in+the+2020+election&go=Go&ns0=1
Fair enough. Nobody has created a page for it.
So I just searched for the Maricopa Audit. This is what came up: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2021_Maricopa_County_presidential_ballot_audit
IT EXISTS! YAY!!!
However, the first paragraph:
How the fuck can it be reported BY CNN that they haven't "uncovered evidence suggesting widespread voter fraud" WHEN THERE HASN'T EVEN BEEN A REPORT ISSUED ABOUT ANYTHING YET!!!"
I expect this from CNN, but not a well "documented and sourced" platform.
Read the whole wikipedia page. It's trash.
Here's some high(low)lights:
"Unmonitored"? There were LITERALLY 9 FUCKING CAMERAS pointed at the audit 24/7.
Wikipedia is full of commies. If you want advice on how to build a sand castle or rake your leaves, then by all means, have at it, but NEVER count on them to be neutral or non partisan in their reporting of history or politics. And quinine/HCQ have been made political.
4 Liters of Tonic Water per week?? Have you ever had tonic water lol?
As for the rest, I get what you're saying, but I will keep using wikipedia. I really don't think it's a corrupt source for normal things like this. Sure I wouldn't trust a section about HCQs efficacy against COVID since that's politicized...
...but the section I read was promoting the use of Chloroquine OVER quinine, so it is a pro-HCQ section... so this kind of contradicts your claim, if it was being edited to attack HCQ due to HCQ's now political nature, why would the section on quinine's side effects promote an HCQ precursor and demote quinine which is not in HCQ? Your stance is contradicting itself here. "If Satan casts out Satan, he is divided against himself."
I have written several times in the past about quinine, chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine. Quinine is the natural herbs that was analyzed and then synthesized in a lab. This was patented and distributed as chloroquine. There were some bad side effects from chloroquine, so they redesigned and patented HCQ to be safer. Make no mistake, natural quinine is far safer than either of the synthetics. Quinine has been used in Central and South America where the trees grow natively long before recorded history. The natives still use quinine tea and parts of leaves and bark for a myriad of health benefits, especially as an antimalarial