Go buy some anti-parasitic herbs. But do it quietly so they don't limit our access to those, as well.
You're viewing a single comment thread. View all comments, or full comment thread.
Comments (29)
sorted by:
I’ve been researching sweet wormwood. Has anti parasite properties and also may have anti covid properties, saw someone doing a study on it.
I think HCQ is related to wormwood
No, not that I know of.
Hcq is based on quinine which came from the bark of the chinoah tree (ah nuts I cant spell the name of the tree).
This was documented in guns, germs and steel; which was a book about the rise and fall of empires. What it took to have an empire and how different resources aided. Jesuit bark is what is was first called because the natives have the bark of the ... tree to the jesuits when they got sick. It was good for all kinds of fevers. It was good if you got sick and the British discovered that if you took a certain amount of it every day, then you didn’t get malaria. That strategic advantage allowed the British to build their empire.
It tasted terrible. So they mixed it with alcohol. Now you know the origin of the English gin and tonic. The tonic is made with the bark of the chinoah tree. Some tonic is still made with the bark, but I ran into an article from a guy complaining about tonic he would buy in the store. He couldn’t taste the tonic. It was way too weak. So he got some bark and made his own tonic and bingo it was like he remembered it. So while today’s tonic sold in stores may have some of the bark, it does not have a medicinal dosage.
So just to close up the loop. Root of hcq was a tree bark. That bark originally was converted into a drink/tonic. When pharmaceuticals started quinine was born. In the .... I forget 60’s? 70’s? a synthetic manufacturing process is created and hcq is born.
Close, but not quite. Cinchona Officianalis is one of a couple trees, the other is Cinchona something or other, but I can't remember it now. The synthetic was developed in the late 1940's or early 50's as chloroquine. The synthetic was prone to side effects, so it was improved to Hydroxychloroquine. Quinine is the original and still available over the counter, for now. Taken with zinc, it is a zinc ionophore. I have also heard that Quercetin will work as well.