Anonymous ID: 10b730 July 24, 2020, 12:20 a.m. No.10062631   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2641 >>2701 >>2702 >>2703 >>2705 >>2717 >>2978 >>3040

First three images tell about how Operation Legend

The use of armed Federal agents in cities where the police

Are unable to end the mob violence

Will be hit by a false flag

In which an armed Federal officer

Kills a child

People who have access to NSA data

Can often learn of these things before they happen

But knowing that an action is planned

And that the OK is given for execution

Does not mean that the NSA knows who, where and when

However if we make a lot of noise on social media

There is a real chance that the string pullers

Will back off this operation

Anonymous ID: 10b730 July 24, 2020, 1:30 a.m. No.10062908   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2925

>>10062829

Yale epidemiologist says hydroxychloroquine could save up to 100K lives if used for coronavirus

 

https://www.joshwho.net/yale-epidemiologist-says-hydroxychloroquine-could-save-up-to-100k-lives-if-used-for-coronavirus/

 

An epidemiology professor at the Yale School of Public Health said hydroxychloroquine could save 100,000 lives from the coronavirus but added that the controversial anti-malaria drug has instead been used in a “propaganda war.”

 

“I think 75,000 to 100,000 lives will be saved,” Dr. Harvey Risch said in an interview Tuesday evening with Fox News’s Laura Ingraham after she asked if thousands of lives could be saved if a hydroxychloroquine stockpile was released.

 

“It’s a political drug now, not a medical drug, and that’s caused the complete population’s ignorance. And I think we’re basically fighting a propaganda war against the medical facts, and that color is not just the population of people, how they think about it, but doctors as well,” Risch said earlier in the interview.

 

Risch also addressed colleagues who have denounced using the drug as a treatment for coronavirus patients.

 

“There are many doctors that I’ve gotten hostile remarks about, saying that all the evidence is bad for it, and, in fact, that is not true at all,” Risch said, claiming the medication can be used as a “prophylactic” for front-line workers.

 

And don't forget to check out this article on Zinc and zinc ionophores which explains why some HCQ studies show disappointing results. Synergy and protocol of use are important. HCQ is not a cure, it is a treatment that works well if correctly used.

 

https://medium.com/@hotvpc/what-therapy-is-the-real-game-changer-cebc8838d447

Anonymous ID: 10b730 July 24, 2020, 1:37 a.m. No.10062934   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>10062894

 

Again more nonsense about Tonic Water. Do not drink fizzy sugary drinks. They make you MORE vulnerable to disease.

 

Read this article:

 

https://medium.com/@hotvpc/what-therapy-is-the-real-game-changer-cebc8838d447

 

And carefully read this section the NUMBERS are important. Nobody drinks 42 liters of tonic water every day. That would kill you from H2O poisoning.

 

Would tonic water work just as well?

The same question might be asked as to whether there is a protective effect for those who consume tonic water which contains quinine (either alone or in the form of gin and tonics etc.). While medicinal tonic water of the past contained quite a bit of quinine, the FDA now limits the quinine content of tonic water to 83 ppm (83mg per liter) whereas, just for comparison, the modern-day studies on the use of quinine for malaria (yes, quinine can still sometimes be used for malaria) would use 3,500 mg daily. Furthermore, pharmacological doses of quinine would be expected to cause all the same cardiac and neurotoxic side effects as chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine. Just to highlight this, the antiarrhythmic drug, quinidine, is just the stereo-isomer of quinine, can easily cause fatal arrhythmias if taken in just a slightly high dose (normal dosing ranges of quinidine is 600–1,200mg daily). So as long as tonic water consumption remains below 7 liters per day, one would likely avoid the side effects but would also likely be far from the beneficial effects on zinc transport as well. But there is certainly no harm in reasonable consumption and there may be some benefit as a zinc ionophore particularly in the same parts of the body the cornavirus first invades, the throat. As has been said, ‘what have you got to lose?’

Anonymous ID: 10b730 July 24, 2020, 1:44 a.m. No.10062959   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2992 >>3008

>>10062925

I also found that sleeping sitting up helped with respiratory virus infections. In my case the doctor said it was likely Adenovirus and a Strep test came up negative. He gave me Dexamethasone which is also used to treat COVID.

 

I set an alarm to only sleep 1.5 hours at a time.

 

8 years ago when I had a cold that would not go away, I travelled to Russia to my wife's relatives. They greeted us with the usual food and vodka and I got smashed. We walked back to our hotel in the winter air and I just collapsed into an armchair with my parka still on. I was still coughing and felt the cold deep in my chest.

Next morning, when I woke up, the cold was gone.

 

My theory is that burning the alcohol in my liver heated up the bottom of my lungs due to sitting up, and that heat just killed all the viruses. Maybe this is why the Russians and Finns have a tradition of sitting in a sauna getting drunk to cure what ails you.