Anonymous ID: 0c9b43 Aug. 4, 2020, 3:44 p.m. No.10182965   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3029

This comms video hints at Green Tea being important.

That is the green leaf in the opening image.

 

However you need to really dig to get the full picture.

Green Tea is rich in EGCG which is a Zinc ionophore

Like HCQ

Except you can buy Green Tea in every grocery store

And if the demand skyrockets

They just have to STOP FERMENTING THE LEAVES to make black tea

And there is LOTS available to meet market demand.

 

But not only can Green Tea be used (with Zinc) to cure any and all retroviruses

Which includes HIV and the common cold viruses

But it can also disrupt/starve cancer cells

Effectively, if you cut out sugar and dring strongly brewed Green Tea

You can cure cancer.

 

NO PRESCRIPTION DRUGS REQUIRED AT ALL!!!

No chemo

No radiation

No hospital visits

No piles of cash handed over to Big Pharma

Look at them desperately advertising on TV right now…

 

The diagram comes from the paper attached as a PDF

Anonymous ID: 0c9b43 Aug. 4, 2020, 3:51 p.m. No.10183019   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>10182948

Breathtaking…

That is comms

I can't breathe!

 

Somebody is going to have the oxygen taken away as a result of this Durham report

 

August is a HOT, HOT month

Anonymous ID: 0c9b43 Aug. 4, 2020, 4:18 p.m. No.10183211   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3233

>>10183158

 

Location of Event at Sea The international network of seismic stations to monitor the CTBT in northern Europe and adjacent oceanic areas is complete and has been in operation for several years. Figure 3 shows IMS and other seismic stations relevant to this discussion in the area surrounding the Russian test site on Novaya Zemlya. Stations consisting of multiple sensors, i.e. arrays, are indicated by solid triangles. A large and sensitive seismic array in southern Norway called Norsar has operated since 1970. Funds for its operation and research on its data have come from the Norwegian government and the U.S. Department of Defense. DoD later provided funds for additional seismic arrays in northern and southern Norway (ARCESS and NORESS), Finland (FINESS), Spitsbergen (SPITS) and Germany (GERESS). Sweden has operated a small but very sensitive array at Hagfors (HFS) for several decades. The Russian stations APA and NRI are part of the IMS.

 

The event of August 16 was recorded by the various IMS stations in Figure 1 with the exception of ARCESS, which was being repaired following a power surge. Fortunately, the seismic coverage in the area has some redundancy. The Finnish station KEVO near ARCESS recorded the event, as it had previous nuclear explosions at the Novaya Zemlya test site. Its data are important for the identification of the 1997 event as an earthquake. KEVO is not one of the designated IMS stations. Its recording of that and previous events points out the great value of drawing upon data from supplementary stations like it when a "problem event" arises. SOD also recorded the 1997 event and some earlier nuclear explosions. Likewise, a new small seismic array at Amderma, which also is not part of the IMS, should provide key additional data for events near Novaya Zemlya as it did for a small earthquake in 1995. Norwegian and Russian seismologists have worked out an arrangement for exchanging data, such as those from Amderma, APA and stations in Scandinavia.

 

Locations obtained by the IDC and by the Norwegian seismological center Norsar place the August 16 event more than 100 km (62 miles) southeast of the underground nuclear test site at Novaya Zemlya. The IDC location is shown in Figure 4. On September 15 the Associated Press reported results of a classified study by AFTAC of September 4 about the event. It quotes a Pentagon spokesperson ``It is a seismic event approximately 130 kilometers (81 miles) southeast of the test sites [sic] and is located offshore.'' Thus, the three agencies each places the event at sea and well to the southeast of the test site.

 

On August 21 Dr. Frode Ringdal, the Director of Norsar and probably the world's foremost expert on small seismic events in and near Novaya Zemlya, sent a long fax message about the event of August 16 to Dr. Ralph Alewine, Director of the Pentagon's Nuclear Treaty Programs Office within the Office of the Secretary of Defense. Alewine was the only scientist quoted by name in the initial article in the Washington Times. That fax, which was distributed widely, contains the received date and time stamped on all pages. Ringdal states "Thus the event appears to be quite confidently located offshore and at least 100 km from the test site." This and other information in the fax, including copies of seismograms, were available in Alewine's office a week before the article appeared in the Washington Times, which quotes him by name.

Anonymous ID: 0c9b43 Aug. 4, 2020, 4:38 p.m. No.10183375   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>10183120

 

No it's not

This is the middle of the storm

The endgame is underway

Isaiah 32:2 is appropriate

 

Each one will be like a shelter from the wind and a refuge from the storm, like streams of water in the desert and the shadow of a great rock in a thirsty land.