Possible Antidote for the V-Serum and the Current Spike Protein Contagion
Dr. Judy Mikovits (1 min. MP4 is attached) has revealed that the medical establishment has known all along about the antidote to the contagion – a contagion that is now being seen today by thousands of people who have not taken the serum, but have merely come in close proximity with others who have taken the jab. (The word "serum" is being used here since, evidently, the way to avoid taking the jab is to say "I am allergic to the serum".)
The People’s Antidote
Now the people have the antidote, and it is readily available in the form of pine needle tea. How do we know this? Because Suramin is a derivative of the oils in pine needles.
The whole herbal source (needles) is superior to the single compound extract (Suramin) – because the needles possess a full complement of phytonutrients providing numerous additional benefits that the extract is incapable of.
Now, here is the direct connection between Suramin and Pine Needle Tea:
Suramin is Derived from Trypan Blue
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trypan_blue
Trypan blue is derived from toluidine, that is, any of several isomeric bases, C14H16N2, derived from toluene. Trypan blue is so-called because it can kill trypanosomes, the parasites that cause sleeping sickness. An analog of trypan blue, suramin, is used pharmacologically against trypanosomiasis. Trypan blue is also known as diamine blue and Niagara blue…
Trypan red and trypan blue were first synthesized by the German scientist Paul Ehrlich in 1904.
Trypan Blue is a derivative of toluene which is a derivative of pine oil.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toluene
The compound was first isolated in 1837 through a distillation of pine oil by the Polish chemist Filip Walter, who named it rétinnaphte.[10]
• I personally recall many years ago one health professional was using a Pine Sol bath to rid the body of parasites.
• Pine-Sol was based on pine oil when it was created in 1929 and during its rise to national popularity in the 1950s. However, as of 2016, Pine-Sol products sold in stores no longer contain pine oil to reduce costs.Wikipedia
• Yet pine needle tea provides a similar, if not superior, benefit, due in part to the fact that it is a direct mild extract of the whole herb leaving many of its properties still intact that might be destroyed by excessive heat during distillation and further dissection of its many nutrient components.
• I harvested some young Dougles Fir needles last fall and have been adding it to my morning tea blend for the last couple of months. It must have been an instinctive call. I discovered the Suramin info just last week.
• The Douglas fir needle tea I have been drinking provides an energetic lift and a nice boost to the immune system.
• Pine needles are high in vitamin C and A among numerous other compounds which provide a long list of benefits:
• A 2011 Korean study demonstrated using pine needles in tea was the best way to access the antioxidant benefits from pine needles.
• The study demonstrated that the hot water extract of pine needle proanthocyanidins and catechins offer the highest levels of antioxidant benefits compared with chemical extract processes.
• There are other known benefits that pine needle tea and the tea made from other conifers share, which include:
Analgesic, Antibacterial, Antifungal, Anti-inflammatory, Antimicrobial, Antioxidant
Antiseptic, Antitumor, Antitussive
Antiviral, Aromatic, Astringent
Decongestant, Detoxifying, Disinfectant
Diuretic, Expectorant, Immuno-modulating
Improves circulation, Invigorating, Lymphatic, Relaxing, Relieves nervous exhaustion and fatigue, Relieves sore muscles, Restorative, Tonic, Herbalists the world over have known all along about the benefits of this simple natural tea. Pine needle tea has been used medicinally worldwide for thousands of years.
Pine Needle Tea Video (3 min)
https://youtu.be/MY4UNrjnoLA
Wild Food Foraging – Pine / Spruce / Cedar / Fir – Evergreen Teas
https://youtu.be/RdTcmexTBH0
• A few notes of caution:
Be careful with the yew pine (which is not a true pine) and can be toxic, although it does have a few medicinal properties).
In order to grasp the seriousness of the situation we are in, and to understand why, we need to look back in history to the times in which this very day had been forecast, obviously planned for, and now created….
• By far the vast majority of conifers have been used medicinally for thousands of years with an excellent track record. Get to know your trees. They may provide a medicine cabinet full of health benefits to you and your family.
Sources for Pine Needles
https://archives.simplelists.com/nfu/msg/16539359/