Anonymous ID: dc55d5 Jan. 8, 2022, 9:16 a.m. No.15332548   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2566 >>2614

>>15332390

HCQ is not in citrus. QUININE is. HCQ is hydroxychloroquine. Quinine is found in the tree bark of the cinchona tree. It is also in grapefruit juice and peels. It was once the most widely used medication in America. Bitters. Until prohibition.

Anonymous ID: dc55d5 Jan. 8, 2022, 9:20 a.m. No.15332557   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2624 >>2859

>>15332543

Mine was 1st week of Jan 2020. And I'm immune to Omicron. Everyone around me is getting it. It's super contagious. I would trade what I had for the omicron sniffles any day. That shit nearly killed me.

Anonymous ID: dc55d5 Jan. 8, 2022, 9:34 a.m. No.15332631   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2654

>>15332566

I used this citrus tonic to help keep my health with vitamin D and C and zinc when I felt a bought of fever coming on. It helped. I don't know if it cures colds, but it helps fever illnesses. Like malaria. And COVID.

Anonymous ID: dc55d5 Jan. 8, 2022, 9:40 a.m. No.15332669   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2677

>>15332614

Yes, and tonic water was a medicine.

 

Wiki on Gin and Tonic: The cocktail was introduced by the army of the British East India Company in India. In India and other tropical regions, malaria was a persistent problem. In the 1700s, Scottish doctor George Cleghorn studied how quinine, a traditional cure for malaria,[21] could be used to prevent the disease.[22] The quinine was drunk in tonic water but the bitter taste was unpleasant.[22] British officers in India in the early 19th century took to adding a mixture of water, sugar, lime and gin to the quinine in order to make the drink more palatable, thus gin and tonic was born.[23] Soldiers in India were already given a gin ration, and the sweet concoction made sense.[24] Since it is no longer used as an antimalarial, tonic water today contains much less quinine, is usually sweetened, and is consequently much less bitter.[25].