Mandatory quarantine camps now in NZ. Video at the link. https://twitter.com/_reddpill/status/1293786621477654528
https://wearethene.ws/notable/129805 The Pandemic Appears to Have Spared Africa so Far…can you say Malaria and HCQ? The Pandemic Appears to Have Spared Africa so Far, Scientists are Struggling to Explain Why, We KNOW Why Details INSIDE https://thedcpatriot.com/the-pandem...ng-to-explain-why-we-know-why-details-inside/
Harvey Risch, M.D., Ph.D., professor of epidemiology at Yale School of Public Health: "Hydroxychloroquine works in high-risk patients, and saying otherwise is dangerous" I can only speculate about the cause of the FDA’s recalcitrance. Hydroxychloroquine is an inexpensive, generic medication. Unlike certain profit-generating, patented medications, which have been promiscuously touted on the slimmest of evidence, hydroxychloroquine has no natural financial constituency. No one will get rich from it. Further, it seems quite possible that the FDA, a third of whose funding comes from drug companies, is under intense pressure from those companies to be extremely conservative in its handling of hydroxychloroquine. If hydroxychloroquine is used widely and comes to be recognized as highly effective, the markets for expensive and patented COVID-19 medications, including intravenous drugs that can only be used in the hospital, will shrink substantially. https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/...sk-patients-and-saying-otherwise-is-dangerous
Could it have anything to do with the fact that the Faith is growing in Africa faster than anyplace else in the world? I think so.
"State Representative Jesse Topper, who is also a High School Football coach, points out the hypocrisy of not allowing fall sports in Pennsylvania #LetTheKidsPlay" *** The following is not related to the topic of this thread but since it popped up after the above I watched it. I think that this video from last year is very good and should be viewed by everyone. If you watch it, you will probably be surprised as I was. The title is not really indicative of the point being made but a very good point is being made. + "Brutally Honest Valedictorian Regrets Being Top of the Class"
Rep. Louie Gohmert to Newsmax TV: They Wanted Me to 'Just Die'; HCQ Saved Me Celebrating a victory over COVID-19 and hateful critics who they said wanted him to "just die," Rep. Louie Gohmert, R-Texas, told Newsmax TV that hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) helped him overcome his bout with the coronavirus. "I know there were people, from some of the comments I got, they were hoping I would just die, but there were a lot of people praying," Gohmert told "The Chris Salcedo Show." "But, I've got to say, Chris, I got the hydroxychloroquine, azithromycin, the z-pak, and zinc, and vitamins, steroid nebulizer, and I'm telling you, it made a huge difference, a huge difference. "So, I'm doing so much better than I would have expected." Gohmert has been a harsh critic both of face mask mandates and those politicizing the global coronavirus pandemic, but he is squarely on the side of believing in the power of prayer and HCQ as a treatment for COVID-19. "I'm grateful that people like the president, Sean Hannity, Laura Ingraham, and so many others have talked about it: Hydroxychloroquine, it may not be the silver bullet to slay COVID, the China virus, the Wuhan virus, but it is a help to so many people," Gohmert added to host Chris Salcedo. "Why would the non-doctors, Google, Twitter, Facebook, try to stop people from getting something that really does help people? "It certainly helped me." https://www.newsmax.com/newsfront/louie-gohmert-hydroxychloroquine-z-pak-zinc/2020/08/12/id/981878/
https://www.seattletimes.com/seattl...e-stockpiles-tons-of-food-for-the-need-ahead/ From peanut butter to applesauce, Washington state stockpiles tons of food for the need ahead Aug. 8, 2020 at 6:00 am Updated Aug. 8, 2020 at 7:49 am By Anna Patrick Project Homeless engagement editor In Washington state’s new food warehouse, there’s enough Jif peanut butter to make nearly 3 million sandwiches. Barilla pasta boxes stretch to the ceiling, 100,000 in all. Large stacks of TreeTop applesauce, pancake mix and canned green beans sit on pallets, like soldiers waiting to be sent into duty. Since the coronavirus crisis first rocked Washington in March, nonprofits and state agencies working in food assistance have been forced to draw a completely new road map for getting food to people who need it. The warehouse in Fife is part of that new model. After seeing food banks struggle to meet demand once the pandemic hit and the economy tanked, the Washington state Department of Agriculture (WSDA) began preparing to buy and stockpile tons of food to ward off a shortage in the months ahead. The new stockpile is driven by two major factors: A nearly doubling in demand for food assistance across the state and a national food supply chain that is bogged down amid an overwhelming surge in demand. As many as 2.2 million Washingtonians — about 30% of the state’s population — are facing food insecurity, according to Katie Rains, WSDA food policy advisor. That’s more than double the 850,000 state residents who sought help from food assistance programs last November, before the pandemic. “We’ve been in this very desperate situation starting toward the end of March,” said WSDA Director Derek Sandison. “This [warehouse] is a continuation of our efforts to make sure we have fusions of product that will help us to continue to weather the storm.” The storm took hold in mid-April, Sandison said during a tour of the warehouse on Friday. That’s when the state’s three main food bank distributors — Food Lifeline, Northwest Harvest and Second Harvest — told the WSDA that based on the spike in requests for food assistance, the organizations had roughly a two-week supply of food for hunger relief. “We went into panic mode,” Sandison said. “That’s not an exaggeration. … So we jumped in with both feet and started active procurement on our end.” But as the WSDA was trying to buy as much nonperishable food as it could to increase the state’s emergency reserves, so was everyone else. Not only was the WSDA competing with other states and large national food-assistance programs, it also faced competition from grocery stores as national supplies of products such as pasta and peanut butter were becoming increasingly hard to come by. “Peanut butter was a very highly wanted and needed commodity,” said Gary Newte, sourcing and product director for Northwest Harvest. “Peanut butter prices have probably tripled in the last three to four months.” These high costs are having significant effects on the big food bank distributors’ bottom lines. “Over a seven-month span during this crisis, we’ll spend more on purchasing food than we have for the previous four years combined,” said Thomas Reynolds, CEO of Northwest Harvest. And six months into the pandemic and economic crisis, those costs haven’t gone down, Newte said. Many food distributors are still waiting on food they ordered months ago, he said.
EZ cure for covid? My husband came down with all the covid symptoms Sunday night . . .dry cough, fever, chills, groggy, muscle aches. I was able to get a Dr. appt. Monday afternoon. I could not go in with him, had to wait in the car. But I sent in a note requesting zpac, HDC. The Dr. said NO to HDC, but gave him a zpac and cough suppressant. His temp was 103. Did two flu tests and covid test. I got home, praying to God for a cure. Mentioned it on FB, one of my friends said to get quercetin, it is as good as hdc, over the counter. I went to Walgreens, they did not have it, I went to GNC, got their brand. I gave one to hubs and me Mon. evening along with him: tylenol for fever, zpac pill, cough suppressant, airborne that has zinc, zinc lozenges, my essential oil diffusers with echinacea and rosemary to help lungs. Green tea with raw honey. He was so weak he could not get off the couch, I had to help him, very groggy. Went into chills. Gave him another quercetin Tues. with the other things. A little improvement. Tues night sweat so bad I had to change his t shirt twice, ringing wet. Temp a little lower, 100. Results all came back negative for tests tues evening. But I did read that can be a fail. Wed. could see improvement. Temp down to 99. Less chills, energy coming back. Feeding him gatorade for fluids. Got a little food in him, not much. Still can't wake up. Today. Chills gone, fever gone, cough gone. Still very weak, eating good. Still taking quercetin. I ordered the one my friend recommended from Amazon, am getting two bottles, Toniiq is her fav. Along with more airborne. To have on hand, I have had some symptoms but mild. I was almost ready to call the ambulance Monday night, he was so weak. But I was afraid if he went in I would never see him again. So, am sharing this. The quercetin is not expensive. I got online and some dr's are recommending it as a treatment for covid, you can check it out. Big pharma wants to control us! It is so obvious. So, my prayers were answered, not in the way I expected, through a recommendation from FB! It's been quite a week here.
Thank you for telling us Katfalls. What an ordeal. Thank God you were able to fend it off. Good advice on quercetin. Also tonic water helps. It has quinine in it. I heard an MD on youtube say start drinking it as a preventative the way the people drank gin and tonics to prevent malaria in the tropics way back. This whole ban on HCQ is evil. Plain evil.
Katfalls, I am thankful that your husband is on the mend. Thank you for letting us know your treatment plan. You did very well! God bless you both.
Katfalls that is great news. I am a natural health proponent and I am glad to hear this is working for your husband.
Forest fires breaking out across southern CA. One in Carona CA. Dutch sounds pretty freaked out by it and thinks that a group is setting them intentionally.
I didn't have tonic water but have heard its good to fend off covid. Husband is doing so much better today, still very weak, but not groggy. A friend of mine went in the hospital with double pneumonia. They said she had covid by her symptoms. Put her on a respirator. Gave her remdesvir(sp). She got better, took her off respirator, just on oxygen for a few days. Then bad again, back into ICU on respirator again. Not sounding good.