Little Ladies,
Judy Mikovits is on my mind because she’s on the whiteboard in the Flynn photo.
She has said, and since it’s too preliminary I consider it a theory, that a drug called Suranim can help repair vaccine damage. It was a 100+ year old drug used for sleeping sickness. I know this is early and other medications and treatments will now be examined for use - but I pass it along because it’s on my mind.
She said Suranim is present in pine needle tea.
I looked into it. Many pines are toxic but there are about 6 species that are safe and some make what sounds like a pleasant anti-oxidant tea. In particular, online information makes white pine tea sound better than standard tea, and a second kind was said to taste ‘floral’. The other 4 varied and I think two were astringent. Apparently this kind of tea has been long consumed for healthy antioxidants.
:) But, if collecting wild, one HAS to know how to correctly identify pine trees as some would be toxic. Info said tea should not be consumed more than once a week, individuals said they have it a little more often than that. A YOUTUBE demo I watched showed collecting needles from different parts of a tree to avoid damaging it and encourage continued growth. The man said collect enough needles to fill an ‘okay’ sign (the circular region between thumb and forefinger when gesturing ‘okay’) and grind it up with mortar and pestle.
I wanted to try this ‘smooth’ white pine flavor but didn’t see white pines nearby. Etsy sells pine needle tea but the more ‘astringent’ flavors.
The science on this issue is too new to say ‘this is the treatment’ but I was intrigued by the idea that one could enjoy smooth tea and get anti oxidents at the same time, without purchasing supplements.
MOAR treatments. MOAR research. The answers are coming!
Does clove contain Suranim?
Clove is from pine trees, I believe.
It may not be a flavor of choice in the summer, but it does make for a nice addition to cinnamon tea and coconut cream, nutmeg, turmeric, cinnamon and black pepper enhanced coffee.
Tune in to CPAC all weekend on the RSBN mobile app or our livestream on Rumble!https://t.co/YuVMAasPhG— RSBN 🇺🇸 (@RSBNetwork) July 8, 2021
Thank you - I had remembered about the pine needle tea but the actual use was a bit fuzzy in the old memory banks. IIRC fir needles have the same goody stuff in them, I will look. I have a gazillion fir trees and if they have the same stuff I will be happy to collect needles and send to anyone who wants any.
Ain’t the internet grand! I knew I’d read about it. Snips only, more at links.
PINE TEA: Possible Antidote for Spike Protein Transmission
https://ambassadorlove.wordpress.com/2021/05/06/pine-tea-possible-antidote-for-spike-protein-transmission/
The Trail from Suramin to Pine Needle Tea
Here is the trail of science and data that shows the derivative relationship between pine needles and Suramin (“the elist’s antidote” to microbial illnesses) – and which also provides a potential antidote for those affected by the spike protein contagion (for reasons explained within the following data):
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suramin
Now read the following paragraph within the subtitle (Too) Many Targets in the 100 Years of Suramin PDF to understand its antidote properties to the spike protein contagion (derived from the mRNA that gives instructions to replicate a spike protein in other cells):
Suramin further decreases the activities of a large number of enzymes involved in DNA and RNA synthesis and modification: DNA polymerases (103, 104), RNA polymerases (103, 105, 106), reverse transcriptase (18, 103), telomerase (67), and enzymes involved in winding/ unwinding of DNA (107, 108) are inhibited by suramin, as well as histone- and chromatin-modifying enzymes like chromobox proteins (109), methyltransferases (110), and sirtuin histone deacetylases (111)
This is medical-speak for inhibiting the inappropriate replication and modification of RNA and DNA.
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:
[long list]
Pine, spruce, cedar, and fir needle tea may end up being the easiest way to gain the numerous benefits of the evergreen trees, along with a natural protection against unhealthy replications of spike proteins today.
Dosage: 3 cups per day or more of any desired strength (based on the quantity of needles added to a french press or teapot) with an approximate 1-3 tablespoons of needles per cup of near boiling water. This is a maintenance health-building dose.
Stronger amounts of needles to water can be used therapeutically. If it feels too acidic (due to the vitamin C) for your system, moderate the quantity and complement the tea with alkalizing food and dark green herbs or sea vegetables.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Sciencey article: (!!!!!!)
Suramin and Autism
https://health.ucsd.edu/news/topics/Suramin-Autism/Pages/default.aspx
COVID-19 update: A Phase II clinical trial assessing the drug suramin as a treatment for autism is slated to begin in the spring of 2021, pending final approvals. Read Autism and Suramin in the Time of COVID-19 response.
Suramin is a 100-year-old drug developed to treat African sleeping sickness and river blindness. Though it has been investigated for other diseases, including cancer, it is not approved for any therapeutic use in the United States.
However, a small, randomized clinical trial conducted by Robert Naviaux, MD, PhD , professor of medicine, pediatrics and pathology, and colleagues at University of California San Diego School of Medicine have found that a single intravenous dose of suramin produced dramatic, but transient, improvement of core symptoms of autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Currently, there are no drugs approved for treating the core symptoms of ASD.
More broadly, the trial findings support the “cell danger response theory,” which posits that autism and other chronic conditions are fundamentally driven by metabolic dysfunction—and thus treatable. Naviaux and his co-authors propose larger, longer clinical trials to assess suramin (or similar drugs) as an ASD treatmen
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Aha, Judy Mikovits connection:
Here’s an effective way to guard against the spike protein contagion caused by the Covid vaccinated
http://stateofthenation.co/?p=63895
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 – acontagion 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”.)
When the medical establishment and political promoters want to exempt themselves from taking inoculations, they always give themselves a legal way out, while pushing the “citizenry” to take the jabs.
“I am allergic to the serum” is one of their solutions.
Taking the serum is one thing. The spike protein contagion now being experienced in large numbers by those who did not take the serum, but just visited with a relative or friend who did, is entirely new and unprecedented.
(then same info as the first article)
Little Ladies - brilliant!
Ping med