Ella, I’ve read your comments and you have my sympathy for your situation! Yours is much like so many others that never wanted this vaccine. I believe our government will eventually try to force it on everyone soon . God have mercy on everyone. I’ll keep you and your daughter in my prayers at mass today. God bless….
I have had similar prompts to get written/hard copies of religious books including the divine office. I believe we will not have on line access so it will only be the hard copies we have in our possession that we will have access to. at a minimum , we should have a Bible, Divine office, book of saints, psalter , and book of prayers imo
Thank you too Brian. I feel like we’re all in this together. I’ve appreciated your knowledge and expertise that you’ve constantly shared here on the forum. You have provided substantial information that has benefited us all. I’ve lurked here for quite a while. In some respects it’s you that have given me the courage to chime in and not worry about public backlash. Peace.
Agree! It’s a blessing and gift to have the knowledge and sources of truth from both you and Brian. I’ve found the lack of information and tbh misinformation coming from once trusted sources most frustrating. Prayers for both of you that you are not attacked for speaking the truth and providing us “lay” people with information so we can make informed decisions. Peace
Thank you. The loss of potency hadn't occurred to me. With everything in supermarkets having a use by or best before date, I thought that it might somehow go bad. At the same time, I couldn't think of what would make boiled lemons and grapefruit go bad over time. The shortcomings of being equally ignorant of medicine and nutrition are my excuse for what appear to many to be stupid questions. Perhaps storing the tea in airtight containers would help it from losing potency. Some, not all, tonic water contains quinine. Tonic water has a long shelf life. Wouldn't the hydroxychloroquin tea have a similar shelf life if stored in an airtight container? Or would it? The only person I know who recovered from covid told me that she was so ill she could barely move. She and her husband caught the virus. Her children didn't. Neighbours and friends fed them, leaving cooked meals in the porch.
The thing is, this virus affects each person differently. I am glad your friends recovered. Both of my parents were sick with the Hong Kong flu. I think that was it. It was a dreadful flu. They were in bed for a week, not moving. I was home on Christmas break so I took care of them. I didn’t catch it. But they weren’t talking or moving. The Christmas of 1968. I am going to look it up. Another wonderful gift from the Far East.
Dandelion root is primarily inulin, a poorly digestible form of sugar related to fructose. The active chemicals you want are in dandelion leafs, so it must be in the form of an extract. So search for dandelion leaf extract. (The brand I bought a month ago on Amazon is no longer in stock. There must have been a run on dandelion leaf extracts.)
We hear and read so much contradictory information about this virus. Symptoms are minimal, mild, severe or lethal How can any of us know how it would affect us? The good Lord has protected me thus far, but I have a duty to take precautions. I wouldn't stand in the middle of a busy road and expect God to direct all the traffic away from me. Likewise with covid, I am taking all the precautions I can short of taking an abortion tainted vaccine, one that hasn't been in use long enough for the medics to know all the possible long term negative effects. Could I make ice cubes out of the tea and reheat them in a covered container in the microwave when needed? Do you think the tea would maintain its potency using that method?
I see no reason why the recipe would lose its potency if refrigerated unless it was sitting for several months. You could also freeze it for use later in smaller containers if desired. Why microwave the ice cubes when you can simply add one to a cup of hot tea and they would melt while cooling the tea a bit?
I thought of one cubes too! I think that would work. Also as you said tonic water lasts a long time. So why wouldn't an air tight container of this tea.
I feel just awful for the people who have taken the vacc and are getting ill anyway. We are losing many people around me who had the vacc and are dyeing anyway. It's so strange how it affects some people so strongly and others not so much. Quercetin seems to be a good preventative for those with or without the vacc. Natural ingredients work better than formulated . . . My friend who lives near a lot of homeless people had a recommendation for the vacced: vit d and c, zinc, quercetin, pine needle tea, and shizandra. Homeless people, farmers, andAmish seem to be more in the know than big name docs! Trying something is better than nothing imho.
I think that threads such as this one may necessitate becoming private sometime. In fact, I am surprised that padraig has not had some kind of push back at this point. The way people are being banned from social media sites for any infraction of the approved narrative is sure to become a full on campaign to silence any website not playing by their rules at some point. The reason I think this is coming soon are articles like this one. It's completely absurd yet much of what we have seen so far is borderline neurotic when it comes to those who have been given authority to decide what we are allowed to believe. https://www.msn.com/en-ca/news/cana...-if-an-unvaccinated-person-gives-you-covid-19 'Choices have consequences': Can you sue if an unvaccinated person gives you COVID-19? Sharon Kirkey 2 days ago Should the wilfully unvaccinated be held liable if they infect someone with COVID-19? As the drumbeats of a Delta-driven fourth wave grow louder, an argument is being made that people who choose not to get vaccinated should face fines, loss of such benefits as employment insurance, increased rates for life insurance and personal liability, if it could be proven their behaviour caused the hospitalization or death of others. “Choices have consequences. Personal responsibility matters,” Arthur Caplan, founding head of New York University School of Medicine’s division of ethics, and Dorit Reiss, a law professor at the University of California’s Hastings College of Law wrote in Barron’s magazine. “Want to reject expert opinion and the established facts about COVID and put yourself and others at risk? Then you should pay, if your choice harms others.”