Medicinal

A Recipe for home-made Quinine

Hydroxychloroquine, sold (by Big Pharma) under the brand name Plaquenil among others, is a medication used to prevent and treat malaria in areas where malaria remains sensitive to chloroquine. Other uses include treatment of rheumatoid arthritislupus, and porphyria. It is taken by mouth, often in the form of hydroxychloroquine sulphate.[2]

 Hydroxychloroquine is said to have been studied to prevent and treat coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID‑19), but we are being told that all clinical trials of that formulation conducted during 2020 found it is ‘ineffective and may cause dangerous side effects‘. It proved good enough, however, to be administered to our Prime Minister earlier this year, when he was in a pickle [3][4][5][6]

Quinine alone, on the other hand is a totally natural medication, derived from the bark of the cinchona tree, which is native to the Andean forests of western South America. It has been historically ‘sought after’ for its medicinal value, and was probably brought to Europe by the Spanish, at a time when they were being unkind to the local population there. It proved to be an effective treatment against malaria, which made it of great economic and political importance.

Whenever you feel a chest cold coming on or just feel grotty, make your own Quinine. It is easily made, out of the peelings of grapefruits and lemons …but, especially grapefruits.

Here is the recipe – you can take this concoction during the day…or you can make a ‘tea’ out of it and drink it all day.

To make your very own Quinine:

You will need the rind of 2-3 grapefruits or lemons

Taking the peel only, cover it with water to about 3 inches above the peels. Put a glass lid on your pot if you have one  – (a metal one is OK if you don’t) – and let it simmer for about 2 hours.

Do not take the lid off the pot until it cools completely, as this would allow some Quinine essence to escape in the steam.

You can sweeten the Quinine ‘tea’ with honey or sugar since it does taste bitter. Take 1 tablespoon every couple of hours to bring up phlegm from your lungs. Discontinue this just as soon as you get better.

This should allay your fears about this ‘virus’ because you now have the defence against that – and many other things. If you can also take zinc in tablet form (available from any herbal chemist) with this recipe, the zinc will propel the Quinine into your cells for a much faster healing process.

Or you can just accept the ‘unproven‘ vaccination, which has just arrived in the nick of time, and continue to wear those’ ineffective‘ masks for the next four years, since the Chancellor’s forecast is that it will take until 2125 to get our national budget back into any sort of decent shape.

History, Medicinal

Common Sense in a crisis

I am ‘getting on a bit’ but. after suffering a nasty fall indoors at around 2am last Tuesday, when I did fortunately manage to stand up again, I was able to unlock my front door, knowing that the ambulance crew were on their way.

Normally, even during the day, I do tend also to leave the ‘safety chain’ across the door, and this prompted my question to the paramedics –

How do you guys manage if you come to a property where the door is unlocked, but the safety chain has been left on? Do you carry any bolt cutters in the ambulances?”

No”, came the answer, “we call the fire brigade!”

Which seems a bit daft really, with someone inside in need of immediate life-saving medical attention. It must surely be cheaper to issue cutters to every ambulance rather than to pay for a fire crew to attend – and not even a fire occurring.

Inevitably, my mind turned to 15th April 1989, and that dreadful public order debacle at the Hillsborough stadium. There were finally 96 persons dead and 766 were injured, all of which might have been avoided, if only the groundstaff equipment had included a set of stout bolt-cutting equipment to open up the front ‘gates’ to those terraced areas, allowing supporters to spill out safely onto the pitch.

I don’t recall that being raised as an issue during the public enquiry.

(The last time I mentioned this on social media I got a bit of abuse from one family who had been bereaved at Hillsborough, which was unfortunate, because my point was not against their relatives’ situation, but supportive of them and how those poor people could have been saved.)

Globalist, Medicinal

BUDESONIDE – Why the silence in the UK?

I recently recorded an audio file on ‘Brighteon’ – where a Dr Ronald Bartlett describes how he has found this treatment, Budesonide – already proven over many years to clear bacterial infection and inflammation from the lungs – is also effective today in clearing off the present troublesome version of SARS. He has now used it successfully to help cure many patients.

However, I am not permitted to load an audio file onto WordPress – for security reasons? Anyone who would like to hear and share the file can email us at the usual address – info@livingstones.uk – or it may still be up on Brighteon

Update:
Yesterday, after a fall in the early hours in my home, being taken by ambulance to the local hospital, with broken nose and damaged spectacles, I was happy to get x-ray confirmation that my very sore neck vertebrae were still intact. However, I was openly mocked by doctors that I should outright REFUSE the very matter-of-fact COVID swab , declared to be a ‘conspiracy theorist’ and told that I WOULD ‘have to have’ said swab when they put me on a Ward (to check out my chronic hypotension).

Twenty minutes later, I was back home by taxi. Going to bed to rest my sore neck, I was disturbed after 30 more minutes by heavy knocking at the door; an ambulance with two paramedics had been dispatched, quote “because you still have a cannula in your arm” (which I had already removed). “Is there a shortage of them?” I asked, “you can take it away if you need it” – and thanked them politely but firmly for their concern. They seemed nonplussed that a patient should understand that there is a difference between admission and detainment within the NHS  system. They left..

With a hat-tip to my online friend, Christian Destree, for spotting the typo in the product name..