You can't discover virus because you can't test for it. Viruses are too small for any optical microscopy, and there is no proven DNA evidence except in silico which is latin for "i guessed using a computer".
Look at horse suppliers. Cheap, OTC. Horses have a delicate constitution, totally safe for us. Careful with dosing! (I've done this to great effect, it's not some armchair idiot saying "you try it first")
Also made in a form designed for dogs. They can eat anything, stay away.
HCQ was (theoretically) available via America's Frontline Doctors. I procrastinated on that too and their website got pulled.
You're kidding! I guess we do have a few liberties (precious few) left in the US.
An herb, licorice aka licorice root (Glycyrrhiza glahra in Latin) is anti-viral and also specifically against wuflu. Fauci knew this in 2005.
Hopefully you've been supplementing with lots of vitamin D for some time now?
Zinc + zinc ionophore helps, by interfering with viral replication inside cells. A good ionophore is Quercetin. Not as good as HCQ IMHO but beggars can't be choosers.
I should add that there is no test where they have "reinfected" someone or something else using tissue from someone who has tested positive. This includes animal/bat tests. If I found such a test of course the bar for believable evidence would be damn high.
I forget the name of the 1900 scientist you're drawing from, but all of his ideas have been replaced. There's not an ethical way to implement your suggestion, for one. Of course it's not ethical to deny sick people medicine. Everything done is a violation of ethics!
Ok, looking at it that way, autopsy on people dead supposedly of wuflu discovers blood clots, not virus. No wonder WHO forbade autopsy, right?
Btw Ivermectin clears out the clotting and junk, at least if taken early.
You can't discover virus because you can't test for it. Viruses are too small for any optical microscopy, and there is no proven DNA evidence except in silico which is latin for "i guessed using a computer".
False. Electron microscopes exist. The issue is these are not used on all patients, or anything but a tiny sample.
That isn't optical. Electron microscopes don't see the same things.
They still allow us to see it.
Look at horse suppliers. Cheap, OTC. Horses have a delicate constitution, totally safe for us. Careful with dosing! (I've done this to great effect, it's not some armchair idiot saying "you try it first")
Also made in a form designed for dogs. They can eat anything, stay away.
HCQ was (theoretically) available via America's Frontline Doctors. I procrastinated on that too and their website got pulled.
You're kidding! I guess we do have a few liberties (precious few) left in the US.
An herb, licorice aka licorice root (Glycyrrhiza glahra in Latin) is anti-viral and also specifically against wuflu. Fauci knew this in 2005.
Hopefully you've been supplementing with lots of vitamin D for some time now?
Zinc + zinc ionophore helps, by interfering with viral replication inside cells. A good ionophore is Quercetin. Not as good as HCQ IMHO but beggars can't be choosers.
Early treatment is key ...
I should add that there is no test where they have "reinfected" someone or something else using tissue from someone who has tested positive. This includes animal/bat tests. If I found such a test of course the bar for believable evidence would be damn high.
I forget the name of the 1900 scientist you're drawing from, but all of his ideas have been replaced. There's not an ethical way to implement your suggestion, for one. Of course it's not ethical to deny sick people medicine. Everything done is a violation of ethics!
Injecting a virus into a test animal is fine. Claiming it can or cannot crossover is separate.
Coronaviruses typically are quirky in cross species infection. The test is meaningless.