Also good for nettle stings, but more importantly, it contains quercetin, which has strong antiviral effects, especially in this case, perhaps, anti-inflammatory action.
Yes! and the high inulin kept my blood sugar a bit more level, since my appetite was off while ill as well....the totality of its properties (hundreds of constituents) is what works on the blood cleaning aspect; Burdock is some deep root medicine all right, and roasting the root makes it taste the best, and increases some constituents, though perhaps at the expense of some others. I drank my burdock tea from raw roots, and it still tastes ok that way...sure it saved me, glad I was sick before the hubris and bad advice was rampant...and you know, i just happened to have it on hand by chance, 2 pounds of it. Luck.
In country after country, there was a curious phenomenon surrounding the inoculations: daily case counts increased, and the rate of infection increased, AFTER the inoculations were widespread.
If the inoculations were preventing community spread, this cannot happen. Considering the random nature of the propagation of infectious respiratory pathogens, if a majority of the population is inoculated and the inoculations are effective, the rate of community spread MUST slow down, as the frequency with which the pathogen encounters an unprotected host is reduced.
That the rate of spread actually increased dovetails well with Big Data analysis of country-level data showing the inoculations cause an INCREASE in SARS-COV-2 infections.
Not one of these studies purporting to show inoculation efficacy can reconcile to the raw epidemiological data. That alone makes them highly suspect and unreliable.
Had a new type of something 11/2019 thru 12/2019. Burdock root tea healed me. Reeeeeeeeeee
Also good for nettle stings, but more importantly, it contains quercetin, which has strong antiviral effects, especially in this case, perhaps, anti-inflammatory action.
https://covid19.onedaymd.com/2021/10/quercetin-and-covid-19-two-new-studies.html
Yes! and the high inulin kept my blood sugar a bit more level, since my appetite was off while ill as well....the totality of its properties (hundreds of constituents) is what works on the blood cleaning aspect; Burdock is some deep root medicine all right, and roasting the root makes it taste the best, and increases some constituents, though perhaps at the expense of some others. I drank my burdock tea from raw roots, and it still tastes ok that way...sure it saved me, glad I was sick before the hubris and bad advice was rampant...and you know, i just happened to have it on hand by chance, 2 pounds of it. Luck.
Being a little retarded modern pop-culture wise, who's the woman in the picture and what's the connection, if you don't mind?
The vaccines (ahem, well, the mRNA-injections) seems more and more like an anti-dragon amulet.
That’s Daenerys, the dragon queen from Game of Thrones.
In country after country, there was a curious phenomenon surrounding the inoculations: daily case counts increased, and the rate of infection increased, AFTER the inoculations were widespread.
https://allfactsmatter.substack.com/p/no-return-to-normal-in-sight?s=w
If the inoculations were preventing community spread, this cannot happen. Considering the random nature of the propagation of infectious respiratory pathogens, if a majority of the population is inoculated and the inoculations are effective, the rate of community spread MUST slow down, as the frequency with which the pathogen encounters an unprotected host is reduced.
That the rate of spread actually increased dovetails well with Big Data analysis of country-level data showing the inoculations cause an INCREASE in SARS-COV-2 infections.
https://allfactsmatter.substack.com/p/how-many-red-flags-are-enough
Not one of these studies purporting to show inoculation efficacy can reconcile to the raw epidemiological data. That alone makes them highly suspect and unreliable.