I suspect the powers that be aren’t satisfied with just the Covid pandemic. They’re already talking about another unnamed viral pandemic to push more vaccines, so this is something worth preparing for. Ash Wednesday and yesterday I was coming down with something bad, either a very bad cold, the flu or some other virus. It has devastated my friends’ family here where I attend nightly rosary for weeks now, so I knew what I was up against. I was so exhausted and my muscles were so sore, I couldn’t kneel during the TLM Ash Wednesday, which is offered at a school chapel with bare floors. A close friend, Dr. Chris Kahlenborn, carried out a study during Covid with his hospital patients. If while being treated for Covid they had any GI symptoms he recommended peptobismol. That contains bismuth which has known antiviral properties. The patients who received peptobismol did remarkably better with Covid than those who didn’t. He actually wrote up the study and had it published in the medical literature. https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fddsv.2022.962988/full He is fully convinced it’s more effective than ivermectin or hcq with Covid, cold and flu viruses. It’s an extremely safe, cheap, widely available over the counter medicine and it’s taken at the maximum dose on the package but only for 3 to 5 days. I started taking it yesterday. Yesterday I also got out the bottle of liquid injectable Ivermectin. Yes, the “horse” version available at farm supply stores. I drew up the proper dose according to established guidelines for Covid treatment, made a hot tea cocktail, and downed it. Dosage: https://www.barnhardt.biz/2022/07/1...-by-drinking-it-full-dosage-conversion-table/ Ivermectin was definitively proven to be effective during Covid and is effective with cold and flu viruses as well. It’s also being studied for cancer treatment, among other things. It’s a wonder drug and one of the safest prescription meds known to man. So I take a combo of ivermectin and peptobismol as soon as I start coming down with a viral infection. The cytokine storm, even the mild one of a common cold, hits my brain like a ton of bricks 24 to 48 hours prior to cold or flu symptoms due to prior multiple strokes causing recrudescense, a low grade recurrence of the original stroke symptoms, so I know when a virus is coming on. This combo of generic PeptoBismol and ivermectin really does work wonders for me. It seems to shortcircuit and dramatically shorten, and sometimes stops a bug when I’m getting sick. Today that seems to be the case. I’m still tired but all the other symptoms I had over the last 48 hours are gone. This has consistently been the case for me, and I know others who are doing likewise now also. I suspect big pharma knows this. But since they can’t make money off it and because sell billions of dollars worth of over the counter cold and flu remedies yearly, they have a vested interest in not promoting this.
They’re already planning the next pandemic: https://www.newscientist.com/article/2413011-what-is-disease-x-and-why-is-it-in-the-news/ What is Disease X and why is it in the news? The World Health Organization uses the term "Disease X" to refer to an infection with the potential for causing the next epidemic – or a new global pandemic What is Disease X? Don’t panic! Disease X doesn’t exist yet – but it might one day. Disease X is the label that the World Health Organization uses to refer to some currently unknown infectious condition that is capable of causing an epidemic or – if it spreads across multiple countries – a pandemic. The term, coined in 2017, can be used to mean a newly discovered pathogen or any known pathogen with newly acquired pandemic potential. By the latter definition, covid-19 was the first Disease X. But there could be another in the future. Why are people talking about it now? The World Health Organization has been warning global leaders about the risks of future pandemics at the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting, held this week in Davos, Switzerland. “Some people say this may create panic,” says WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus. “No. It’s better to anticipate something that may happen – because it has happened in our history many times – and prepare for it.” What might the next Disease X be? We don’t know – that is why it is called Disease X. The coronaviruses, a large group of viruses, were long seen as a prime contender for producing a new pandemic, even before the covid-19 outbreak. That is because the novel coronavirus wasn’t the first dangerous pathogen from this group. In 2002, a different coronavirus started spreading in China. It caused a form of pneumonia called SARS that killed around 1 in 10 of those it infected, before it was stopped by strict infection control measures. Another, even deadlier coronavirus called MERS occasionally breaks out, causing a pneumonia that kills 1 in 3 of those infected. However, recent work suggests SARS and MERS would have a harder time triggering a fresh pandemic because almost everyone in the world now has antibodies to the virus that causes covid-19 and these seem to give partial protection against most other pathogens in the coronavirus family. Are there any other contenders with pandemic potential? Plenty of diseases, some well known and others less familiar, could pose a global threat. Flu strains have caused global pandemics several times in the past, including one of the deadliest disease outbreaks ever, the “Spanish flu” of 1918. A virulent strain of bird flu is currently sweeping the world, and it occasionally spreads from birds to mammals, causing mass die-offs. Just this week, it was named as the culprit in the deaths of 17,000 baby elephant seals in Argentina last October. Then there are other contenders, such as Ebola, which causes severe bleeding, and the mosquito-borne Zika, which can cause babies to born with smaller heads if the infection occurs during pregnancy. The WHO updated its list of pathogens with the most pandemic potential in 2022. What can we do to stop Disease X? There is some good news: the covid-19 pandemic may have made it easier to stop any future Disease X. Covid-19 spurred the development of novel vaccine designs, including ones that can be quickly repurposed to target new pathogens. It led, for instance, to the advent of vaccines based on mRNA. This formula contains a short piece of genetic material that makes the body’s immune cells produce the coronavirus “spike” protein – but it could be updated to make cells churn out a different protein, simply by rewriting the mRNA sequence. Can we do anything else to fight against Disease X? Countries need better early warning systems for new diseases, and health services need to become more resilient to unexpected surges in demand, says Tedros. “When hospitals were stretched beyond their capacity [with covid], we lost many people because we could not manage them. There was not enough space, there was not enough oxygen.” To prevent the same thing from happening when Disease X strikes, Tedros says health services must be able to expand their capacity on demand. Luckily, they can make those preparations without knowing exactly what Disease X will be. “Disease X is a placeholder,” he says. “Whatever the disease is, you can prepare for it.”
Remember that thesis that the thaw in Siberia could bring smallpox again? I think this would be the worst-case scenario considering the factor (mortality x propagation).
Thanks BrianK, I will save this in my computer. Some pharmacies which used to have ivermectin during the pandemic no longer sell ivermectin now.
Smallpox is a variola virus. I suspect but have no way of knowing for certain that this combo would have some effect with it also, since smallpox was supposedly eradicated years ago.
I buy liquid injectable vet Ivermectin at farm supply stores and follow these dosing instructions: https://www.barnhardt.biz/2022/07/1...-by-drinking-it-full-dosage-conversion-table/ Veterinary pharmaceuticals are made to the same high standards as the human version. A lot of the time they’re the same exact med made in the same manufacturing facility. Plus consider this - what would happen if substandard veterinary meds were given to a multimillion dollar race horse, which subsequently died as a result. That pharmaceutical company would be sued out of existence. I’m convinced vet drugs might even be MORE safe than those made for human consumption.
I just asked Dr. Chris about this. His response: Check out the second subtitle where it says NTPase is vital for [smallpox] replication, which is exactly what bismuth [in peptobismol] inhibits. Definitely theoretically possible, probably be best if you took it orally and applied heavy doses on your skin where the smallpox were so you get direct contact. Bismuth subsalicylate if you put it into a petri dish with herpes, kills it or kills a lot of it so theoretically if you put peptobismol on your cold sores, it may cure it or help a lot with it. Same thing should go for a smallpbox. I would do both but my guess honestly is that it would be affective. I don't know if it's curative but I think it will diminish the disease. Certainly the first thing I would reach for! So peptobismol at least should be active against smallpox.
@BrianK By an incredible coincidence, after reading your answer I searched on Google, in the news filter, for the word "Varíola" and some of the results talked about this disease. https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.cn...se-that-claimed-a-life-in-us-19041111.htm/amp