Dr Vladimir Zelenko — who treated me for Covid-19 about 9 months ago — has famously said that the gene transfer therapeutics we are now at the point of coercing into people’s bodies with the threat of loss of freedom and loss of livelihood, leave behind “ticking time bombs.” He’s alluding here to the scientists who have been warning against vaccine enhancement of the disease (see, eg., Geert Vanden Bossche or Michael Yeadon). But he also says that these time bombs needn’t explode. If you have already been vaccinated, Zelenko, along with a host of the early sequential treatment pioneers, advise immediate treatment at the first sign of potential Covid. But even before that, there are things you can do to help prevent infection.
One of the easiest is an oral and nasal prophylaxis. A 1% solution of iodine in water, gargled and spit 2x a day, along with a nasal swab of that same solution (or something like the spray, Xlear), will keep clean the nasal pharynx ordinarily hosting the virus. If you feel you’ve been exposed to SARS-CoV-2, you can up the regiment to 4x daily. This prophylaxis / treatment was originally developed by dentists in close proximity to patients who are potentially infected with any number of viruses that take hold in the nose and throat.
Before I was diagnosed with Covid, I was on a priming prophylaxis to lessen my symptoms should I catch the virus. I caught the original strain, not the Delta variant, the latter being faster-moving and in need of quicker treatment. Still, you buy yourself time if your body is ready: if you are already on blood thinners, you have a 50% reduction in severe cases. If you have a vitamin D3 level over 50, you, too, have an excellent prognosis, regardless of age.
That said, here is a regimen that I was on — and I’m continuing to take (though in smaller doses) because it can help ameliorate the symptoms of any number of viruses — and that I put my wife and oldest son on when they had Covid. The entire household had and cleared the virus. Tanner was over it in an evening. I was over it in about 5 days, with no symptoms beyond day 3. Helen and Satchel had the worst cases, but the regimen I put them on shortened the syndrome and kept some of the worst symptoms away.
Quercetin 1000 mg; elemental zinc 50 mg; Vitamin D3 10,000 IU; Vitamin C (as directed); Vitamin K2 (as directed). After my diagnosis, I was given a zpack, HCQ, and Ivermectin (dosed by weight).
Today, I’d say to add in curcumin, melatonin, magnesium, and NAC or black seed oil.
Covid-19 is a virus that can be treated in stages. Unfortunately, there has never been an official protocol for treatment, and the medical establishment has gone out of its way not only to avoid treating the virus, but to prevent others from treating it. They went all in on the “vaccine” program. And because we have many clinical studies showing that, among physicians treating the virus, hospitalizations and deaths are cut by 85-96%, it’s fair to say — as Dr Zelenko has publicly — that over 550K Americans may have died for lack of early treatment.
The virus first enters and settles in the nose and throat, where it replicates, usually for up to 5-10 days. If you can treat it in its earliest stage — with the iodine solution, a Neti pot with saline, etc., you can kill off a lot of the virus and greatly reduce the viral load, which in Delta is quite high. If you cannot find HCQ, Quercetin and zinc are the two over-the-counter supplements you want to take immediately. HCQ has become, along with Ivermectin, so politicized that many pharmacies won’t fill prescriptions — effectively taking over the role of doctor. Never mind that these are two of the safest medicines on the planet; their efficacy promotes natural immunity, and the naturally immune aren’t likely purchasers of Covid products from Big Pharma.
HCQ or Quercetin act as zinc ionophores. That is, they provide the pathway for zinc to enter infected cells, where the zinc destroys an enzyme in the spike protein and derails replication. Quercetin also shows effectiveness in blocking the virus from latching onto ACE2 receptors. Ivermectin, if you can get it, has a number of mechanism of actions. For Covid, it, too, can act intercellularly, but its major benefit seems to be that it acts as a competitive binding agent, blocking the virus from entering healthy cells. This shortens the duration of replication and reduces viral load.
You should also find and demand a monoclonal antibody infusion.
All of these things will prevent the virus from getting into your respiratory tract. If, however, that happens, there are a number of corticosteroids, or inhaled budensinide, that can be given to combat the inflammatory stage of the virus. The object there is to reduce inflammation caused by the spike protein. The gout drug colchicine has shown great effectiveness in this area.
In the end, though, Covid-19 is a clotting disease. And the clots are micro-clots of the kind you won’t see on imaging tests. You’ll want to get a D-Dimer test, which will identity the micro-clotting, which should be treated with an anticoagulant. Thinning to blood to prevent the clots is the key to treatment once the disease has moved through the cytokine storm.
Our official hospital treatment protocols are garbage. First, they’ll give you an inadequate dose of a steroid. Then they’ll try to use remdesivir. Remdesivir is an anti-viral that might be effective if given up front at the onset of the virus. Instead, we give it as a precursor to the ventilator. The virus is gone by then in most patients. So all remdesivir has managed to do is bring on renal failure and liver trouble. From there it’s oxygen and intubation. And the prognosis at this point is awful. Vitamin D infusions that don’t go through the liver can dramatically raise Vitamin D levels and should be used.
But the bottom line is this. If at all possible, avoid going to the hospital. You are far better off being treated at home so long as you begin treatment early.
Here are a few of the protocols now being used with Delta. FLCCC. Dr Vladimir Zelenko. AAPS. America’s Front line Doctors. My Free Doctor.
Others to look into: Dr Urso. Dr. Pierre Cory.
I had my sis and BIL on the list of ingredients above sans HCQ or IVM, the latter of which they were able to get prescribed, after which they rapidly improved. You and your family. Mindy and her father in the ICU. All got better on this regiment, but all I hear is HAR HAR FISH TANK CLEANER HORSE DEWORMER HAR HAR.
A brief “anecdotal”, as they now call it.
When I was younger, I would get an occasional sinus infection or throat infection or ear infection or tooth infection. My doctor (or dentist) would prescribe an antibiotic. I would start taking it, and usually within 2-3 days, I would have a “sweat-out”; I would wake up in the morning to find my pillow was soaked in sweat, and the fever I had before starting the antibiotic had been broken.
Zooming ahead to last November: I came down with COVID; the original variant. I had been able to get a prescription for a tri-pack in advance: zinc sulfate capsules, HCQ pills and azithromycin (in a “Z-Pak”). As soon as the lab results came back positive, I started taking it according to the directions on each medication in the tri-pack. This was Sunday afternoon.
Monday night into Tuesday, I had a “sweat-out”. My fever didn’t break, but I had started taking ibuprofen, which I took for another day or two, then switched to acetominophen on my doctor’s instruction. My COVID symptoms: some congestion, a cough, a very mild headache/feeling of being out of it a bit (that might have been brought on, at least in part, by the cough syrup I was taking for the cough), continued on for another five days or so.
The following Sunday, my fever didn’t top 99.5. I stopped taking the acetominophen. My temperature was normal the next day, and remained that way. My cough persisted for another couple of weeks, then finally diminished. I still retain some diminished capability of detecting some odors.
Can I PROVE the HCQ and zinc prevented me from being hospitalized and possibly dying? No, I can’t. An anecdote isn’t proof. But even though I’ve had COVID and am now better protected from reinfection than those who are vaccinated and have never had it, I’d feel better, in the intermediate term (the effectiveness of drugs wanes over time), if I could get hold of another tri-pack…just in case. Maybe this time with Ivermectin rather than HCQ.
In that respect, I believe now that I was “lucky” to have gotten COVID before the vaccines became available. At my age and with my comorbidities, I certainly would’ve taken the vaccine had I not acquired natural immunity (I tested positive in both February and May for antibodies; the test itself is very hard to get now). Instead, I took the tri-pack, which is much more difficult to obtain now because of restrictions.
That’s my story, and I’m sticking to it.
Damn, that shit is scary! I was never afraid of COVID-19 because I felt I would survive it being relatively young and healthy. I was coerced into getting the vaccine: crying mother and pushy husband, who both were vaxxed and didn’t experience any problems. First shot, I was nauseous for 5 straight days. Second shot, I couldn’t stand for 24 hours. I’m still having trouble standing and walking 5 months after my Moderna shots. Granted, I had back surgery 10 months ago, and recovery was a horrible experience, but I was doing great (even driving again) until the second shot. I’ve been taking quercetin, zinc, D and C for many months now, and just ordered zeolite because of a link from Peters. I’m fearful of the jab, not COVID. I want this crap out of me, or at least neutralized. I will NOT be taking any boosters.
There are some protocols I’m starting to see for getting the toxins out of the body for those who have taken the shots. I’ll be posting on them as they become more familiar to me.