Melatonin, especially when given with vits C and D (gasp! what a surprise!). Another bullet in the head for the vaccine boondoggle. Considering the grip that the gics have on Western media, is it any wonder that we have to go to outsider-dissidents like (Dr.) Joe Mercola for what should be headline news - along with all the other front-line-proven cures:
And another from Mercola, on a topic central to 5F: media-lying:
And another, on the long-haulers. What’s being described here sounds closely similar to what Dr. dan at the Leaky Hulk describes of his frightening struggle with the illness:
And yet another, on the PCR swindle:
PS: there’s yet another, on the utter toxicity of farmed fish, especially salmon. But I’ll leave interested parties to forage for that themselves. I never touch salmon these days, for precisely that reason: one of the most toxic ‘foods’ around lately, as has been reported for some time.
That’s an excellent round-up of the melatonin evidence. It seems there are several ways in which melatonin can help Covid-19.
Here’s support for melatonin in a cancer context, from an unexpected source:
20/11/20 Melatonin: a “full-service anti-cancer agent”? E Ernst
Praise indeed! Dr Edzard Ernst is the famous fierce basher of everything alternative! He has made a career out of this. Many examples on his blog, where he is often taken on by knowledgeable proponents.
[By way of example, here he sets off on a bash (the title says it all) at the anti-vaccination cult, quickly reeled in by John Stone and ‘Lucy’.
Andrew Wakefield, Donald Trump, SCAM, and the anti-vaccination cult
Link: https://edzardernst.com/2018/07/andrew-wakefield-donald-trump-scam-and-the-anti-vaccination-cult/
The title is revealing of his adhom style when challenged. This particular debate proceeds along usual lines - the ‘medical’ side claiming ‘evidence’ and ‘science’ as excuse for mainly using just adhom.]
So it was a surprise to see Dr Ernst advocating melatonin. Admittedly, it’s not exactly ‘alternative’ in the usual cultural meaning, but it is ‘alternative’ in that it’s benefits and uses in clinical settings have been flagged up for well over ten years in research papers - yet is not used much in these settings in practice. Considering that one of these settings is patients with sepsis (where a significant proportion die) it’s a little surprising that it has remained on the sidelines for so long.