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#Post#: 12941--------------------------------------------------
THE REALITY OF LYME DISEASE NATIONWIDE, ALL CLIMATES, ALL ALTITU
DES
By: AGelbert Date: July 21, 2019, 6:07 pm
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[center]THE REALITY OF LYME DISEASE[/center]
[center]NATIONWIDE, ALL CLIMATES, ALL ALTITUDES[/center]
[center]AN INTERVIEW WITH JOHN MIONCZYNSKI[b][/center]
[center]
HTML https://youtu.be/ZqeaRXFgY7s[/center]
The official “party line” of the US medical industrial complex
is that chronic Lyme disease doesn’t exist.
This video appeared on Wyoming PBS in 2017. You can find other
excerpts of this video by searching YouTube.com
Amazingly, the Google-FDA Nazis haven’t taken it down yet.
The man being interviewed is John Mionczynski.
I’m afraid that I don’t have any contact info for him.
HTML https://realfoodchannel.com/the-reality-of-lyme-disease/
[b]Agelbert NOTE: Artemisia frigida has been used as a medicinal
plant by Native Americans for centuries. It is little wonder
that it is effective in treating Lyme disease symptoms. [img
width=20]
HTML http://renewablerevolution.createaforum.com/gallery/renewablerevolution/3-250817121424.gif[/img]
[center][img
width=640]
HTML https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/62/Artemisia_frigida_NPS-1.jpg/800px-Artemisia_frigida_NPS-1.jpg[/img][/center]
[center]Artemisia frigida common names include fringed
sagebrush, prairie sagewort, arctic sage and pasture sage. The
plant is not, however, closely related to the true sages
Salvia.[/center]
[center][img
width=345]
HTML http://www.minnesotawildflowers.inf
o/udata/r9ndp23q/pd/artemisia-frigida-12.jpg[/img][img
width=295]
HTML https://i1.wp.com/www.coloradohardyplants.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/ArtemisiaFrigida-close-up.jpg?fit=410%2C640&ssl=1[/img][/center]
Artemisia frigida has a variety of uses for Indigenous peoples
of North America. It is used medicinally for coughs, colds,
wounds, and heartburn by the Blackfoot. The Cree people use it
for headache and fever and the Tewa people took it for gastritis
and indigestion. It also has ceremonial and veterinary
applications, including for the Blackfoot, who reportedly used
the crushed leaves to "revive gophers after children clubbed
them while playing a game". Among the Zuni, the whole plant is
made into an infusion for colds. Sprigs of this plant and corn
ears are attached to decorated tablets and carried by female
dancers in a drama. The sprigs are also dipped in water and
planted with corn so the corn will grow abundantly.
HTML https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artemisia_frigida
Artemisia frigida is a tufted, low-spreading, woody-based
perennial that is primarily cultivated for its aromatic
(camphor-scented), silver-white foliage. Erect, clustered,
herbaceous stems with deeply-cut, silky-haired, silvery-white
foliage rise up from tough, woody crowns. Stems typically grow
to 9-16” tall in gardens. Tiny yellow flowers in nodding
clusters bloom in summer, but are not particularly showy.
Foliage is finely divided and feathery in appearance, hence the
also used common names of fringed sagebrush, fringed sage-wort
and fringed wormwood. This species is native to western North
America, where it is most commonly found on dry open sites and
waste areas in the Great Plains, foothills and mountains.
Additional common names for this species include praire
sagewort, pasture sagebrush and mouintain sage.
HTML http://www.missouribotanicalgarden.org/PlantFinder/PlantFinderDetails.aspx?kempercode=h360
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