Hi Ivan, I saw that your bio says you live in Thailand. Here is a Thai translation you can share with any Thais that might benefit from the spike protein detox:
Thanks for that Nicholas - I noticed you have a Thai language section too. Well done.
I have been meaning to start something but never done it. I also want to suggest your Thai language site would likely do better or be more accessible to Thai people if it was a stand alone Substack dedicated to the Thais and only in Thai. Perhaps an English-Thai name for the page. Just a thought.
Yes, that has been on the cards for a while. Although I rely almost entirely on my wife to do the translation, and she is increasingly busier with her day job. Perhaps the Thai language content would be better as its own substack page, even if I won't be publishing there as often. Thanks for the suggestion Ivan.
Do you read and write Thai? I published my first book in Thai 4 years ago. It was on English pronunciation problems for Thai. What I have learned is that when I want to write something in Thai and am too lazy to type it up or think it through in Thai, I speed write in English, thinking about the structure of Thai sentences as I go, and then drop it in Google translate - which does a pretty good job, but not perfect. And then I simply clean it up - and it comes out really clear. If you did it this way first, even if you don't read Thai, then you could get your wife to check it - the process will save her a lot of time.
That's impressive that you published a book in Thai. I can read and write Thai, although translate apps have made me lazy. What I can say in Thai I can say clearly, so on the rare occasion when I need to send a text message in Thai, I will speak Thai into the translate app and I will know from reading the Thai script if it is correct before I copy paste. I do need to get back to regular self-study. Never finished Benajwan Poomsan Becker's book "Thai for beginners"...
That's great that you're focused on mastering the language.
I think it changes our lives forever, for the better, as expats living here, and it helps us to see our own world through new eyes too. When I was in self-study mode and ramping up my skills before I sat down and started on the book-which took 5 years-I kept signing up for tutorial lessons as it forced me to go out and focus on improving. That's the main value of signing up for classes, the discipline of turning up. Even though I mastered Thai after many years of hard work, I am still in awe of polyglots who teach themselves several languages. I haven't mastered that discipline!
Learning the language helps unlock a whole new world as a foreigner here, being able to interact with Thais is great. It can also help to better negotiate discounts at markets, as well as avoiding getting hustled in numerous scams or two-tier pricing incidents. It always amazes me how many foreigners I meet who've lived here 20 years but can only order beer in Thai, and maybe give basic directions.
I've been here on and off for 10 years. I had friends upon arrival who'd moved here, and they all spoke fluent Thai back then, so that helped to motivate me to learn. I just wish I'd learned to read and write first, rather than making notes in English transliteration for how the Thai words sounded to me -took a while to undo tonal errors and many embarrassing incidents along the way...
Ivan, since the Congress has started to talk about the danger of Covid Vaccines, it is now SAFE for you to talk about solutions. I just sent the link to your substack out to all kinds of people and media.
Hi, thanks for that - I appreciate your efforts to help spread my Substack.
I must confess to feeling fatigue for some time due to the relentlessness of the Marxist-fascists behind all of this, and understanding the depth and breath of the evil, that's a burden I really feel everyday- and the genuine apathy I see all around me is equally if not more frustrating.
But we must all stay in the fight, because to stop fighting is to accept a loss of everything.
Protocol to detox from the spike protein:
Intermittent fasting
Cold showers
Resveratrol 500mg twice daily
Ivermectin 0.2mg/kg daily with food (if available)
Sodium butyrate 300mg daily
Melatonin (slow release) 2-10mg 3-4 x a week
These encourage autophagy and are cancer protective.
Treatment for acute Covid:
Magnesium 400mg daily
Selenium 100mcg daily
Zinc 30-50mg daily
Vitamin D 10-20,000 iu daily
Vitamin C (slow release) 4-5gm daily
Quercetin 500mg daily
Low histamine diet
Antihistamines: Loratadine 10mg 4 x a day or Cetirizine 10mg 4 x day or Fexofenadine 180mg up to 4 x a day
Amoxicillin 250mg 3 x a day for 5 days (virus affects the bacteria in the gut)
Ivermectin 0.4mg/kg daily with food (if available)
https://drtesslawrie.substack.com/p/tess-talks-with-dr-tina-peers?r=nz0fn&utm_medium=ios&utm_campaign=pos
To find out more about Dr Peers, please visit her websites:
drtinapeers.com
Thanks for the link to Dr. Peers :)
DOUBLE BRAVO
For re-posting this incredibly important information!
Folks, "Save To Disk!"
Well done, Ivan, well done!
Edwin - mate I really like it when you turn up!
You make my day.
Cheers
Hi Ivan, I saw that your bio says you live in Thailand. Here is a Thai translation you can share with any Thais that might benefit from the spike protein detox:
https://open.substack.com/pub/nicholascreed/p/spike-protein-detox-summary-leaflet?r=16xjwn&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web
Thanks for that Nicholas - I noticed you have a Thai language section too. Well done.
I have been meaning to start something but never done it. I also want to suggest your Thai language site would likely do better or be more accessible to Thai people if it was a stand alone Substack dedicated to the Thais and only in Thai. Perhaps an English-Thai name for the page. Just a thought.
Yes, that has been on the cards for a while. Although I rely almost entirely on my wife to do the translation, and she is increasingly busier with her day job. Perhaps the Thai language content would be better as its own substack page, even if I won't be publishing there as often. Thanks for the suggestion Ivan.
Do you read and write Thai? I published my first book in Thai 4 years ago. It was on English pronunciation problems for Thai. What I have learned is that when I want to write something in Thai and am too lazy to type it up or think it through in Thai, I speed write in English, thinking about the structure of Thai sentences as I go, and then drop it in Google translate - which does a pretty good job, but not perfect. And then I simply clean it up - and it comes out really clear. If you did it this way first, even if you don't read Thai, then you could get your wife to check it - the process will save her a lot of time.
That's impressive that you published a book in Thai. I can read and write Thai, although translate apps have made me lazy. What I can say in Thai I can say clearly, so on the rare occasion when I need to send a text message in Thai, I will speak Thai into the translate app and I will know from reading the Thai script if it is correct before I copy paste. I do need to get back to regular self-study. Never finished Benajwan Poomsan Becker's book "Thai for beginners"...
That's great that you're focused on mastering the language.
I think it changes our lives forever, for the better, as expats living here, and it helps us to see our own world through new eyes too. When I was in self-study mode and ramping up my skills before I sat down and started on the book-which took 5 years-I kept signing up for tutorial lessons as it forced me to go out and focus on improving. That's the main value of signing up for classes, the discipline of turning up. Even though I mastered Thai after many years of hard work, I am still in awe of polyglots who teach themselves several languages. I haven't mastered that discipline!
How long have you lived here?
Learning the language helps unlock a whole new world as a foreigner here, being able to interact with Thais is great. It can also help to better negotiate discounts at markets, as well as avoiding getting hustled in numerous scams or two-tier pricing incidents. It always amazes me how many foreigners I meet who've lived here 20 years but can only order beer in Thai, and maybe give basic directions.
I've been here on and off for 10 years. I had friends upon arrival who'd moved here, and they all spoke fluent Thai back then, so that helped to motivate me to learn. I just wish I'd learned to read and write first, rather than making notes in English transliteration for how the Thai words sounded to me -took a while to undo tonal errors and many embarrassing incidents along the way...
Ivan, since the Congress has started to talk about the danger of Covid Vaccines, it is now SAFE for you to talk about solutions. I just sent the link to your substack out to all kinds of people and media.
Hi, thanks for that - I appreciate your efforts to help spread my Substack.
I must confess to feeling fatigue for some time due to the relentlessness of the Marxist-fascists behind all of this, and understanding the depth and breath of the evil, that's a burden I really feel everyday- and the genuine apathy I see all around me is equally if not more frustrating.
But we must all stay in the fight, because to stop fighting is to accept a loss of everything.
Ivan