Treats the following conditions

Cancer, Anxiety, Arthritis, Asthma, Backache, Chronic fatigue syndrome, Depression, Diabetes (type 2) Edema, High fever, Gastric ailments, Heartburn, Hot flushes, Hypertension, Influenza, ME, Peptic ulcer, Rheumatism, Rheumatoid arthritis, Viral hepatitis, Gonorrhoea, Syphilis, Wasting from cancer, TB and AIDS and Mental depression and Lupus, Hemorrhoids/Piles and Clamidia.

Sunday 22 August 2010

TAMIFLU IS COMING BEWARE.....

The Season for Flu is coming ever so near , Tamiflu will be offered to you as a so called protection against Influzena / Swine Flu. 
IMPORTANT INFORMATION TO READ

1918: The Spanish flu pandemic remains the most devastating outbreak of modern times. Caused by a form of the H1N1 strain of flu, it is estimated that up to 40% of the world's population were infected, and more than 50 million people died, with young adults particularly badly affected.

.Did you know that they used cancerbush to treat spanish flu in 1918.


Swine influenza virus is common throughout pig populations worldwide. Transmission of the virus from pigs to humans is not common and does not always lead to human influenza, often resulting only in the production of antibodies in the blood. If transmission does cause human influenza.

In 2004 a 17-year-old boy in the Japanese town of Gero suddenly ran out of his home and into the middle of a busy street, where he was struck and killed by a truck. In 2005 a 14-year-old boy Chiryu got out of bed, climbed the wall outside his parent’s ninth-floor apartment and dropped from the edge. And last month, in two separate incidents, a 14-year old male and a 14-year old female fell to their deaths from their respective high-rise apartment buildings. No one left a suicide note.
What they have in common is that each victim took the influenza antiviral Tamiflu shortly before they died. According to the Japanese Health Ministry, 54 people have died after taking Tamiflu — the drug governments around the world have stockpiled for use against avian flu — since the drug was approved for use in Japan in 2000. Most suspiciously, in multiple cases people, including those cases above, acted erratically after taking Tamiflu. Though the Health Ministry has said there is no clear evidence linking Tamiflu to the deaths, there is growing concern among doctors and parents in Japan over the drug’s possible side effects. That is potential cause for concern in the rest of the world, because in the absence of a vaccine, Tamiflu will be the drug of first and last resort in the event of a pandemic.

The Food and Drug Administration is looking into reports of deaths and abnormal behavior among children in Japan who took the anti-influenza drug Tamiflu, which is being stockpiled by governments around the world for use in a possible flu pandemic. The agency said that given the available information, it could not conclude that Tamiflu had caused the deaths and other problems. It plans to continue monitor possible complications from the drug for up to two years.

PROTECT YOURSELF WITH CANCERBUSH

No comments:

Post a Comment