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This is a recipe for the flu bomb, which can be used for various respiratory issues like bronchitis, asthma, and the flu. The ingredients include garlic, ginger, eucalyptus or tea tree oil, cayenne pepper, lemon, honey, and hot water. The recommended amounts are half a clove of garlic, a quarter teaspoon of ginger, 1 drop of eucalyptus or tea tree oil, a quarter teaspoon of cayenne pepper, half a lemon, and approximately 1 teaspoon of honey. Mix these ingredients in about a third of a cup of hot water. Take this mixture three times a day for the first three days of a flu, cold, or sinus infection.

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Ginger is great for nausea and motion sickness. Gingerol has many antioxidants, contributing to antimicrobial, anticancer, anti obesity, antioxidant, and anti inflammatory effects. This does wonderful things for our body. Eating ginger can cut down on fermentation. This will help bloating, intestinal gas. This helps acid reflux. It helps many stomach issues. This actually prevents wear and tear in the cells. These antioxidants and the molecules prevent free radicals from overwhelming and conquering our body. So how do you eat ginger? You can put it in your food, put it in your smoothies. Me, peel it off a little bit. Take a little bite. It burns. If you have to chase a little bit of water, do it. This will keep your body healthy.

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Speaker 0 outlines a list of six natural remedies to use when you feel cold, pale, or white, and you’re dealing with a cold or flu. The speaker presents these as a “super six” of remedies, describing both their warming effects and their antiviral or antibacterial properties, along with practical ways to incorporate them into daily routines. - Ginger: Described as warming the body and improving circulation. It is noted for powerful antiviral properties. Practical uses include an herbal tea or taking it as a supplement. The speaker also suggests grating ginger into chicken vegetable soup as another way to use it. - Cinnamon: Recommended as a beneficial addition, such as in applesauce for breakfast, or by adding a full teaspoon of cinnamon or pumpkin pie spice to foods. It is presented as part of the regimen to address cold symptoms. - Garlic: Highlighted for its antibacterial and antiviral properties. The implication is to include garlic as part of the dietary approach to support the immune response. - Cayenne pepper: Included among the top remedies, noted for its role in the set of six treatments to combat cold or flu symptoms. - Oil of oregano: Described as very, very good if a cold virus has entered the system, indicating its use as a supplementary antiviral option. - Horseradish: Identified as a favorite that is often underused. It is specifically noted as beneficial for people with sinus and lung issues, including croup, bronchitis, or when lungs aren’t moving enough. The speaker emphasizes these six—ginger, cinnamon, garlic, cayenne, oregano oil, and horseradish—as the primary recommendations for addressing a cold or flu when the body is cold, with particular attention to their circulatory warming effects and their antiviral or antibacterial properties. Practical applications include making teas, consuming as supplements, adding to soups, applesauce, or spices, and using horseradish for respiratory concerns. The overall message centers on leveraging these natural ingredients as a targeted, empowering approach to supporting the body's response to cold or flu symptoms.

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"I have a sore throat, and instead of running to antibiotics, I try this first. So I use about three tablespoons of Manuka honey. Then I slice up some ginger. You wanna slice it up really thin. And then I use the fork to, like, mince it, and then I add it to the honey. Then you're gonna take, like, two to three cloves of garlic, and, again, do the same thing. Cut it up really small. Then I add about a teaspoon of cayenne pepper. Mix it all up. You want, like, a syrupy consistency. I take a spoonful like every two hours until I feel better."

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Garlic is a powerful antibiotic, and to use it as such, one should take four cloves a day. A "flu bomb" can be made by combining the following in half a cup of hot water: the juice of one lemon, one crushed clove of garlic, half a teaspoon of grated ginger, and a quarter of a teaspoon of cayenne pepper. This concoction is drunk without chewing the ginger or garlic. It can bring relief for about four hours for respiratory problems ranging from pneumonia and bronchitis to asthma, the flu, and sinus issues. It is suggested to have three or four "flu bombs" a day for such complaints.

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Chinese ginger is not recommended as it can cause mucus buildup in the body. African or Caribbean ginger is better for high blood pressure and blood circulation. Real ginger, like scotch bonnets, can increase your vibration and is created by God. Fake versions of natural products can cause problems. Eating foods created by nature helps maintain an alkaline environment in the body, which is beneficial. Electric foods nourish us because humans are electric beings, as shown by the use of defibrillators to restart the heart with electricity.

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What happened if you chewed one clove of garlic every single day? Garlic has a unique compound called allicin, and it's highly antimicrobial against viruses, bacteria, and even fungi. Chewing garlic activates more of this allicin than grinding, crushing, or cooking it. It's gonna instantly cause your liver to detoxify poisons, get rid of any pathogens you have in your mouth. It's gonna increase your nitric oxide in your blood and decrease your blood pressure. It's gonna act as an antihistamine to get rid of any type of sinus congestion that you have. Instead of chewing raw garlic, you might want to chew either fermented garlic, pickled garlic, garlic with honey, lemon juice, or olive oil, or you can consume dehydrated garlic chips.

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This is a recipe for the Flu Bomb, a remedy that can be used for various respiratory issues like bronchitis, asthma, flu, pleurisy, pneumonia, sinus, or a head cold. The ingredients include garlic (amount depends on tolerance), ginger (about a quarter teaspoon), eucalyptus oil (or tea tree oil, one drop), cayenne pepper (quarter teaspoon), half a lemon, and approximately 1 teaspoon of honey. Mix these ingredients in about a third of a half of hot water. Take this mixture three times a day for flu, cold, or sinus issues. Usually, by the third day, the remedy is no longer needed.

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This is a recipe for the flu bomb, which can be used for various respiratory issues like bronchitis, asthma, and the flu. The ingredients include garlic, ginger, eucalyptus or tea tree oil, cayenne pepper, lemon, honey, and hot water. The measurements are half a clove of garlic, a quarter teaspoon of ginger, 1 drop of eucalyptus or tea tree oil, a quarter teaspoon of cayenne pepper, half a lemon, and approximately 1 teaspoon of honey. Mix these ingredients in about a third of a cup of hot water. Take this mixture three times a day for three days when dealing with a flu, cold, or sinus issue.

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Speaker 0 argues that the only way to disrupt a virus and reduce its ability to advance so the immune system can finish it off is to use a nasal spray and gargle. He asserts that if a respiratory virus hits, nasal sprays and gargles have the best track record, and that anything can work as long as it’s used twice daily. His preferred option is ClearXLEAR nasal spray with the companion gargle, but he also mentions iodine-based options such as Immune Mist or NeoMed Betadine, as well as hypertonic saline and colloidal silver. He emphasizes that the routine must be performed twice a day. Speaker 0 further explains the infection timeline: you inhale a virus on an airplane, and it resides in your nose for about seven days, where it replicates without you realizing it. It then drains to the throat, leading to a sore throat, and only then do you recognize you have something. By that point, you’re seven days behind the infection. Therefore, the only way to disrupt the virus and reduce its burden enough for the immune system to finish it off is to use a nasal spray and gargle, and he insists that doing this twice daily is super important. He states that he has interviewed people on his show who never had COVID and have remained free of respiratory illnesses for extended periods—five, ten, fifteen years, even one man for twenty years. He asserts that this practice could be a game changer if many people adopted it. Speaker 1 asks whether there is anything society can do to prevent the next outbreak and what people can do to prepare their bodies to fight off future infections. Speaker 0 reiterates his stance that an airborne viral respiratory illness is likely to be the next major threat and that a twice-daily nasal spray and gargle routine is critical for disruption of the virus, enabling the immune system to finish it off. He maintains that if many people adopt this approach, it could be a game changer.

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This is a recipe for a natural remedy called the flu bomb, which can be used for various respiratory conditions like bronchitis, asthma, the flu, pleurisy, pneumonia, sinus or head cold. The ingredients include garlic, ginger, eucalyptus or tea tree oil, cayenne pepper, lemon, and honey. The recommended dosage is three times a day for flu, cold, or sinus symptoms. Typically, it is no longer needed after the third day.

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Ginger can be used internally and ginger can be used externally. Internally, it's an anti inflammatory, but it's probably mostly known for its anti nausea effect. If you buy car sickness or seasickness tablets, it's compressed ginger. Now the easiest way I think to have this is to grate it. So you grate it on that little grater and you'll grate about a teaspoon and you put it in a little teapot and pour boiling water on it and let it sit probably ten minutes. Now that might be too strong for you, but I love it. I love it like that. If it's too strong, you just water it down a little bit.

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Pouring honey over onions is an old remedy known for its anti-inflammatory properties. The honey ferments and extracts the onion's anti-inflammatory substances, while also benefiting from the natural antibiotic called allicin found in onions. To make the medicinal syrup, leave the jar on the kitchen counter for about 12 hours. This remedy is recommended for the first signs of a cold or flu, as well as for stubborn coughs.

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Garlic has been around for thousands of years. It's helped multi millions of people. It has so many different antimicrobial effects, antifungal, antibacterial, antiviral. But antibiotics only work on bacteria, not viruses. That's why garlic is so important. So once we chop the garlic, could be a little strong, I understand that, but an enzyme called allinase is released, affecting allin in the garlic. This results in the sulfenic acids reacting with each other to produce allicin. This is the medicinal healing part of garlic. You need to let it sit out for ten minutes or more before you eat it. So make sure you're eating your garlic. You can use a little bit of lemon that will counterbalance the strength of it, and your immune system will be happy.

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Ginger can be used internally and externally. Internally, it's an anti-inflammatory known for its anti-nausea effect; car and seasickness tablets are compressed ginger. A teaspoon of grated ginger in boiling water, steeped for ten minutes, makes a strong tea that can be watered down if needed. Hot ginger tea can warm someone who is chilled or cold and is an ingredient in the flu bomb recipe. A singer who lost her voice in Greece was given hot ginger tea by a Greek lady and was able to sing that night. Therefore, ginger is good for a sore or hoarse throat.

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Let's talk about ginger. You can use it inside your body or on the outside. When you ingest ginger, it helps reduce swelling, but most people know it for stopping you from feeling sick to your stomach. In fact, those pills you take for car or sea sickness? They're made from ginger. I like to grate about a teaspoon of ginger into a teapot, then add boiling water. After it steeps for around ten minutes, it's ready. Now, this might make a strong cup of ginger tea, which I enjoy. If it's too strong for you, just add a bit of water to make it weaker.

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Garlic is a powerful herb with antibiotic properties, but can be harsh on sensitive stomachs. The flu bomb recipe includes garlic, grated ginger, eucalyptus oil, cayenne pepper, lemon juice, and honey mixed in hot water. It can be taken three times a day for cold or flu relief. Frozen flu bombs made from lemon juice are convenient for quick use. This remedy helps alleviate cold symptoms and respiratory issues.

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Amish people supposedly never get sick because they stockpile an old-fashioned recipe during cold winters to ward off colds and flu. The recipe includes raw honey, fresh ginger, garlic, cayenne pepper, and lemon. Raw honey is described as an ancient healer, ginger as a root that warms you, garlic as nature's antibiotic, and cayenne pepper as a revitalizer for the immune system. Lemon is added for a vitamin C boost. A spoonful of this syrup is claimed to help you recover quickly when you feel unwell. Nature is presented as the best ally.

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This video shares a recipe for a powerful antibiotic using just four ingredients. In a bowl, combine half a cup of raw organic honey, a teaspoon of turmeric, half a teaspoon of ginger, and a teaspoon of vanilla. Mix well. This mixture is antimicrobial, antibacterial, antiaging, anti-inflammatory, and rich in antioxidants. Taking one teaspoon a day can help prevent colds, coughs, and the flu.

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Recipe for the flu bomb: garlic, ginger, eucalyptus oil (or tea tree oil), cayenne pepper, lemon, and honey in hot water. Adjust garlic amount to preference. Take 3 times a day for flu, cold, or sinus issues, usually for 3 days.

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Ginger is an anti-inflammatory herb, comparable to turmeric. Fresh ginger can be used internally or externally. Internally, grated ginger in boiling water makes a tea that can reduce inflammation, warm the body, and settle the stomach, relieving nausea and morning sickness. Externally, ginger is helpful for joint inflammation, such as sore lower backs, arthritic pain, or gout. To make a poultice, grate ginger and place it on a cloth over Gladwrap. Apply the poultice to the affected joint, securing it with a bandage. If inflammation is present, the skin may become very hot as the ginger draws out the inflammation. The heat may fluctuate, but it will not burn the skin. The skin getting hot indicates inflammation in the joint.

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This video discusses a recipe for a flu bomb, which can be used to alleviate symptoms of respiratory illnesses such as the flu, sinus issues, colds, and bronchitis. The main ingredient is garlic, which can be crushed or grated. Ginger is also added in a small amount. Eucalyptus oil or tea tree oil can be included, but only one drop is needed. Cayenne pepper is added to taste. The mixture is then combined with lemon juice, honey, and hot water. The recommended dosage is one dose, three times a day. This remedy is said to provide relief for sore throats and congestion.

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Pouring honey over onions creates a medicinal syrup that extracts the onion's anti-inflammatory properties and allicin, a natural antibiotic effective against throat and lung infections. Leave the mixture on your counter for about 12 hours, and it's ready to use at the first sign of a cold or stubborn cough. Take it by the teaspoon until symptoms improve. This onion syrup is just one of many home remedies that our grandparents relied on. If you're interested, there are over 100 other recipes available. Additionally, consider what happens when you mix honey with garlic, the steps to take during a heart attack or stroke, and other natural remedies that could be beneficial in emergencies.

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Ginger can be used internally and externally. Internally, it is an anti-inflammatory, known mostly for its anti-nausea effect; car and seasickness tablets are compressed ginger. The easiest way to ingest it is to grate about a teaspoon of ginger into a teapot, pour boiling water on it, and let it sit for about ten minutes. If the resulting tea is too strong, add water.

The Diary of a CEO

No.1 Herbal Medicine Expert: This Over The Counter Drug Is Quietly Killing You!
Guests: Simon Mills
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Simon Mills, a pioneering herbal practitioner with more than fifty years in natural medicine, argues that conventional medicines have saved lives but carry long‑term risks and that we overuse antibiotics, fueling resistance. He emphasizes that many people could benefit from plant‑based medicines that act quickly and diversely, sometimes alongside standard care. Mills frames his mission as helping people become stronger by using plants within a scientific framework that complements conventional healthcare. He notes that traditional plant knowledge was displaced by modern pharmaceuticals as urban living reduced practical knowledge of herbs, and he describes how different cultures still rely on plants as medicine, including in Europe, China, and parts of Asia. Mills stresses that the body’s biology is accessible through the gut. He explains that digestion, the microbiome, and the liver connect to virtually all health outcomes, including brain health, immune function, and inflammation. He cautions that inflammation is a natural defense, not the enemy, and that chronic inflammation often has upstream causes in the gut and microbiome. Antibiotics not only wipe out pathogens but also disrupt gut diversity, contributing to resistance and longer healing times. He cites WHO figures and recent prescribing stats to underscore urgency. In practice, Mills sees thousands of patients with chronic conditions, including cancer, autoimmune disease, gut disorders, and hormonal problems. His approach is to fine-tune health by addressing root function—digestion, liver and kidney function, and circulation—rather than merely treating symptoms. He shares case examples: Heather, a 65-year-old with a severe skin condition linked to infections and gut-lung interplay, who improved rapidly after gut and lung support; and Karen, 37, with panic and anxiety whose liver function and sugar cravings were targeted, yielding cycle stabilization and mood benefits. Both illustrate that plant remedies often work through the gut-liver-brain axis. Mills demonstrates practical remedies: ginger and cinnamon teas warm and clear airway congestion; cayenne plasters and mustard baths can relieve joint pain by increasing local blood flow; garlic as a prebiotic with potent antiseptic properties; echinacea for upper respiratory infections; resins like frankincense and myrrh for mucous membranes. He discusses turmeric’s curcumin, its microbiome-mediated effects, and its potential in arthritis and brain health; green tea and rosemary as neurovascular protectors; cacao and dark chocolate as brain and heart supporters. He promotes dietary richness—eating the rainbow, prioritizing color-rich polyphenols, root vegetables, greens, and diverse plant foods—to nourish the microbiome and health. He cautions about long-term uses of acid-suppressants like omeprazole, proposing the raft method with slippery elm or seaweed-based products to protect the gut while wean off acid suppression. He also notes that lifestyle changes and intermittent fasting have context-dependent value. The discussion closes with practical advice on cost-effective, plant-forward eating, and the need for more reliable, evidence-based herbal resources. He also touches on the tastiness and versatility of foods and spices, including ginger, cinnamon, garlic, echinacea, rosemary, green tea, cacao, and matcha, highlighting how these can support heart, brain, gut, and immune health through polyphenols, prebiotics, and microbiome interactions. He emphasizes that there is no one-size-fits-all diet and that plants function as medicines best when personalized to the individual.
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