
Ice, ice, baby!
Umeboshi Soda
A pickled-plum drink from Japan
Health benefits: Energy boosting and digestion.
Made using preserved ume – a Japanese plum or apricot-like fruit – this salty-sour-sweet drink is a concoction of umeboshi paste and soda water. Umeboshi paste can be found at select pharmacies or ordered online.
Umeboshi soda combines the refreshing qualities of a fizzy drink while also replenishing lost energy and fighting fatigue.
Espresso Tonic
A coffee and tonic water blend from Scandinavia
Health benefits: Energy boosting and anti-inflammatory.
A new discovery, with the most popular account crediting a barista in Sweden, who accidentally whipped up the drink after mixing leftover tonic water with espresso and syrup, it originated in the early 2000s.
Espresso Tonic is made by layering espresso, rich in anti-oxidants, and iced tonic water, rich in quinine known for its anti-inflammatory properties.
Some variations could include lemon garnish, or flavours like cherry or honey.
Karkadeh
Hibiscus tea from Egypt
Health benefits: Helps regulate blood pressure and manage weight.
While there are many variations of this ruby red drink, many theories point to its origins in Egypt.
Dubbed the 'drink of the pharaohs', it is made by infusing dried roselle flower petals in water and can be enjoyed hot or cold.
It has a tart cranberry-like flavour, which can be balanced by adding sugar or enjoyed as is.
Buko Salad Drink
A tender coconut beverage from the Philippines
Health benefits: Prevents dehydration and replenishes lost fluids.
Buko ('tender coconut') water is rich in electrolytes like magnesium and potassium, with the coconut pulp being full of fibre, healthy fats, and vitamins and minerals. Available at most Pinoy restaurants and cafes, the creation combines coconut water and pulp, tapioca pearls, assorted jellies, condensed milk, and sweet syrup – a party in your mouth! Whether you call it a drink or dessert, all variations of this concoction are a summertime hit.
Aam Panna
Raw mango refresher from India
Health benefits: Boosts immunity and mental focus while reducing the risk of heatstroke.
Made using the pulp of unripe mangoes, this tart beverage has a pale yellow to lime green colour and can make you feel rehydrated in seconds. Popular in Northern and Western India, mint leaves are often muddled along with the pulp in some recipes, enhancing the flavour. Rich in vitamins, minerals, electrolytes and more, it is the perfect drink to sip on, chilled, in the hot, sweat-inducing summers.
Limonada Suíça
Limeade variation from Brazil
Health benefits: Hydration and cooling, anti-oxidant properties, skin benefits.
Almost every culture has its version of lemonade.
Limonada Suíça, Portuguese for 'Swiss lemonade', is a classic summer combination that blends the acidity of Vitamin C-rich limes – not lemons – and the rich sweetness of condensed milk. The Swiss company, Nestle, is said to have popularised condensed milk in Brazil, which gives the drink its name.
Almond Milk with Orange Blossom
A cooling beverage from Morocco.
Health benefits: Glowing skin and strong bones.
Almonds might be heaty, but almond milk, which is made by soaking almonds in water and then blending and straining the liquid, is said to have cooling properties. Unlike dairy, it helps soothe heartburn and when combined with anti-oxidant and vitamin-rich orange blossom water, serves as a delicious and refreshing low-calorie drink.

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Gulf Insider
03-08-2025
- Gulf Insider
Japan Creates Frankenstein Bird Flu Virus With New Immunological Traits
According to a new study published last week in NPJ Vaccines , Japanese researchers engineered an entirely new strain of bird flu, combining the genetic material of two separate wild viruses to create what they call Vac-3: a pathogen that is 'a reassortant virus between A/duck/Hokkaido/101/2004 (H5N3) and A/duck/Hokkaido/262/2004 (H6N1).' This lab-built virus—A/duck/Hokkaido/Vac-3/2007 (H5N1)—was never observed in nature. It was artificially assembled, grown in eggs, concentrated, and inactivated with formalin to become the whole-particle vaccine used in long-term testing on nonhuman primates. The new study comes after NIH-funded researchers at the University of Georgia, Mount Sinai, and Texas Biomed were caught engineering lab-made H5N1 bird flu viruses—one of which killed 100% of exposed mammals—using synthetic DNA constructs and then deliberately infecting live dairy cows, all under the same $59 million federal contract that has also been tied to mammal-adapted, drug-resistant strain development. Japan is also working with U.S. scientists on other projects to build lab-made horse-human influenza hybrids that replicate 100 times faster than natural strains using aborted fetal cells engineered with the cancer-linked SV40 virus, also under the banner of vaccine development. All of these developments raise fears that another man-made pandemic is on the horizon, as Congress, the White House, the Department of Energy, the FBI, and the CIA have acknowledged that a lab-related incident involving gain-of-function research is most likely the origin of COVID-19. The new Japanese paper highlights that this bird flu Frankenvirus triggered significantly stronger immune responses than existing flu vaccines. It did so by retaining its full genetic structure, including viral RNA, which stimulated toll-like receptor 7 (TLR7) and a cascade of innate immune activation. 'WPVs contain single-stranded viral RNAs that stimulate innate immune receptors such as toll-like receptor 7,' the authors write. This means the lab-built virus was left fully intact so it could shock the immune system into overdrive, triggering a much stronger reaction than normal flu shots. Unlike conventional 'split' vaccines, which separate viral proteins from RNA, Japan's whole-particle vaccine (WPV) preserved the virus's full anatomy. This allowed it to activate dendritic cells, induce interferon-producing T cells, and stimulate somatic hypermutation—a powerful, but risky, rewiring of the immune system. In short, the new virus didn't just train the immune system—it reprogrammed it. While the researchers don't use the phrase 'gain-of-function' that's effectively what this is: the creation of a chimeric virus with novel immunological features. The Vac-3 strain was not isolated in the wild. It was constructed by merging influenza genes from unrelated alleged viruses, giving the final product new, enhanced abilities—especially in triggering memory immune responses. A White House Executive Order from May 2025 defines 'dangerous gain-of-function research' as scientific work on infectious agents that can cause disease by enhancing their pathogenicity or transmissibility. Importantly, the Order explicitly includes research that can: '[disrupt] beneficial immunological response or the effectiveness of an immunization against the agent or toxin' (meaning altering how the immune system responds to the virus), and, '[enhance] the susceptibility of a human host population to the agent or toxin.' 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As avian influenza outbreaks spread across continents and headlines warn of a possible H5N1 human pandemic, it's critical to ask: How many of these outbreaks are caused by wild strains, and how many involve viruses manufactured for vaccine research? Governments and scientific institutions continue to play with viral fire, creating unnatural pathogens and injecting them into animals to test vaccines that may never see approval. The result is a growing infrastructure of high-stakes, high-risk bioengineering, all under the banner of public health—without public awareness or consent.


Gulf Weekly
10-07-2025
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Ice, ice, baby!
The mercury is rising and cooling fabrics and air-conditioned rooms alone aren't going to cut it. What we need is a refresher that can keep us going from one task to the next. If you are looking for something to keep yourself hydrated between glugs of water, embark on this journey as Melissa Nazareth explores some summer coolers from around the world, nodding to the kingdom's cosmopolitan community. Umeboshi Soda A pickled-plum drink from Japan Health benefits: Energy boosting and digestion. Made using preserved ume – a Japanese plum or apricot-like fruit – this salty-sour-sweet drink is a concoction of umeboshi paste and soda water. Umeboshi paste can be found at select pharmacies or ordered online. Umeboshi soda combines the refreshing qualities of a fizzy drink while also replenishing lost energy and fighting fatigue. Espresso Tonic A coffee and tonic water blend from Scandinavia Health benefits: Energy boosting and anti-inflammatory. A new discovery, with the most popular account crediting a barista in Sweden, who accidentally whipped up the drink after mixing leftover tonic water with espresso and syrup, it originated in the early 2000s. Espresso Tonic is made by layering espresso, rich in anti-oxidants, and iced tonic water, rich in quinine known for its anti-inflammatory properties. Some variations could include lemon garnish, or flavours like cherry or honey. Karkadeh Hibiscus tea from Egypt Health benefits: Helps regulate blood pressure and manage weight. While there are many variations of this ruby red drink, many theories point to its origins in Egypt. Dubbed the 'drink of the pharaohs', it is made by infusing dried roselle flower petals in water and can be enjoyed hot or cold. It has a tart cranberry-like flavour, which can be balanced by adding sugar or enjoyed as is. Buko Salad Drink A tender coconut beverage from the Philippines Health benefits: Prevents dehydration and replenishes lost fluids. Buko ('tender coconut') water is rich in electrolytes like magnesium and potassium, with the coconut pulp being full of fibre, healthy fats, and vitamins and minerals. Available at most Pinoy restaurants and cafes, the creation combines coconut water and pulp, tapioca pearls, assorted jellies, condensed milk, and sweet syrup – a party in your mouth! Whether you call it a drink or dessert, all variations of this concoction are a summertime hit. Aam Panna Raw mango refresher from India Health benefits: Boosts immunity and mental focus while reducing the risk of heatstroke. Made using the pulp of unripe mangoes, this tart beverage has a pale yellow to lime green colour and can make you feel rehydrated in seconds. Popular in Northern and Western India, mint leaves are often muddled along with the pulp in some recipes, enhancing the flavour. Rich in vitamins, minerals, electrolytes and more, it is the perfect drink to sip on, chilled, in the hot, sweat-inducing summers. Limonada Suíça Limeade variation from Brazil Health benefits: Hydration and cooling, anti-oxidant properties, skin benefits. Almost every culture has its version of lemonade. Limonada Suíça, Portuguese for 'Swiss lemonade', is a classic summer combination that blends the acidity of Vitamin C-rich limes – not lemons – and the rich sweetness of condensed milk. The Swiss company, Nestle, is said to have popularised condensed milk in Brazil, which gives the drink its name. Almond Milk with Orange Blossom A cooling beverage from Morocco. Health benefits: Glowing skin and strong bones. Almonds might be heaty, but almond milk, which is made by soaking almonds in water and then blending and straining the liquid, is said to have cooling properties. Unlike dairy, it helps soothe heartburn and when combined with anti-oxidant and vitamin-rich orange blossom water, serves as a delicious and refreshing low-calorie drink.


Gulf Insider
26-05-2025
- Gulf Insider
Japan Tightens Control on Speech: Censorship Laws and Pharma Lawsuits Spark Concerns
The manufacturer of the replicon mRNA Covid 'vaccine' in Japan, Meiji Seika Pharma, has brought a lawsuit against a member of the Japanese parliament, Kazuhiro Haraguchi. Haraguchi had commented that the Covid injections are 'akin to a biological weapon,' a statement which the Meiji Pharma president claimed was beyond the bounds of acceptable expression. However, statements like Haraguchi's about the dangers of the Covid mRNA injections are now commonplace in many nations, and drug companies do not seem to be suing people for making them, at least in the US. Instead, state attorneys general in Kansas and Texas have been suing Pfizer for misrepresenting its Covid injections. In general, Japan has been gradually evolving into a place where it is difficult to publicly express ideas unapproved by powerful business interests and officialdom. In addition to government and mainstream news media collusion to keep Covid medical realities from the Japanese public, the government passed a law to squelch nonconforming messaging online. The intentions behind this measure are clear: Prominent government figures have openly declared their conviction that 'misinformation' is a major problem in Japan. In December 2024, Prime Minister Ishiba stated that he was considering more regulations concerning Internet discourse that he considers problematic, and a prominent LDP (Liberal Democratic Party) politician named Noda commented recently that Japan was being influenced more and more by 'fake' information. In May 2024, Japan's parliament passed a law to enable the quick elimination of defamatory posts from social media platforms like Facebook and X. By this law, such platforms would have to make explicit sites for taking requests to delete posts and also make clear their criteria for taking down posts. The new law went into effect on April 1, 2025. Unsurprisingly, some Japanese YouTube vloggers are expressing concerns that, under the new set of regulations, their vlogs may soon be targeted as purveyors of 'misinformation,' especially when they criticize government policy. Only online media platforms are targeted in this development, even though Japanese print communications and TV programs have also often been guilty of spreading harmful disinformation. Ironically, in many instances, this is not because they are unregulated but precisely because they are under the thumb of government agencies. For example, the Japanese National Police Agency has deliberately leaked information about people under investigation in order to pressure them into confessing to crimes. Since the Japanese public often naively believes that suspicion equals guilt, this tactic results in terrible consequences for the unjustly accused.