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First of all, let me respond to the FDA ... Fuck You!
And yes, it's better to start with Quercetin Phytosome with Vitamin C, D, N-Acetyl-Cysteine, R-Lipoic Acid, and Zinc for daily maintenance and only have the Rxs on hand if you feel an oncoming emergency.
"many inactive ingredients found in animal products aren’t evaluated for use in people," the FDA warned.
Dear FDA, When will you tell us what is in the Vax? Not that I'm going to take that shit.
Just like when the government instituted prohibition on liquor then complained when people were poisoning themselves with "bathtub gin". Of course, it's not the nanny-state's fault..
An amazing level of ignorance regarding human behavior and complete disregard for freedoms. There is something seriously wrong with the mental state of all of these authoritarian types. These same boobs will then point out that making abortion illegal will result in dangerous back alley doctors performing unsafe procedures.
Once again, the cognitive dissonance is bewildering. People are not sane or rational creatures.
Are you agreeing that Ivermectin is dangerous?
Got the sniffles yesterday. Took my second dose of horse ivermectin (little bit squeezed from syringe) and Quercetin, along with the rec'd vitamins.
Took my third doses today. So far so good. Of course, I have no control group and a sample of one, but they seem to help with whatever bug this is.
Main thing, I can't determine that I have been harmed at all, so it appears that the horse ivermectin is at its worse benign in me.
Robert W Malone, MD
@RWMaloneMD
1h
This type of "analysis" is really not helpful. Not disclosed is that Ivermectin is a human drug which is also used for veterinary purposes. And repurposed drugs versus vaccines is a false dichotomy. Most people seek Ivermectin for therapy.
Got the sniffles yesterday. Took my second dose of horse ivermectin (little bit squeezed from syringe) and Quercetin, along with the rec'd vitamins.
Took my third doses today. So far so good. Of course, I have no control group and a sample of one, but they seem to help with whatever bug this is.
Main thing, I can't determine that I have been harmed at all, so it appears that the horse ivermectin is at its worse benign in me.
I think he is saying, "The government is killing us by limiting our freedom and access to information and effective medical treatment". At least that is what I am reading into his post.
prevented from even talking about Ivermection w/o fear of losing their 'provider' license
You can buy R-Lipoic Acid & N-Acetyl-Cysteine from online vitamin vendors like vitacost.com
Garlic's active ingredient is Allisure Allicin from allimax.us
Quercetin Phytosome is at thorne.com
Are you agreeing that Ivermectin is dangerous?
Rin saysprevented from even talking about Ivermection w/o fear of losing their 'provider' license
"without fear" or "for fear"?
the government causes dangerous situations by criminalizing safer ones.
Ivermectin/Quercetin
Ceffer saysIvermectin/Quercetin
Here's the thing, on the Quercetin Phytosome side (read: Not Quercetin DiHydrate, which isn't very bioavailable) you can ramp up your uptake between 250 mg to 3000 mg w/o toxic side effects. Sure, your GI tract may tell you to stop at a certain amount but that's just time in the toilet, not a life threatening situation.
Plus, you can also ramp up your Allisure Allicin, from 100 mg to 2000 mg per day, w/o toxic reactions. The only thing which will happen is that that virus will die.
Rin saysCeffer saysIvermectin/Quercetin
Here's the thing, on the Quercetin Phytosome side (read: Not Quercetin DiHydrate, which isn't very bioavailable) you can ramp up your uptake between 250 mg to 3000 mg w/o toxic side effects. Sure, your GI tract may tell you to stop at a certain amount but that's just time in the toilet, not a life threatening situation.
Plus, you can also ramp up your Allisure Allicin, from 100 mg to 2000 mg per day, w/o toxic reactions. The only thing which will happen is that that virus will die.
So, if I feel Covid coming, I should take Quercetin and Allisure/Allicin el pronto and lots of it?
So, if I feel Covid coming, I should take Quercetin and Allisure/Allicin el pronto and lots of it?
You may need to take an an antiviral with the quercetin, such as zinc. Garlic is always good as well but quercetin goes with zinc or hcq.
I should take Quercetin
Today in "rabbit holes nobody should ever jump into" we will attempt to answer the eternal question of whether a rolling stone truly gathers no moss.
Actually, we'll read through this article and try to find: how does it feel... to be on your own...
rollingstone.com/politics/po…
The FDA Is Begging You Not to Take Horse Dewormer for Covid-19
Ivermectin, a livestock medication, is causing a spike in poison control calls in Mississippi as people take it to treat or prevent Covid-19
rollingstone.com
I'm listening to this on repeat, hoping to keep my mood above a certain minimum, play it if you want to follow along: invidious.snopyta.org/IwOfCgkyEj0
Bob Dylan - Like a Rolling Stone (Audio)
“Like A Rolling Stone" by Bob DylanListen to Bob Dylan: https://bobdylan.lnk.to/listenYDSubscribe to the Bob Dylan YouTube channel: https://bobdylan.lnk.to/_...
youtube.com
How it started: How it's going:
Well, that's an awkward start. Are Fox news hosts really telling people to take the animal preparation of ivermectin? That would be unconscionable. They could suggest ivermectin for humans, you know, the kind that has had billions of doses administered?
From the outset, we're treated to a puzzling statement. Given that ivermectin is in the WHO list of essential medicines (for humans), either RS didn't fact check this, or they're calling half the world's population livestock. Hmmm..
I know what you're thinking. You're sophisticated. You read David Fuller's piece on Aero where he says the problem of legacy media is that they fact check too much.
Calling Africans livestock is the interpretation we'll go with then. Weird flex, but OK.
areomagazine.com/2021/08/12/…
So, let's see. 85% calls had mild symptoms, one person was asked to seek further help. So one person is 15%? Are we talking about 7 calls total? @chrismartenson seems to think so.
Chris Martenson
@chrismartenson
Aug 21
Sounds bad, but let's unpack the situation.
First, they only used percentages. But how many people are we talking about?
If 85% of "callers" had mild symptoms but one was sent for eval, then we're talking either 6 or 7 people total. Let's call it 7...
Show this thread
Still. That one person seems like they got themselves in trouble huh? Lucky for you my snarky tweets are on top of this. This story was seen yesterday on The Hill (to die on). Short summary: nobody was hospitalized. Who knows what "further help" means.
Aug 21
Good thing no ivermectin in aquarium cleaners.
As we head lower down the article, things start clearing up. It's a matter of dosing, you see. Ivermectin does get used in humans, but in different doses. Well, that's awkward.
Ah, we're back on track. The obvious risks of humans ingesting ivermectin? Say it ain't so. Maddow is on the case.
OK, but maybe ivermectin is the sort of thing given in extreme circumstances. Something for the desperate cases.
Oh...
Wait, did you say FDA approved?
researchgate.net/publication…
What about the rest of the world though?
Et tu, Nature?
Maybe we should send @Maddow to Brazil, I'm sure @ggreenwald would love to show her around. Maybe they can pick up some toxic substances at the local convenience store.
Mauricio Rodriguez
@ColombianRoast
Bought it OTC here in São Paulo, Brazil. Around US$5 if I remember correctly.
At this point we have RS quoting Maddow quoting Fox news. If I have my count right, this must be 3x the fact checking. Still, though, I'm feeling a bit burnt, are we sure this was actually said? Specifically the horse deworming kind? Maybe I'll wait for attribution on that.
Especially with the zero new patients overwhelming the hospitals, the situation sounds extreme. Are we sending the national guard? Won't somebody think of the horses?
In seriousness though, if you're looking for medical misinformation, this is it. The equivocation being played here is grotesque. People on Fox are discussing a drug that the FDA has approved, and physicians are perfectly allowed to prescribe "off label" if they choose to.
Why might they choose to? Well, there's a boatload of studies. Maybe imperfect, definitely more needed. This website keeps track, though more research is needed, we have signal: ivmmeta.com/
Make what you will of the aggregation, the studies are there for all to see.
Now, many critics will say that some meta-analyses have failed to find any effect.
What they won't tell you is that what that means is that those meta-analyses have in fact failed. At their stated purpose of figuring out what's going on. Others haven't. Maybe look at those?
Some doctors definitely do. And they prescribe the medication. What happens next? Well, some report that pharmacies are refusing to fill those prescriptions. Yes, doctors prescriptions.
Adam Meyer
@meyer2478
Jul 31
@MichaelBerrySho @kroger is refusing to fill a prescription for Ivermectin OR transfer the prescription to another pharmacy that will. Safe to say I’m done spending my money there. Others should know too.
Michael Krieger
@LibertyBlitz
Aug 20
Pharmacies in our area are refusing to fill prescriptions of ivermectin. Presented with a prescription they are simply refusing. @Walgreens was the first and now others are following along.
It’s getting nutty out there.
Show this thread
Kim Goldberg
@KimPigSquash
24 Dec 2020
Replying to @demartini777 @maggieoutabout @Covid19Critical
For sure. I have horse paste as a back-up in case pharmacy unwilling to fill the prescription I now have for #ivermectin. Some reports of that happening in US - pharmacists refusing to fill a script for it for off-label #covid19 use.
So I'm sure Maddow and Rolling stone are running a campaign to stop this abusive practice of pharmacies that may drive people to extreme measures in order to follow their doctors' advice? I must have missed the link to the petition.
Or is perhaps what we're seeing a campaign against the legitimate form of ivermectin, making the human form of the substance hard to come by, and then blaming people who go for perhaps inadvisable alternatives? Has anything like this happened before? Yes. slate.com/technology/2010/02…
The little-told story of how the U.S. government poisoned alcohol during Prohibition.
It was Christmas Eve 1926, the streets aglitter with snow and lights, when the man afraid of Santa Claus stumbled into the emergency room at New York...
slate.com
Say what you will about ivermectin. I've heard from it's most hardcore critics that they believe there is likely some effect on COVID. (for instance Eric Topol, on Sam Harris' podcast). If it's safe, and it may have some effect, what's the harm in trying when infected?
Are we suffering from an advanced case of scientism? Will we literally deny people sth that may help, because we have no final evidence to convince everyone? Are we going to wait until the large-scale RCT, the kind that costs 10 figures, is run for a generic? And by whom?
The most likely explanation is that any alternative to vaccination must be eliminated in order to support vaccines in getting us herd immunity. Another of the many noble lies of this pandemic. slate.com/technology/2021/07…
The U.S. Government’s Noble Lies About COVID-19
When Fauci said in March 2020 that Americans didn’t need to wear masks, it was a noble lie—and a destructive one.
slate.com
This explains why we're not hearing messaging about exercise, vitamin D, HVAC/ventilation upgrades, or the many other things we know can help somewhat. This was probably decided many months ago. When herd immunity was on the table. Oops. cnbc.com/2021/08/12/herd-imm…
Here's why herd immunity from Covid is 'mythical' with the delta variant
Achieving herd immunity with Covid vaccines when the highly infectious delta variant is spreading is likely to be impossible, leading experts say.
cnbc.com
And now we must clean this mess up somehow. Boosters-as-a-service is seriously not sustainable. A new balance must be found, allowing government room to back off while saving face. If you want to read a lot more on this, this thread has the details:
Aug 19
I want to try something different: A 🧵on a 32-minute segment by @RWMaloneMD speaking to Jason from the Intellectual People Podcast.
It's all worth listening to, but this segment stopped me in my tracks, and pulls together much of what's going on. invidious.snopyta.org/nYkUePQMfkE?t=6785
Show this thread
The music didn't really help my mood, turns out. Or perhaps it was because autoplay moved on to this: invidious.snopyta.org/YR5ApYxkU-U
Pink Floyd - Another Brick In The Wall (HQ)
HIT SUBSCRIBE FOR MORE CLASSIC VIDEOSPink Floyd - Another Brick In The Wall Lifted from "Pink Floyd The Wall" film, this video is actually comprised of two s...
youtube.com
Verdict: well, this stone has stopped rolling a long time ago, though an RCT is in the works to ascertain whether the stopping caused the moss or the other way around.
The End.
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https://www.yahoo.com/news/stop-fda-warns-people-not-184608993.html
'Stop it': FDA warns people not to take veterinary drugs to treat Covid-19
Nicole Acevedo
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is urging people to stop taking veterinary drugs to treat or prevent Covid-19 after receiving multiple reports of patients who have been hospitalized after "self-medicating with ivermectin intended for horses," according to the federal agency.
"You are not a horse. You are not a cow. Seriously, y'all. Stop it," the FDA tweeted from its official account on Saturday, alongside a consumer update detailing why the drug can be unsafe for humans.
Ivermectin, which is not an anti-viral drug, is generally used to treat or prevent parasites in animals.
"These animal drugs are often highly concentrated because they are used for large animals like horses and cows, which can weigh a lot more than" a human, the FDA update reads. "Such high doses can be highly toxic in humans."
Patients who overdose with ivermectin can experience nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, low blood pressure, allergic reactions, dizziness, problems with balance, seizures, coma and even death, according to the FDA.
The agency clarified that the FDA-approved ivermectin tablets meant to treat people with certain conditions caused by parasitic worms as well as topical formulations used for head lice and skin conditions like rosacea are different from the drug used on animals. Ivermectin tablets and topical formulations for humans have "very specific doses" that are significantly smaller than the doses meant for animals.
Moreover, "many inactive ingredients found in animal products aren’t evaluated for use in people," the FDA warned. "In some cases, we don’t know how those inactive ingredients will affect how ivermectin is absorbed in the human body."
The FDA stressed that no form of the ivermectin drug has been approved by the agency for use in treating or preventing Covid-19 in humans.
"However, some initial research is underway," the agency said, adding that "taking a drug for an unapproved use can be very dangerous. This is true of ivermectin, too."
The agency said it was forced to issue a warning in the consumption of ivermectin following "a lot of misinformation" around the drug.
"You may have heard that it’s okay to take large doses of ivermectin. That is wrong," the FDA consumer update reads. "Meanwhile, effective ways to limit the spread of Covid-19 continue to be to wear your mask, stay at least 6 feet from others who don’t live with you, wash hands frequently, and avoid crowds."
The FDA has also granted emergency use authorizations for three Covid-19 vaccines to prevent Covid-19 infections.
Covid-19 has claimed the lives of more than 630,000 people in the U.S. since the start of the pandemic in early 2020. Since then, more than 37.6 million cases of Covid-19 infections have been reported nationwide, according to NBC News' tally.