Hump Day Hilarity – BANNED by Big Tech

Or maybe not so funny. We still have that video that has been banned on Facebook, YouTube, CNN, BBC, and Twitter. It seems that big tech doesn’t like it when people think for themselves and go off the rails of the official narrative.

They’ve apparently never heard of the The Streisand Effect.

Josh sums it up:

Do watch if you have not already – the video is here.

Meanwhile…this study happened.

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Loren C. Wilson
July 29, 2020 12:09 pm

The second poster is perfect.

David L. Hagen
Reply to  Loren C. Wilson
July 29, 2020 5:01 pm

For the silenced medical evidence, 74% of 62 papers show EARLY use of hydroxychloroquine (especially with Zinc and azithromycin) show major benefit. See C19Study.com
Especially within 2 days!
Dr Zelenko had 84% lower hospitalization and 80% lower deaths per TheZelenkoProtocol.com
Dr Stella said she successfully treated 350 with no deaths. Now writing a paper. Etc.

Reply to  David L. Hagen
July 29, 2020 7:33 pm

Mr. Hagen, please note “physicians worldwide for COVID. Survey of 6,150 physicians.” is not a study of the efficacy of HCQ.

(You are banned once again, you can’t help yourself, you need to grow up and get a life!) SUNMOD

Joel Snider
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 30, 2020 9:41 am

+1

Reply to  Henry Pool
August 2, 2020 8:08 am

Thank you, SUNMOD!

Reply to  David L. Hagen
July 29, 2020 7:35 pm

Mr. Hagen, please note: “Monkey study which reports no effect of HC Q or HC Q+AZ.” does not show efficacy in humans.

David L Hagen
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 8:54 pm

Henry Pool The Sermo Covid19 Barometer -Survey documents what 6200 physicians are actually using to treat Covid-19. e.g.

Hydroxychloroquine was overall chosen as the most effective therapy amongst COVID-19 treaters from a list of 15 options (37% of COVID-19 treaters). 75% in Spain, 53% Italy, 44% in China, 43% in Brazil, 29% in France, 23% in the U.S. and 13% in the U.K.

cedarhill
Reply to  David L Hagen
July 30, 2020 4:31 am

Just fyi, Henry Pool is using specious statements. Next will be loaded questions like “when did you stop beating your kids”. Then move on to simple lies followed by outright lies followed by demands for opponents to be arrested followed by BLM…
‘Tis why they’re called “progressives”.

(Henry Pool is BANNED) SUNMOD

Ian W
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 30, 2020 6:12 am

Note the lack of zinc in that list.

It is the zinc that is the important item in the list. Intracellular zinc needs to be raised and then RNA viruses cannot replicate by hijacking the cellular RNA transcription process. This is why all so called studies deliberately omit zinc.

The medical community cannot be trusted to carry out a formal trial as they are deliberately varying the successful regimen and dosages and the best time to use the regimen. The regimen that is successful when used prophylactically through to when symptoms appear is:
> HCQ as an ionophore that also reduces inflammation;
> zinc that inhibits viral replication;
> azithromycin antibiotic that prevents opportunist infection and also has some antiviral effect.

niceguy
Reply to  Ian W
July 31, 2020 5:59 pm

“they are deliberately varying the successful regimen and dosages”

Those studies with the highest, absurd doses (>>1 g) are what I call conspiration to murder directly and indirectly.

niceguy
Reply to  Henry Pool
August 1, 2020 8:18 pm

After nearly 5 months of virus circulation in France, among HUMANS, the greatly overrated INSERM publishes a trial on … monkeys?

Oh My God

David L Hagen
Reply to  David L. Hagen
July 29, 2020 8:31 pm

Now 65 publications listed at C19Study.com.
75% show effectiveness of early use of hydroxychloroquine.
See especially the 2nd graph.
Sermo.com surveyed 6200 physicians:
Largest Statistically Significant Study by 6,200 Multi-Country Physicians on COVID-19 Uncovers Treatment Patterns and Puts Pandemic in Context

The three most commonly prescribed treatments amongst COVID-19 treaters are 56% analgesics, 41% Azithromycin, and 33% Hydroxychloroquine
Hydroxychloroquine usage amongst COVID-19 treaters is 72% in Spain, 49% in Italy, 41% in Brazil, 39% in Mexico, 28% in France, 23% in the U.S., 17% in Germany, 16% in Canada, 13% in the UK and 7% in Japan
Hydroxychloroquine was overall chosen as the most effective therapy amongst COVID-19 treaters from a list of 15 options (37% of COVID-19 treaters)
75% in Spain, 53% Italy, 44% in China, 43% in Brazil, 29% in France, 23% in the U.S. and 13% in the U.K.
The two most common treatment regimens for Hydroxychloroquine were:
(38%) 400mg twice daily on day one; 400 mg daily for five days
(26%) 400mg twice daily on day one; 200mg twice daily for four days
Outside the U.S., Hydroxychloroquine was equally used for diagnosed patients with mild to severe symptoms whereas in the U.S. it was most commonly used for high risk diagnosed patients
Globally, 19% of physicians prescribed or have seen Hydroxychloroquine prophylactically used for high risk patients, and 8% for low risk patients

Roger Knights
Reply to  David L Hagen
July 30, 2020 1:50 pm

Here are some links I’ve collected on the use of HCQ / hydroxychloroquine:

https://c19study.com :
a treatment which is x% effective could have saved:
10% effective could have saved 59,288 lives.
25% effective could have saved 148,473 lives.
50% effective could have saved 296,496 lives.

Graphic from the above: “Country CFR (Case Fatality Rate) by HCQ Usage”:
comment image

Another graphic: “Case Fatality Rate by Country”:
comment image
——————

Comment by icisil July 18, 2020 at 3:03 am
An interesting compilation of HCQ studies that are overwhelmingly positive
https://twitter.com/gummibear737/status/1283840177497088001
——————

Comment by By Kai Kupferschmidt Jun. 9, 2020 , 5:15 PM Science Mag (AAAS)

“There is one exception. Many researchers agree that a good case can be made for continuing to test whether hydroxychloroquine can prevent infection if given to people just in case they get exposed to the virus, for instance on the job at a hospital—a strategy called pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP). “You have a much better chance of preventing something with a weak drug than you have of curing a fully established infection,” says White, who runs one of the largest PrEP trials. He notes that doxycycline, an antibiotic, has long been used in malaria prophylaxis. “We would never treat anybody with it, it’s too weak. But it’s a very good prophylactic.””
https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2020/06/three-big-studies-dim-hopes-hydroxychloroquine-can-treat-or-prevent-covid-19

The above is a supposedly fair, gold-standard (Minneapolis) study that found no benefit in HCQ treatment. But, if it’s 10% effective as a prophylactic, it could save tens of thousands of lives.

Joel Snider
Reply to  David L. Hagen
July 29, 2020 8:34 pm

In the optimistic hope of setting straight some of the oh-so-typical elitist snark of our progressive board posters regarding Dr. Dr. Immanuel.

I groaned a little when I heard about her beliefs – if only because I knew what the press harpies would do with it, but I’m willing to see what she’s got.

See, I’m from Portland – that means you grow up learning to accept a wide range of wild beliefs – half the women I’ve dated since before the turn of the Millennium were at least Wiccan , if not outright witches – and I mean casting-spells-witchcraft – and some of them were pretty damn smart.

One woman was a personal director for a major international company – she told me the story of how when she and her husband broke up, she said she cast a spell to make their house sell, but forgot to take it off after it did – and she explained that you’re not supposed to do that because a spell is like a living thing that will start acting on its own – and therefore her house burned down. Her ex-husband apparently chided her – you didn’t take the spell off, did you?
Another young woman – valedictorian her class – told me “I can see where you came from a monkey, but I’M a divine creation of God’.

I would easily place either one of these women’s IQ at 145-plus, and if either of them had been doctors instead of the field in which they worked, I would say, yes, I would take their medical advice – hell, I might even let them cast a spell.

I’ll tell you this, too – once you’ve had a voodoo doll with a lock of your damn hair in it passed around town, you’ll start being a little more respectful of people’s theological beliefs.

I’d also remind you that this is a big sub-culture in the Earthy community – so perhaps, you should be a littler more careful about the witches you burn.

Reply to  Joel Snider
July 30, 2020 6:19 am

Snider
Is that a true comment or are you
Just trying to be funny?

Joel Snider
Reply to  Richard Greene
July 30, 2020 7:38 am

All true. Including the voodoo doll.

Reply to  Joel Snider
July 30, 2020 8:50 am

Thanks Joel, that’s funny, even if it’s true. Of course if true, one better tread carefully breaking up w/them…..

Jimmie CJ'52
Reply to  David L. Hagen
July 30, 2020 2:18 pm

The link does not work now. 3;16 mt 7/30/2020

David L Hagen
Reply to  David L. Hagen
July 30, 2020 3:46 pm

3119 patients treated successfully with Hydroxychloroquine & Azithromycin
(9 times more than the 350 Dr. Stella Immanuel successfully treated)

Although this is a retrospective analysis, results suggest that early diagnosis, early isolation and early treatment of COVID-19 patients, with at least 3 days of HCQ-AZ lead to a significantly better clinical outcome and a faster viral load reduction than other treatments.

We retrospectively report the clinical management of 3,737 screened patients, including 3,119 (83.5%) treated with HCQ-AZ (200 mg of oral HCQ, three times daily for ten days and 500 mg of oral AZ on day 1 followed by 250 mg daily for the next four days, respectively) for at least three days and 618 (16.5%) patients treated with other regimen (“others”). …No cases of torsade de pointe or sudden death were observed.
Lagier JC, Million M, Gautret P, Colson P, Cortaredona S, Giraud-Gatineau A, Honoré S, Gaubert JY, Fournier PE, Tissot-Dupont H, Chabrière E. Outcomes of 3,737 COVID-19 patients treated with hydroxychloroquine/ azithromycin and other regimens in Marseille, France: A retrospective analysis. Travel medicine and infectious disease. 2020 Jun 25:101791.
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1477893920302817

Earthling2
July 29, 2020 12:14 pm

What would really be funny, is seeing Larry Page and Sergey Brin, Mark Zukerberg and Jack Dorsey all in orange jump suits, shackled and being led in front of the TV camera on their perp walk to prison. Because this is what should be happening to these giant monopolistic tech firms that are now limiting free speech on their platforms. Because they are now effective Utilities, they are now in breach of criminal behaviour and will be charged and broken up. Good riddance to these jerks and the way the operate their companies. The proof is in the pudding.

Broadie
Reply to  Earthling2
July 29, 2020 12:56 pm

The modern day equivalent of book burning . Big Tech is de-platforming knowledge, history & debate. The swamp is prosecuting and destroying those who question the dominant narrative

You can buy Hitler’s Mein Kampf on Amazon.

You can buy Marx’s Das Kapital on Amazon.

But you cannot listen to a group of Doctors speaking of their experiences with Corona Virus.
You are unable to be lectured by a University Professor, Peter Ridd, who questions the narrative that the Great Barrier Reef is dying.

Face the Facts!
You are too stupid and will make the wrong decision if you are aware of alternative arguments.

OldCynic
Reply to  Broadie
July 29, 2020 9:09 pm

“You are unable to be lectured by a University Professor, Peter Ridd, who questions the narrative that the Great Barrier Reef is dying.”

That is because he has been sacked by James Cook Uni for speaking out. Worse than that; he took them to court, was awarded damages but now the verdict has been overturned 2-1 in the Federal Court. He has launched a GoFundMe appeal for money to appeal to the High Court.

If you want to support him, Search for “Peter Ridd go fund me” and get your credit card out, please.

Broadie
Reply to  OldCynic
July 30, 2020 4:56 am

And Ridd is the genuine article, a tradesman with a passion in his craft and possessing the patience and desire to pass that knowledge on.

Who would sack a person like Peter Ridd?

RichardX
Reply to  Broadie
July 31, 2020 1:04 am

Who would sack Peter Ridd? People who don’t give a fig about science, but who are very ambitious.

This link to Junk Science at James Cook University explains a few things:

https://quadrant.org.au/opinion/doomed-planet/2020/02/the-tip-of-a-jcus-junk-science-iceberg/

Captain James Cook is probably spinning in his grave.

Chad C. Mulligan
Reply to  Broadie
July 31, 2020 11:25 am

Who would sack Peter Ridd? The same people who led Lavoisier to the guillotine.

niceguy
Reply to  Earthling2
July 29, 2020 1:45 pm

Not only that, at the instant you

1) appear in front of a congressional committee
2) receive a letter from a representative

you are NOT just a “Christian bakery like corp” making cakes for everybody and marriage cake for “normal” marriages. You are a major actor and part of the System (even if unwillingly).

Reply to  Earthling2
July 29, 2020 7:28 pm

Facebook now an effective Utility??

LMAO, no, it’s no where near being that.

Earthling2
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 7:54 pm

That’s what the HouseJudiciary Committee on Big Tech was saying that today, and not only that, but they are engaged in Anti-Trust activities.

Even Wikipedia has a page called Social Media as a Public Utility. When it dominates, and crushes its competition, it becomes an Anti-Trust Utility. This is why changes is coming to the way big tech operates. Europe has been hitting some them of them hard over the years too, including Microsoft and Google as probably everyone recalls. There is no doubt now that the definition of Utility now exceeds the usual definition of electricity, water, sewer and gas. Cable TV and Internet are utilities, so why not social media like Facebook, Google and Twitter? They have a near monopoly and are now crushing free speech on their platforms that the majority of people access. Amazon is crushing Main Street, and also engaging in nefarious activities how they do business. So why isn’t that a utility, when they now have dominant market share?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_media_as_a_public_utility#:~:text=Social%20media%20as%20a%20public%20utility%20is%20a%20theory%20postulating,phone%20utilities%20are%20typically%20government

niceguy
Reply to  Earthling2
July 30, 2020 1:41 am

Anti monopoly laws are fundamentally inappropriate here. They may help, just like solving a problem with classical mechanics may appear to work, but it’s the wrong analysis, wrong viewpoint, wrong frame of reference.

The laws were written against people trying to control market to earn as much as possible. They weren’t designed against collusion of actors trying to impose a suicidal “ideology” (or ideals-ogy? as failed presidential candidate Royal might say) on the People.

Monopolies lead to enrichment but going woke in general does not. It’s something much more nefarious.

The frame of reference must include interference in politics and free speech: monopoly not on selling gadgets, but on “moderation” of public forums.

Anti monopolies laws were not used, AFAIK, against communists.

niceguy
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 30, 2020 1:28 am

President Trump LOST against White Knights of Free Speech (or something like that). His twitter is a public square (for US citizens). Which immediately means Twitter is too. And so is Facebook if used for political speech by elected officials.

MarkW
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 30, 2020 10:06 am

I’m guessing that Hank is working with his own definitions again.

Izaak Walton
July 29, 2020 12:20 pm

Not her seems like sensible advice. Dr. Immanuel has publicly stated that infertility is caused by
people have dream sex with demons and that alien DNA is being used for medical treatment. Why
would anyone think she has credibility when it comes to COVID-19?

Steve Taylor
Reply to  Izaak Walton
July 29, 2020 12:30 pm

Don’t get her going on the reasons for endometriosis and ovarian cysts either. Those demons are busy buggers

sycomputing
Reply to  Steve Taylor
July 29, 2020 12:48 pm

Don’t get her going on the reasons for . . .

Nice! Let’s get Steve on that list of Sloppy Thinkers too! Way to go Steve! Give him a hand folks!

Your logical fallacy is:

The Genetic Fallacy: This fallacy avoids the argument by shifting focus onto something’s or someone’s origins. It’s similar to an ad hominem fallacy in that it leverages existing negative perceptions to make someone’s argument look bad, without actually presenting a case for why the argument itself lacks merit.

Adrian Mann
Reply to  sycomputing
July 29, 2020 1:32 pm

@Syncomputing: Can’t see anything in what Steve says that refers to her origins or genetics. Or what Izaak says. Or Carguy Pete.

Your logical fallacy is:

Just making stuff up.

sycomputing
Reply to  Adrian Mann
July 29, 2020 1:59 pm

@Syncomputing: Can’t see anything in what Steve says that refers to her origins or genetics.

Hey now, “kudos” to Adrian for TRYING to bring something of value to the table.

But you failed.

You failed at understanding the nature of the Genetic fallacy. You didn’t read the link defining it and/or you don’t understand how words mean things in different contexts.

Maybe I can help.

In this context, “Genetic” doesn’t have ANYTHING to do with an INDIVIDUAL’S origins or DNA, but rather, it’s called the “Genetic Fallacy” because:

“You judged something as either good or bad on the basis of where it comes from, or from whom it came.”

Do you see now?

Again, good show for trying, but you’re not quite there yet.

Let me know if I can help further.

2hotel9
Reply to  Adrian Mann
July 29, 2020 5:03 pm

We get it, Adrian, you don’t like women who are smarter, more successful and a different color than you, no need to keep harping on it, sweety.

Reply to  Adrian Mann
July 30, 2020 5:34 am

Sys,

Wow. It is just amazing how little people actually know about argumentative fallacies. Thanks for pointing out the one being used here.

If I tell you that I believe the earth is flat and that it orbits the sun does that make the second assertion wrong because the first assertion is incorrect?

That’s the argument being used by the medical establishment and the MSM against the good doctor today. I would expect this from the education journalists receive today. But I am always amazed that medical doctors, presumably well educated, don’t have any grasp of logical arguments.

Greg
Reply to  Adrian Mann
July 30, 2020 4:34 pm

No, he is absolutely correct.

Reply to  sycomputing
July 29, 2020 2:12 pm

If your doctor prescribed an exorcism to remove your warts, would you follow this advice?

sycomputing
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 2:24 pm

If your doctor prescribed an exorcism to remove your warts, would you follow this advice?

Alright! A weigh-in from Henry, no doubt wading still in his Pool of Propaganda!

Sadly (but not unsurprisingly), at first glance, I’m none too impressed with this effort, Henry. Regardless, I’m in a mood to waste time on addlepates, so let’s get started shall we?

I assume by this logic you mean to equate treatment by Hydroxychloroquine to exorcisms, is that right Henry?

Waiting with bated breath for your undoubtedly phrenic response.

Derg
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 3:02 pm

The only way you would is if a double blind study was done 😉

Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 3:21 pm

“is that right Henry?” …. No.
.
I asked you “If your doctor prescribed an exorcism to remove your warts, would you follow this advice?” What is your answer?

sycomputing
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 3:33 pm

I asked you “If your doctor prescribed an exorcism to remove your warts, would you follow this advice?” What is your answer?

Well good grief Henry, you really DO belong in the set of all Genetically Deficient don’t you?

What an absolutely intellectually vacuous thing to ask . . .

I mean, I don’t believe an exorcism is going to cure my warts. What I do is sandpaper them and then apply Henry Pool’s Logical Snake Oil in lieu of freezing (so far I’m extremely disappointed with the results), so what do you THINK my answer is going to be that rhetorical question?

Are you an intellectual time waster by nature or did you just start classes in November of 2016? Because if it’s the latter you’re doing VERY well I must say.

Regardless, did you ask that question to someone who believes in exorcism by chance?

Joel Snider
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 3:29 pm

Has she done anything like that?

Michael Jankowski
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 3:53 pm

Whatever her personal/religious beliefs may be, she practices medicine with laws, rules, and ethics established by governing bodies within the US.

Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 4:15 pm

You said, “I mean, I don’t believe an exorcism is going to cure my warts” which I believe means that you would not follow this recommended cure for warts. Good to see you have a touch of rationality.
.
Now tell us what Dr. Immanuel would prescribe for endometriosis?

sycomputing
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 5:57 pm

Now tell us what Dr. Immanuel would prescribe for endometriosis?

Pain medication, hormone therapy, I don’t have a clue.

Do you?

sycomputing
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 7:26 pm

Henry? I’ve answered you Henry? Hello?

What now?

I was just getting warmed up.

Charles Nelson
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 4:39 pm

oddly enough there is evidence that many illnesses are psychosomatic
therefore a psychic ritual might help?

MarkW
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 6:58 pm

The sad thing is that Hank actually believes his adolescent taunt is relevant to the discussion.

Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 7:54 pm

Charles Nelson, endometriosis is not psychosomatic.
.
syscomputing, you are half correct regarding medications, surgery is sometimes indicted. However, note that none of the recommended treatments involve direct intervention into the patient’s sleeping.

sycomputing
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 8:00 pm

However, note that none of the recommended treatments involve direct intervention into the patient’s sleeping.

Okay. And your point is?

noaaprogrammer
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 8:51 pm

People from different cultures have different ways of dealing with physical problems. For example in Western Christian cultures, people use prayer, anointing with oil, holy water, visiting sites where miraculous cures are said to occur, etc.

The reason double blind studies are done is to rule out the suggestive power of mind over matter. To assert that the mind has little to no power over one’s body is … well … _____ (fill in the blank here to discover your own belief system.)

Michael Lemaire
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 9:44 pm

If your doctor believed that the earth was created by a bearded man sitting on a cloud, would you take his advice?

pls
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 10:24 pm

>If your doctor prescribed an exorcism to remove your warts, would you follow this advice?

In this case, yes.

There are studies showing that painting a wart with colored water and telling the patient it will go away will work. There are studies showing that putting the wart under a large an impressive machine that shines a low level colored light on the wart and telling the patient that the wart will go away will work.

I have every expectation that performing an exorcism and telling the patient the wart will go away will work.

Ian W
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 30, 2020 6:47 am

@Henry Pool

Actually that happens all the time in current medical practice although they don’t use the same words. It is the reason for ‘double blind’ trials. It is called the placebo effect.
There is no psychological difference between putting on a white coat and giving blue sugar pills to a patient and them recovering – than putting on regalia and doing an excorcism and them recovering. The placebo effect can be extremely powerful.

There will be some patients receiving the placebo in double blind trials that may improve just because they received medical treatment in a hospital from white coated doctors and pills to swallow.

More importantly, if someone worships the great spaghetti monster on weekends, but during the week is a talented physician with a 100% record on curing a particular disease. Why would you avoid that doctor? Should atheists only to to atheist doctors?

Grumpy Bill
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 30, 2020 7:31 am

Why wouldn’t I try an exorcism? I’d have nothing to lose.
When my dad was dying from an incurable progressive disease, he tried everything he could find including faith healers. At least they didn’t have the serious side effects that some of the experimental drugs his doctors tried.

SocietalNorm
Reply to  Henry Pool
August 3, 2020 7:34 pm

“If your doctor prescribed an exorcism to remove your warts, would you follow this advice?”

Depends what symptoms I had along with the warts.

SocietalNorm
Reply to  Henry Pool
August 3, 2020 7:38 pm

“If your doctor believed that the earth was created by a bearded man sitting on a cloud, would you take his advice?”

Sure, there are a lot of doctors who have very little understanding of religion and theology.

jonz
Reply to  sycomputing
July 31, 2020 11:26 am

That was a needed and well stated explanation of ‘Focuse Shifting‘, the best I’ve read to date. Whenever the undesirable narratives are brought out into the light, the cancelers employ their predictable tactics of attacking the messenger and shifting the focus to personal attacks and dehumanization. It’s all so Alinskyesque. These are the morally bankrupt walking dead.

jon Zig
Reply to  sycomputing
July 31, 2020 11:29 am

That was a needed and well stated explanation of ‘Focuse Shifting‘, the best I’ve read to date. Whenever the undesirable narratives are brought out into the light, the cancelers employ their predictable tactics of attacking the messenger and shifting the focus to personal attacks and dehumanization. It’s all so Alinskyesque. These are the morally bankrupt walking dead.

Kenji
Reply to  Steve Taylor
July 29, 2020 1:36 pm

Lordy! She be one crazy black woman … right? How racist is that?

And if she wears a RED MAGA hat … she’d get shot in the head … or does that just happen in “tolerant” Minneapolis?

J Mac
Reply to  Kenji
July 29, 2020 10:46 pm

Milwaukee WI

Bruce Cobb
Reply to  Izaak Walton
July 29, 2020 12:33 pm

You people just can’t stay away from the ad hominems, can you? You know it’s the resort of liars and idiots don’t you? So, which one are you?

MarkW
Reply to  Bruce Cobb
July 29, 2020 1:13 pm

They’ve proven they can’t argue science or data, so ad hominems are all they have left.

Reply to  MarkW
July 29, 2020 2:15 pm

What do you suggest someone do to prevent dreaming of sex with demons?

Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 3:46 pm

Actual sex with a demon, or demons, will likely cure you of your subconscious curiosity.

Regular (timely) sex will likely cure you of your subconscious need to dream of sex.

Good luck.

paul courtney
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 4:34 pm

Mr. Pool: I suggest one open and run a medical clinic in a poor neighborhood, actually caring for the very people forgotten by leftists like you. Why don’t you try walking a few steps in her shoes… nah, ur not worth it.

Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 6:17 pm

Sheila told me that the lizards running the government will not permit me to practice medicine

MarkW
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 7:01 pm

Poor Hank, once he digs himself a hole, he just can’t help digging it deeper.

Another constant with Hank, the further behind he gets, the more illogical obfuscations he starts tossing out.

It’s almost as if he doesn’t realize we aren’t laughing with him.

Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 7:57 pm

Poor MarkW, has nothing, never had anything, and looks like he never will have anything in the future.

(Poor fella who has been banned many times over the years, hopefully my suggestion in how to finally stop you permanently will work, grow up Henry Pool!) SUNMOD

SocietalNorm
Reply to  Henry Pool
August 3, 2020 7:58 pm

“What do you suggest someone do to prevent dreaming of sex with demons?”

Generally, dreaming of sex with someone is seen not so much as a desire to actually have sex with that person, but as wanting to have a quality they possess.
To see demons in your dream indicates that you may be experiencing or inflicting fear, emotional distress or physical abuse in your waking life. Demons are also symbolic of ignorance, negative habits, and of your shadow self. (dreammoods.com)

So, to prevent dreaming of sex with demons if you are having such dreams, you likely have to stop desiring to inflict distress or abuse on others or overcome a masochistic-like desire to have more pain in your life.
Either way, there are serious issues you need to sort out in your life.

I hope this information will motivate you to get the help you need.

Adrian Mann
Reply to  Bruce Cobb
July 29, 2020 3:30 pm

@Syncomputing:
I perfectly understand what “Genetic Fallacy” means – but thanks for assuming that I don’t. So Zero kudos for that.
Here’s where you went wrong –

False Cause & False Attribution Fallacy
Bandwagon Fallacy
Argumentum ad Populum Fallacy
Irrelevant Conclusion Fallacy

So no, you can be of no further help.
You’re welcome.

sycomputing
Reply to  Adrian Mann
July 29, 2020 4:49 pm

I perfectly understand what “Genetic Fallacy” means – but thanks for assuming that I don’t.

No I didn’t assume anything. I went with the evidence. Here’s what you said:

“@Syncomputing: Can’t see anything in what Steve says that refers to her origins or genetics. Or what Izaak says. Or Carguy Pete.”

Unless you were lying, that thar English sentence above means you perfectly did NOT understand the Genetic Fallacy. I think everyone knows this. Probably best to drop that subject before you make yourself look any more like one making really obvious, embarrassing excuses for his Stupid.

Hey I’m just trying to help. I can’t help you being lenient with you. You NEED to understand where you went wrong. Sometimes that hurts, but it’s good for you. IF you listen.

YOU are welcome.

Here’s where you went wrong –

So after the above you listed a bunch of logical fallacies but didn’t cite examples of where I was guilty of them?

Odd . . . you’re not making much sense wouldn’t you agree?

I’m pretty sure I know what you mean (and that’s POTENTIALLY going to be a teachable moment for you, if you listen) but so I don’t “assume,” why don’t cite examples for all us where you think I’ve committed the logical atrocities?

Eagerly awaiting your reply.

2hotel9
Reply to  Adrian Mann
July 29, 2020 5:12 pm

You proved you don’t so Syn schooled your ignorant a$$.

sycomputing
Reply to  Adrian Mann
July 29, 2020 6:15 pm

Hello Adrian?

Here’s what you said earlier:

“Here’s where you went wrong –

False Cause & False Attribution Fallacy
Bandwagon Fallacy
Argumentum ad Populum Fallacy
Irrelevant Conclusion Fallacy”

Still waiting for you point out to me where I “went wrong” as per the above. I don’t want to be wrong Adrian. I need YOUR help to show me the way.

You there? I’m waiting.

sycomputing
Reply to  Izaak Walton
July 29, 2020 12:34 pm

Dr. Immanuel has publicly stated that infertility is caused by . . . Why would anyone think she has credibility when it comes to COVID-19?

I know right Izaak? Similarly, what’s the deal with those idiots who REALLY believe the sky is blue after hearing Dr. Immanuel say so? Right? Because Dr. Immanuel said it and thus it just COULDN’T be true?

Your logical fallacy is:

The Genetic Fallacy: This fallacy avoids the argument by shifting focus onto something’s or someone’s origins. It’s similar to an ad hominem fallacy in that it leverages existing negative perceptions to make someone’s argument look bad, without actually presenting a case for why the argument itself lacks merit.

https://tinyurl.com/bvfmw4k

Beautifully rendered textbook example of sloppy thinking there budrow!

Izaak Walton
Reply to  sycomputing
July 29, 2020 3:53 pm

Sycomputing,
I am not a doctor and have no medical expertise. I do know however that there are a lot of
peer review studies showing that the treatment Dr. Immanuel proposes doesn’t work and even
some that shows it increases the fatality rate of COVID-19. So I have to decide which set of
doctors I would trust and looking at their background and their beliefs on other topics is a
reasonable way to do that. Dr. Immanuel has a range of false beliefs about medical topics which makes me less likely to trust her on other topics.

sycomputing
Reply to  Izaak Walton
July 29, 2020 5:07 pm

So I have to decide which set of doctors I would trust and looking at their background and their beliefs on other topics is a reasonable way to do that.

Well, no Izaak, looking at beliefs on other topics is NOT a reasonable way to judge anyone’s beliefs on any other topic. The only reasonable way to believe anyone on anything is based upon the evidence they have to offer. Under your assumptions, if Dr. Immanuel claimed the sky is blue, you would necessarily have to disagree with her.

That’s just dumb, and it’s a logical fallacy, which places you in the realm of UNREASONABLE individuals if you believe in such nonsense. It makes you a sloppy thinker when you think irrationally. Part of thinking irrationally is thinking on the basis of logical fallacies.

I mean, how much MORE evidence do you need than the agreed upon consensus science of propositional logic itself?

https://tinyurl.com/bvfmw4k

You ARE a proponent of consensus based science aren’t you?

Izaak Walton
Reply to  sycomputing
July 29, 2020 7:01 pm

Sycomputing,
Dr. Immanuel’s beliefs about medicine are precisely what is at issue here. She has made
claims about the effectiveness of HCQ without presenting any evidence. I can do the same
but why would anybody listen to what I said unless I could present myself as a credible
doctor. There are plenty of people who have presented evidence saying that HCQ does not work and is actually harmful. Should I ignore them or listen to them? How do you suggest I decide which doctors are worth listening too?

sycomputing
Reply to  Izaak Walton
July 29, 2020 7:18 pm

Dr. Immanuel’s beliefs about medicine are precisely what is at issue here.

No, they are NOT, as I’ve already sufficiently proved. You’ve subtly moved the goalposts, but I SEE you Izaak. You aren’t going to get up early enough in the morning to fool the ilks of me. Maybe after you listen and learn from the Master you’ll have that opportunity as the Student, but not until then.

So there – :-p

She has made claims about the effectiveness of HCQ without presenting any evidence.

NOW, you’ve finally hit the nail on the head. As far as I know, you’re absolutely correct on this point. And this is all that matters. Maybe there’s hope for you after all.

Now we’ll see if she can produce reproducible evidence to back up her claims. She, along with the other doctors standing with her, need to do this. If they can’t, well that’s a problem. I neither believe nor disbelieve them until they succeed or fail in that particular task.

But this has nothing whatsoever to do with her personal spiritual beliefs or theirs.

You’ll think better if you take this method to heart and consistently use it.

Reply to  Izaak Walton
July 29, 2020 6:29 pm

re: “I do know however that there are a lot of peer review studies showing that the treatment Dr. Immanuel proposes doesn’t work”

Cop out: Assertion w/o cite (Failure to post cite.) Appeal to authority.

See C19study.com for refutation.

MarkW
Reply to  _Jim
July 29, 2020 7:04 pm

As usual, he completely ignores the problems that have been found with the studies that reach the proper conclusion.
He also totally ignores any study that reaches any other conclusion.

MarkW
Reply to  Izaak Walton
July 29, 2020 7:03 pm

Like most alarmists, Izaak only reads studies that agree with what he is told to believe.
All the other studies were done by deniers, therefore aren’t science and must be ignored, if not burned on the spot.

Editor
Reply to  Izaak Walton
July 30, 2020 3:57 pm

Isaak Walton – You need to look a bit more carefully into the “lot of
peer review studies showing that the treatment Dr. Immanuel proposes doesn’t work and even some that shows it increases the fatality rate of COVID-19”. The evidence in favour of HCQ is for early treatment, preferably with zinc. All of the studies that claimed HCG doesn’t work were in hospital patients who were therefore already in a later stage of the virus. The Lancet study was even worse.
This comes up all the time – one example of many: “India could be taking a relook at the use of the anti-malarial drug hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) for treatment of Covid-19 after the World Health Organisation (WHO) on Saturday announced that it had discontinued HCQ clinical trials because it did not reduce mortality in hospitalized patients, based on the results of interim trials.” https://www.msn.com/en-in/news/other/centre-may-review-hcq-use-for-covid/ar-BB16mAmp [my emphasis]
I am appalled at how the WHO has discouraged testing based on results of limited trials, and in some cases, eg. the Lancet study, obviously flawed trials.. How dare they risk lives by preventing something being tested? It isn’t as if testing one thing prevents another being tested. The world should be cnducting every test it can think of.

Garold
Reply to  Izaak Walton
July 30, 2020 4:35 pm

During my Doctoral pursuit I could only use peer-reviewed studies for references. What one will find is cases where Dr. Ying posits this, while Dr. Yang discovers that, which are contradictory.

I’ve taken hydroxychloroquine every time I deployed with the military to war zones; sometimes for up to a year. The largest concern with the drug was liver damage due to taking too much. A prescribed dosage is 100mg per day; though there are weekly doses of 500mg.

All drugs have side-effects and some cause deaths in certain cases. That this excludes empirical evidence of those medical professionals in the field that attest to its effectiveness in early stages is imprudent and irresponsible in the vilest manner.

Crispin in Waterloo
Reply to  Izaak Walton
August 1, 2020 6:50 am

“I do know however that there are a lot of
peer review studies showing that the treatment Dr. Immanuel proposes doesn’t work and even some that shows it increases the fatality rate of COVID-19.”

This is factually incorrect. The treatment Dr Immanuel uses was not use that “lot of peer review (sic) studies”. They all omitted the active ingredient zinc, which is admitted to red blood corpuscles by the HCQ acting as an ionophore. The more recent studies of the treatment she is using shows it reduces the mortality by 50% even with the recommended vitamin D3 supplement. It is about twice as effective as Remdesivir. Gilead is worried about that. Why spend $3000 for half the effect of $12?

I suggest MedCram videos starting at #46+47.

Rich Davis
Reply to  sycomputing
July 29, 2020 7:57 pm

Wait just one second syscomputing! I’m not so sure about this genetic fallacy stuff. If you were right about this, then it would follow that we could not be justified in assuming that everything that Adrian, griff, Henry, Izaak, and Loydo have to say must be wrong. But hundreds of comments without a single sane one from that group, seems to have already proven that rule of thumb to be correct. Seems like “settled science” to me.

I think you got some ‘splainin to do

Carguy Pete
Reply to  Izaak Walton
July 29, 2020 12:35 pm

Would anybody listen to a commentator that post such misleading and false articles about the clean waters act on his website? I don’t think so.

sycomputing
Reply to  Carguy Pete
July 29, 2020 12:51 pm

Would anybody listen to a commentator that post such misleading . . .

Alright! Here’s Sloppy Thinker #3, Pete the Carguy!

Your logical fallacy is:

The Genetic Fallacy: This fallacy avoids the argument by shifting focus onto something’s or someone’s origins. It’s similar to an ad hominem fallacy in that it leverages existing negative perceptions to make someone’s argument look bad, without actually presenting a case for why the argument itself lacks merit.

Gratz Pete!

How many more morons are we going to have to add to this list before I get MOD-ified for b**ch-slapping Stupid?

Andy Espersen
Reply to  Carguy Pete
July 29, 2020 4:17 pm

“Would anybody listen…………….?” There is the rub.

Certainly nobody should be prevented from listening. This doctor’s opinions should not be banned – so that we cannot get to hear them.

I love people who passionately fight and speak out for what they believe.

MarkW
Reply to  Carguy Pete
July 29, 2020 7:05 pm

Please demonstrate:
A) that said articles are false and misleading
B) that said articles are relevant to this discussion

Alex
Reply to  Izaak Walton
July 29, 2020 12:36 pm

@Izaak link please.

Reply to  Izaak Walton
July 29, 2020 12:39 pm

Why is all the criticism of this group focused on just her? There’s several more doctors in this group, she’s not even they organizer? I’ll tell you why, because she is the easiest to attack and so people like you pretend she’s not one of many.

Why would I think that a geophysicist who believes the earth is 5,000 years old has credibility? Because when he says “drill here and you’ll hit oil” we drill and hit oil. That’s why. She says she cured 350 of 350 patients. Why is there not one critic like you asking if that’s true or not? I’ll tell you why, because if it is true, then she could believe in unicorns for all I care, she has a cure and that’s the only question.

Reply to  David Hoffer
July 29, 2020 1:23 pm

David, I’m in an Internet dialogue with a guy who thinks the science related to the age of the earth and universe is all wrong. I told him that petroleum geologists don’t buy that.

Do you have a reference to some successful petroleum geologist who really thinks the earth is less than 10,000 years old, or is that hypothetical?

Reply to  Ralph Dave Westfall
July 29, 2020 1:44 pm

Ask him if he’s afraid if radiation. If he’s afraid of radiation, then he must accept the science behind radioactive decay … which is exactly the same science behind uranium/lead isotope dating of rock.

Kemaris
Reply to  Lil-Mike
July 29, 2020 2:12 pm

Except that radiodating requires two huge assumptions, that you know the initial state and that the rate has remained constant. Research by the RATE group has shown that modest temperature and pressure can reduce the half-life of a radioisotope by as much as 12 orders of magnitude. Which would be a wonderful way of dealing with high-level radioactivective waste after processing to remove it from the spent fuel.

MarkW
Reply to  Lil-Mike
July 29, 2020 7:10 pm

I’ve seen some incredibly stupid statements before, but Kemaris here is so far off the reservation that we are going to have to retire the award in his honor.

If this absurd claim of yours had any basis in reality, then there would be no nuclear waste “problem”, All we would have to do is heat the waste up by a few degrees, and all the radiation from the sample would be gone in minutes.
Not to mention the problem of keeping any nuclear reactor from going critical as soon as it started to heat up.

Kemaris
Reply to  Ralph Dave Westfall
July 29, 2020 2:09 pm

http://www.creation.com

Couldn’t say if they include a petroleum geologist in their number, but they do include PhDs in geology, astrophysics, biology, just about any field of science you care to name. Note that modern geology was founded by a French atheist at the beginning of the 19th century explicitly to free science from the chains of Moses by denying a global flood.

Reply to  Kemaris
July 29, 2020 6:59 pm

Could you provide a link to the “Research by the RATE group has shown that modest temperature and pressure can reduce the half-life of a radioisotope by as much as 12 orders of magnitude” Kemaris? I couldn’t find it with a websearch.

MarkW
Reply to  Kemaris
July 29, 2020 7:11 pm

Even if true, so what?

Robert W. Turner
Reply to  Ralph Dave Westfall
July 29, 2020 4:13 pm

Why would you even care? The notion that the world is less than 10,000 years old is ridiculous and discredited by every single geologic theory and hypothesis today. The only way you could argue that it is 10,000 years old would be to claim that it was created exactly to look like the Earth was billions of years old, but that would be 100% belief which should not be confused with science.

Reply to  Ralph Dave Westfall
July 29, 2020 4:46 pm

Hi Ralph,
I was a professor of mine in university and that was decades ago. Not sure if he is even still alive. But yes he consulted to oil industry. Plus he taught the courses in how to date fossils etc that were millions of years old. But was religious and believed the earth was only a few thousand years old. So one day I asked him how he reconciled those two things. I’m paraphrasing, but the answer was interesting.

He picked up some fossilized sea creature from his desk and said it was x million years old and he wanted to understand what it was that god had created and how it fit into the world, so he became a geophysicist. Then he said, if he had wanted to understand WHY, 5000 years ago, god created a fossilized sea creature that was x million years old, he would have become a priest.

Tom Abbott
Reply to  David Hoffer
July 29, 2020 4:33 pm

“Why is all the criticism of this group focused on just her? There’s several more doctors in this group, she’s not even the organizer? I’ll tell you why, because she is the easiest to attack”

You are correct.

Here’s the way it went: Reporters saw this video and did opposition research (looking for dirt) on all the participants, and found something about her that they thought they could use to discredit the whole bunch of them. It’s classic “Attack the Messenger” stuff.

The woman who organized this news conference (not the Nigerian woman being criticized) and owns the website, said that her website provider took her website down right out of the blue with no notification to her. She said she will have the website back up as soon as they get another provider.

The anti-HCQ forces found a weak spot and they seek to exploit it. Of course, that doesn’t change the fact that all these doctors are reporting very good results using HCQ. Their diversion doesn’t change that at all.

Reply to  Tom Abbott
July 31, 2020 10:14 pm

Quite so. Unmentioned (in any MSM account, and here too) is the organizer of the conference. Dr. Simone Gold – Doctor of Medicine, Juris Doctor, certified by the American Board of Emergency Medicine, worked in the US Surgeon General’s office. Not a “whack job.”

Incidentally, fired by the hospital (in the Soviet Socialist Republic of California) after doing so. She, and others who dared to blow the whistle on the scam and suffered the loss of their livelihoods as a consequence, have hired the “Covington Kids” attorney. Should be some good fireworks there…

(One must note that people willing to be martyred for speaking truth are few and far between – and those who have a deep seated belief in a “higher being” are disproportionately represented among those. )

icisil
Reply to  Izaak Walton
July 29, 2020 12:49 pm

Izaak, I bet you’re a compulsive mask debater.

https://twitter.com/M2Madness/status/1288253717326770177

TRM
Reply to  icisil
July 29, 2020 2:21 pm

Groan. After about the 15th repetition of “mask debate” I finally got it. A bit slow today I am. LOL.

The guy at the end who smirked got it.

Dan Hawkins
Reply to  icisil
July 29, 2020 5:08 pm

I was, but I went blind.

Jeffery P
Reply to  Izaak Walton
July 29, 2020 1:05 pm

How does her beliefs change the facts of her success treating patients with HCQ?

I am certain the doctor is foreign-born. In these times, you cannot criticize a person from different cultures for beliefs that we think are superstitious hookem.

And don’t get me started on you ridiculing a woman of color.

Reply to  Izaak Walton
July 29, 2020 1:06 pm

The only actual fake news seems to be that “Dr Immanuel has publicly stated that infertility is caused by
people have dream sex with demons and that alien DNA is being used for medical treatment”.

Where did she actually say that ?

With respect to HCQ some countries are less idiots (and criminal) than others :
http://m.koreabiomed.com/news/articleView.html?idxno=7428

South Korea, without any idiotic lockdown : 6 deaths / million.

Many other countries adopted the same treatment and had good results (among them, Portugal, Greece, Marocco, Algeria, Island, Turkey, Vietnam, China, Pakistan, etc.).

Compare them to the worst planetary COVID-19 desaster : The Genious Cuomo’s state of New-York : 1682 deaths / million.

Always the same fascist MSM behavior : destroy someone and suppress the message instead of trying to make any argument.

Adrian Mann
Reply to  Petit_Barde
July 29, 2020 1:28 pm

She says it in her sermons. The sermons from the Fire Power Ministries in Houston, Texas. Where she is the founder, and a pastor.
Is where she says it.

sycomputing
Reply to  Adrian Mann
July 29, 2020 2:06 pm

She says it in her sermons.

Ok great, now we have someone who’s actually heard her say it.

But as an example of critical thinking (see your exclamation of woe regarding the same below), I don’t believe you without evidence.

Prove it so I can believe you.

Adrian Mann
Reply to  sycomputing
July 29, 2020 3:43 pm

Go listen to her sermons. Read what she has written. Or do I have to spoon feed you? Prove it to yourself so you can’t dispute it. Otherwise, you’ll just carry on disputing the source or attribution.
Start here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CJrJG9xymts
There’s plenty more. Enjoy.

sycomputing
Reply to  Adrian Mann
July 29, 2020 4:57 pm

Prove it to yourself so you can’t dispute it. Otherwise, you’ll just carry on disputing the source or attribution.

No no Adrian, see, that’s NOT how it works in the grown ups world. The way it works is YOU prove your argument and I prove mine. We don’t prove EACH OTHER’S argument, that would be silly.

Don’t you think?

We’re not in the little boys intellectual sandbox anymore. This is the world’s MOST viewed website on climate change, politics, etc., thus you’re playing with pros now. Please make an effort to behave as such, or get out of where you don’t belong so you don’t waste the big boys time, okay?

Thanks!

Now, you go on and get along and look at that video, and then cite for me where exactly the lady says what YOU claim she says, or find some other evidence somewhere else for YOUR position.

Otherwise, no offense, but I don’t trust you. I say you’re just another kindergarten, boldfaced liar.

2hotel9
Reply to  Adrian Mann
July 29, 2020 5:15 pm

Do you dispute what Louis Farrakhan says in all his videos, or is just women of color you disparage?

Reply to  Adrian Mann
July 29, 2020 4:26 pm

Would you take advice from the Pope or other religious leader who also speak of ethereal deities with supposed control of all of nature?

They also.blame a devil for whatever they consider to be bad without any explanation for why their all-powerful ‘God’ did not prevent it.

MarkW
Reply to  John in Oz
July 29, 2020 7:24 pm

OK, you believe that anyone who has beliefs that are different from yours is untrustworthy in everything.
How intolerant of you.

The Pope, and all Christians have explanations as to why God permits bad things to happen. Either you have never actually bothered to read what Christians have to say, or you just reject out of hand anything you choose not to believe.

tomo
Reply to  Izaak Walton
July 29, 2020 1:48 pm

there;s strange stuff out there in the real world – and while some treatments are superficially bonkers they have been proven to work.

a bit technical – but some pretty authoritative stuff on oddball therapies from a medical educator.

Corn Flakes and Spanish Flu …. who’d have thought?

I can tell you’ve never been to Nigeria 🙂

Dr Deanster
Reply to  Izaak Walton
July 29, 2020 1:55 pm

I don’t believe her, nor anyone else. So, I went and looked up to see if I deed Chloroquine was used in a study in 2005 against SARS. The verdict …. TRUE.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1232869/

So, some here seem to think that since she may have said one falsity, then you can’t believe anything she says. Does the opposite apply, that since she said at least one thing that was true, and in this case relevant to the discussion, can you now give a little credibility to the rest of what she said?

Reply to  Dr Deanster
July 29, 2020 2:32 pm

You should read the abstract before posting the link. Cell cultures are not living organisms.
..
“Chloroquine is effective in preventing the spread of SARS CoV in cell culture.”
..

Dr Deanster
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 3:14 pm

I did read the Abstract. Pharmacological action in vitro is a pretty good sign of action in vivo unless there are pharmacokinetic issues, which there are not. More specifically, if it glycosylates the ACE2 receptor in vitro, it glycosylates the ACE2 in vivo. It is a chemical reaction. There could be some differences in the interaction, however, in the absence of a study addressing this interaction with SARS2 the evidence cannot be dismissed as the genetic coding of the spike protein in both is very similar. …. and due to the politicalization of the whole issue, the study is not likely to ever be done.

Reply to  Dr Deanster
July 29, 2020 4:19 pm

Gasoline put on a cell culture will destroy all of the virus in the cells…..and the cells too.

2hotel9
Reply to  Dr Deanster
July 29, 2020 5:11 pm

DR Deanster? You got to cut back on the multi syllable words, Henry don’t syllable too well. Keep it really simple, under 5 letters would be best, and type slowly.

MarkW
Reply to  Dr Deanster
July 29, 2020 7:26 pm

Once again, when Hank finds himself behind, he goes juvenile.

Krishna Gans
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 3:49 pm

Will you tell us to be more than a cell culture ?
😀

MarkW
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 7:25 pm

Looks like Hank is also unaware of how medical research is done.
I’ve lost track of the number of areas where Hank has taken the lead in demonstrating his ignorance.

Reply to  MarkW
July 29, 2020 8:04 pm

Looks like MarkW has never heard of Thalidomide. Ever hear about phocomelia, dysmelia, amelia, and bone hypoplasticy?

MarkW
Reply to  MarkW
July 30, 2020 10:13 am

As usual, Hank can’t debate the topic so he tries to change the subject.

Gerald Machnee
Reply to  Izaak Walton
July 29, 2020 2:25 pm

There are enough other doctors who have the same results, so quit trolling.

TedM
Reply to  Izaak Walton
July 29, 2020 2:54 pm

How does that effect the results that she gets from using HCQ+Zn+ Azithromycin?

Michael Hammer
Reply to  Izaak Walton
July 29, 2020 3:06 pm

I have a REALLY simple solution to this issue. Instead of putting all your effort into debating whether she (and her claims) have any credibility, why not

1 go get the hospital records of the patients she has treated for covid19 and look at the actual results

2 too difficult? go visit the hospital and talk to the patients she is currently treating – the several a day she claims – and watch how they progress

3 still too difficult? Why not put an add in a local paper expressing an interest in talking to past patients the doctor treated for covid19 (you know some of 350 grateful people she claims to have treated) and ask them to get in touch for a chat – provide a contact number.

But then again, why let facts (and no I have no idea what the facts would indicate) get in the way of a fun episode of character assassination (sarc/). Then again how much would it cost to check and what would the payoff be if she was right. Just maybe even a remote chance she was right might outweigh the cost of checking. Remember nurse Elizabeth Kenny.

John F. Hultquist
Reply to  Michael Hammer
July 29, 2020 4:45 pm

REALLY simple solution

Because of privacy concerns (and lack of newspaper readers reading ads), none of what you suggest is possible in the USA.
Otherwise, great ideas.

paul courtney
Reply to  Michael Hammer
July 29, 2020 4:46 pm

Mr. Hammer: What you say is what a curious person would do. Proof that our press is not curious.

Krishna Gans
Reply to  Izaak Walton
July 29, 2020 3:40 pm

As I asked just yesterday,
If you get a vaccine with antibodies of an other persons blood, is there alien DNA in the vaccine ?
😀
What is your understanding of alien ?
Stranger, outlander ? 😀

Reply to  Izaak Walton
July 29, 2020 3:52 pm

Izaak Walton

I think the important thing is that there were about a dozen other Doctors with her saying much the same thing about treatment for Covid 19.

But of course it’s usual for leftists like yo to dive ind immediately go for the smear without applying even a modicum of thought to what else was going on, who else was there, and what else they were saying.

How about you comment on the other Doctors who were there instead of regurgitating what you read on the Daily Beast rag.

Tom Abbott
Reply to  HotScot
July 29, 2020 4:41 pm

“I think the important thing is that there were about a dozen other Doctors with her saying much the same thing about treatment for Covid 19.”

That is the most important thing. The Left wants to divert attention by focusing on the Nigerian woman’s private life and pretending all the other doctors didn’t exist.

Izaak Walton
Reply to  HotScot
July 29, 2020 4:50 pm

HotScot,
If there were a dozen other doctors why was the poster which started this thread about Dr.
Immanuel? I am commenting about Dr. Immanuel because the poster was asking why we
shouldn’t listen to her.

Catcracking
Reply to  Izaak Walton
July 29, 2020 8:16 pm

So you did not listen to the entire event,
She was one speaker of many!
I did it is informative and worth the time.

John VC
Reply to  HotScot
July 29, 2020 4:51 pm

Seems to me that when so much effort is put into demonizing the messenger, including what can only be described as total censorship by the media (both social and main stream), it has nothing to do with the validity of the message, but rather that the message goes against the “official” narrative. Someone –more likely many someones –can see a lot of dollars disappearing if such an inexpensive treatment goes main stream.
Izzac–take a real close look at all those studies you mention–not a single one of them followed the protocol of early treatment with HCQ, Plus Zinc, and in most cases an antibiotic. The studies you refer to were set up to fail. The very worst was the VA study that gave terminal cases massive overdoses, and then reported how deadly the HCQ was.

Rah
Reply to  HotScot
July 29, 2020 8:14 pm

HotScot

To me the most important thing is the collusion of government, big tech, and big media to stop even the discussion of anything but a vaccine being the answer.
That along with state governments dictating what physicians trying to treat patients can use HCL for without having clear research to back such a ban.

William Astley
Reply to  Izaak Walton
July 29, 2020 4:21 pm

Izaak Walton.

Dr Immanuel did not publicly state that infertility is caused by demons and that alien DNA is being used for medical treatment.

Please provide a link to your source. I am sure it does not exist.

My point is real doctors who care about their patient and life would never lie to push a malaria drug that has been used for 20 years. HCQ is not a new drug.

The Jewish doctor is bullet proof form political attack because is an orthodox Jew working in his own community. That why he had the courage to speak up. In some states, governors have threatened doctors with loss of their license to practice medicine if they speech up.

There is a 2005 paper published by the US Institute of science that states HCQ is an effective treatment for the coronal viruses which covid-19 is. The 2005 paper which noted HCQ is effective against coronal viruses that gave the Jewish doctor the idea of treating his patients with a HCQ cocktail.

This is a link to the interview of the Jewish doctor who used Zinc sulfate plus Hydroxychloroquine plus azithromycin to treat 700 covid patients, who were sick and showing symptoms, with only one death.

This Jewish doctor is how Trump found out about the HCQ cocktail.

https://techstartups.com/2020/04/03/updates-from-dr-vladimir-zelenko-now-treated-700-coronavirus-patients-with-99-9-success-rate-using-hydroxychloroquine-zinc-sulfate-and-z-pak-1-outpatient-died-after-not-following-protocol-exclusi/

BFL
Reply to  Izaak Walton
July 29, 2020 4:51 pm

“infertility is caused by people have dream sex with demons and that alien DNA is being used for medical treatment”
Well Isacc Newton practiced alchemy and occult studies so his works on gravity, optics and mathematics should be discarded??

Charles Nelson
Reply to  Izaak Walton
July 29, 2020 7:09 pm

She is being laughed at by people who will solemnly assure you that a man can become a woman and vice versa. There is much that is ‘irrational’ on both sides.

Matthew Schilling
Reply to  Izaak Walton
July 30, 2020 6:26 am

Cool comment bro.
Do you have anything on whether her claim that she has not lost a single Wuhan Virus patient, even though she has treated hundreds and many had serious underlying conditions? Or do you plan on sticking with snickering from the back bleachers?

niceguy
Reply to  Izaak Walton
August 2, 2020 6:11 pm

Vaccines don’t often contain alien DNA?

2hotel9
July 29, 2020 12:23 pm

Will reopenFL be mad if I steal this image?

July 29, 2020 12:35 pm

“The study found about 20% of patients treated with a combination of hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin died and 22% who were treated with azithromycin alone compared with the 26% of patients who died after not being treated with either medication. “

This is NOT a resounding success for HCQ treatment…the difference between 26 or 20 of 100 patients not recovering, in an ICU environment, is so minor that “more study“ is a valid recommendation.
And it points to Dr. Stella’s claim of no deaths in her 350 patients as being probable wishful thinking, unless maybe they were all youths and children, her background being a successful pediatrician.

John Shewchuk
Reply to  DMacKenzie
July 29, 2020 12:51 pm

Her medical qualifications go far beyond pediatrics.

Reply to  John Shewchuk
July 29, 2020 2:17 pm

You are correct Mr. Shewchuk. She has a wealth of experience with demon sex and lizard DNA.

sycomputing
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 2:34 pm

You are correct Mr. Shewchuk. She has a wealth of experience with demon sex and lizard DNA.

Woot! Subject# 5 has entered the set of Sloppy Thinkers!

Gratz to you Henry! You, along with Izaak, Pete, Adrian and Steve, are all proving your absolute BRILLIANCE in rational thought with your one common means of sloppy thinking.

Aren’t you all just cute in your Stupid?

Your logical fallacy is:

The Genetic Fallacy (Adrian had a conceptual issue with this term earlier Henry, so for your edification I’ll clarify below. You know, in case you’re having a similar failure as he?): This fallacy avoids the argument by shifting focus onto something’s or someone’s origins. It’s similar to an ad hominem fallacy in that it leverages existing negative perceptions to make someone’s argument look bad, without actually presenting a case for why the argument itself lacks merit.

Clarification (for Henry and Adrian): In this context, “Genetic” doesn’t have ANYTHING to do with an INDIVIDUAL’S origins or DNA, but rather, it’s called the “Genetic Fallacy” because:

“You judged something as either good or bad on the basis of where it comes from, or from whom it came.”

https://tinyurl.com/bvfmw4k

Reply to  sycomputing
July 29, 2020 3:25 pm

Syscomputing do you know what posting the same thing over and over expecting different results is? Immanuel is an qualified doctor, experienced with treating people who have suffered from daemon sex.

sycomputing
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 3:43 pm

Syscomputing do you know what posting the same thing over and over expecting different results is?

Are you asking on my behalf or yours Henry? It would seem we’re both guilty.

If the latter, could you elaborate on what you mean by “expecting different results”? E.g., are you assuming I’m expecting different results from the (at present) 5 of you who belong to the Sloppy Thinking Club?

I mean, it COULD be devastating to expect a sloppy thinker to . . . well, NOT be a sloppy thinker. So thanks, but you don’t have to worry. I wouldn’t think of expecting a grain of intellect from the ilks of thee. 🙂

Anxiously awaiting your reply . . .

Joel Snider
Reply to  sycomputing
July 29, 2020 3:54 pm

‘do you know what posting the same thing over and over expecting different results is?’

Gee, Henry, how many times on this thread alone, have you posted the same sarcastic crack?

Adrian Mann
Reply to  sycomputing
July 29, 2020 4:02 pm

@ sycomputing: Before you continue, have you actually watched her sermons yet?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BNqB1DmMWaM

I have. It was highly enlightening and I recommend it to all.

Or this one – Battle Axe Deliverance! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RYwjA8ZDyCE
325 likes! Still available! Not taken down or deleted! Hallelujah indeed.
Now, having watched all that, tell us more about this Genetic Fallacy you’re on about – the one where we judge something as good or bad on the basis of it’s origin…

Matthew 12:37, Proverbs 12:15, James 1:26, Matthew 15:35-37

2hotel9
Reply to  Adrian Mann
July 29, 2020 4:59 pm

“Genetic fallacy”? Is that your problem, got a Dr Richard Levine complex you simply can’t get over? Don’t sweat it, you can pretend to be whatever you want here in America, we are not required to accept your fantasy. We will laugh at you and point so everyone knows what a ‘tard you are.

sycomputing
Reply to  Adrian Mann
July 29, 2020 5:13 pm

I have. It was highly enlightening and I recommend it to all.

Great! Then it’s JUST like I said before! You have evidence for your claim that Dr. Immanuel has publicly stated what Petit_Barde asked anyone to confirm:

“Dr Immanuel has publicly stated that infertility is caused by people have dream sex with demons and that alien DNA is being used for medical treatment”.

To this, you said:

“She says it in her sermons.”

https://wattsupwiththat.com/2020/07/29/hump-day-hilarity-banned-by-big-tech/#comment-3043371

It’s VERY simple. I don’t believe anyone’s claims without evidence. You’ve stated she said it in her sermons, which means you’ve heard her say it in her sermons and YOU can point us all to where she said it.

So do it? Pretty simple right?

Reply to  sycomputing
July 29, 2020 6:12 pm

One thing “western world” centrics (e.g. Adrian Mann?) don’t (would not) comprehend –

Nigerian Christians are crazy…right up until you look at the type of crazy that they’re combating in Nigeria. Then they’re sane harbingers of rationality. Concepts of battle in spiritual places make a lot of sense in a context where witch doctors are still known to kill albino babies in order to sell the parts which are magic when eaten. *

I don’t know to whom she was directly “preaching”, Adrian Mann, but the ‘preaching’ style and content makes more sense given the above (her target is not YOU, the western world, but certain parts, sects IN Africa, or here in the US, where ‘old beliefs and practices’ still exist.)

.
.
* h/t Julie Pascal of IP

Robert W. Turner
Reply to  sycomputing
July 29, 2020 4:09 pm

Hey I just say forget them and let them take their $2,500 per dose remdisivir if they catch Sars2 – the drug that has been pushed on patients for Hep-C and Ebola but did nothing to cure them.

HCQ+ZnSO4+Azithromycin immediately for early treatment followed by steroids if LRT symptoms develop, that’s basically the cure for the newest cold virus until herd immunity is reached. Chicken Little can stop running for the cave now.

Reply to  sycomputing
July 29, 2020 6:20 pm

Turner, HCQ+ZnSO4+Azithromycin does not cure COVID-19

MarkW
Reply to  sycomputing
July 29, 2020 7:29 pm

“Syscomputing do you know what posting the same thing over and over expecting different results is?”

Irony is lost on you isn’t it Hank.

Joel Snider
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 3:11 pm

‘She has a wealth of experience with demon sex and lizard DNA.’

My guess is your mother does too. That explains you.

Reply to  Joel Snider
July 30, 2020 9:02 am

LOL

Richard Brimage
Reply to  DMacKenzie
July 29, 2020 12:52 pm

Look at the Henry Ford Health Systems study. Much better results from hydroxychloroquine.

Reply to  Richard Brimage
July 29, 2020 4:31 pm

Nope….that WAS from the Henry Ford study, first line of their results table.

Raymond Bélanger
Reply to  Richard Brimage
July 29, 2020 9:31 pm

This is the study:

https://www.ijidonline.com/article/S1201-9712(20)30534-8/fulltext

Again, although they got better results, they did not include Zinc in the mix. Maybe they serve fortified food at the hospital containing added zinc.

Derg
Reply to  DMacKenzie
July 29, 2020 12:59 pm

Yep, HCQ is not a treatment for end of life care….we get it.

2hotel9
Reply to  Derg
July 29, 2020 4:47 pm

And yet the American medical “establishment” keeps pushing it as such.

Reply to  DMacKenzie
July 29, 2020 1:01 pm

And how much zinc was used? Is this the fake study pulled by the lancet or another désigned to fail?

Reply to  Cccccccc
July 29, 2020 4:23 pm

Not only must zinc be included in the treatment, but the patient needs to jump up and down on their left foot 10 times, then spin 360 degrees counterclockwise for the HCQ to have any effect.

2hotel9
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 4:55 pm

Ahhh, ain’t you a cute lie spewing leftard!?!?! So precious.

Reply to  2hotel9
July 29, 2020 6:22 pm

HCQ+ZnSO4+Azithromycin has been tested in a double blind randomized trial. It doesn’t work.

Reply to  DMacKenzie
July 29, 2020 1:44 pm

DMacKenzie July 29, 2020 at 12:35 pm
re: “And it points to Dr. Stella’s claim of ..

AT THIS rate NO DOCTOR’S prescription is worth a damn. NONE of them. Better check with the CDC and or the NIH before ANY prescription is written, eh DMacKenzie? Well, F that, DMacKenzie.

Reply to  _Jim
July 29, 2020 4:44 pm

You got that from my description of her as a successful pediatrician. Alprazolam might help with that. But you need a prescription.

jorgekafkazar
Reply to  DMacKenzie
July 29, 2020 2:46 pm

The fact that you deliberately omit the name, date, and source of the study says a lot about you.

Reply to  jorgekafkazar
July 29, 2020 4:35 pm

Line 7 of the lead story is the study I am referring to. Your comment shows you didn’t read it…..

TedM
Reply to  DMacKenzie
July 29, 2020 3:08 pm

They used 14 times the recommended dosage of HCQ, a toxic level. It causes toxicity at this level. This study was either a display of total ignorance, or was a deliberate attempt to produce a negative outcome. Quite likely to produce the much vaunted serious side effects.

Eric Stevens
Reply to  DMacKenzie
July 29, 2020 3:38 pm

DMacKenzie: Several months ago Watts Up With That reported that hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin were not sufficient on their own and that zinc was an essential ingredient. This has been confirmed by a number of informal sources. The study from which you quoted is but one of the many which have confirmed how not to use hydroxychloroquine to treat Covid-19. But we already know that.

William Astley
Reply to  DMacKenzie
July 29, 2020 5:38 pm

You are misreading the study. And the raw results are confusing.

Those treated with HCQ only had half the death rate 13% as compared to those who received no treatment 26%.

The part you quoted is the percentage of those treated who died.

It appears there was cherry picking by a panel of doctors to determine which patient got the treatment.

I noticed it took 24 hours for them to treat the very sick patients with the HCQ cocktails. The treatment only lasted 6 days.

The virus starts in the throat and takes a week to get to lungs and spends a week in the lungs. These people were not treated early. HCQ stops the virus from replicating. It cannot help patients when the virus has replicated and has attacked the lung. It is too late.

That explains why 26% of the untreated patients died. These were very sick patients who for some strange reason could not get early treatment with HCQ.

Only 4% of the general covid patients die from covid and the death rate drops in the summer as the US population is less Vitamin D deficient in the summer.

It looks as if this study, in a Democratic controlled state, was designed to fail and HCQ still managed to show very good results.

The study conclusions are (I am quoting the conclusions not paraphrasing).

Hydroxychloroquine provided a 66% hazard ratio reduction, and hydroxychloroquine+azithromycin 71% compared to neither treatment (p<0.001).

Conclusions and Relevance: In this multi-hospital assessment, when controlling for COVID-19 risk factors, treatment with hydroxychloroquine alone and in combination with azithromycin was associated with reduction in COVID-19 associated mortality.

162 1202 13.5% HCQ Only
33 147 22.4% AZ Only
157 783 20.1% HCQ & AZ
108 409 26.4% None
460 2541 18.1% Total fatalities.

Raymond Bélanger
Reply to  William Astley
July 29, 2020 10:43 pm

But again… no zinc.

They must have been surprised by the results though if they designed it to fail… again.

The zinc is the actual chemical that stop replication of the virus. All these doctors not adding zinc are incompetent as they obviously don’t know the mechanism of action of HCQ and basically wasting people’s lives by doing pretend-science without full knowledge of what they do. It is not only incompetence but criminal by ignorance.

Catcracking
Reply to  DMacKenzie
July 29, 2020 7:22 pm

If you listened to the event the firs thing you would learn is that there are two different cases early treatment and treatment very late after people are very sick
They only made claims related to early treatment while the case you state was when there was already considerable damage which there are no claims for magic results for the medicine.
Furthermore the totally false claims about the side effects for a medication extensively used for over 65 years reveals and agenda that any honest individual would doubt the accuracy of all the claims made by dishonest detractors with an agenda to get elected.

Reply to  DMacKenzie
July 31, 2020 10:28 pm

When the patient is in ICU, it is NOT the time for antivirals – much, much too late. Whether that is cheap HCQ or expensive Remdesivir, or one of the in-between pharmaceuticals. Especially when combined with massive overdoses, the protocol is downright dangerous.

Referencing such unethical, voodoo “studies” is the pinnacle of “spreading misinformation.” Not that I want those doing so to be suppressed – only ridiculed.

Bruce Cobb
July 29, 2020 12:59 pm

Your “study” is a bogus one, but of course you knew that, didn’t you? It’s SOP for you anti-HCQ people to cherry-pick “studies” designed to fail. HCQ works both prophylactically, and in the beginning stages of the disease, and should include zinc. In the ICU, it is too late for it to do much good.

Not Chicken Little
Reply to  Bruce Cobb
July 29, 2020 2:45 pm

The way some of these anti-HCQ studies went, you could “prove” that pulling people out of the water does NOT save them from drowning…

After 20 minutes, 100% of the people pulled out of the water died.

Reply to  Bruce Cobb
July 29, 2020 5:04 pm

That was from the Henry Ford Study….which is pro HCQ…..I quote:
“Overall crude mortality rates were 18.1% in the entire cohort, 13.5% in the hydroxychloroquine alone group, 20.1% among those receiving hydroxychloroquine plus azithromycin, 22.4% among the azithromycin alone group, and 26.4% for neither drug,” the team wrote in a report published in the International Journal of Infectious Diseases.

July 29, 2020 1:00 pm

Immanuel is 100% correct: ” lizard-like “reptilian” aliens are involved in the United States government.”
..
She works in Texas: https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2016/05/donald-trump-shape-shifting-lizard.html

Derg
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 1:07 pm

Henry did she do any of your double blind studies that you crave so desperately?

Derg
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 3:12 pm

No zinc?

Henry now you are really getting dishonest

Joel Snider
Reply to  Derg
July 29, 2020 4:05 pm

‘Getting?’

Reply to  Derg
July 29, 2020 4:34 pm

Show us the randomized double blind HCQ + zpak + zinc study please. Hurry please, another 1000 people have died today.

Derg
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 5:34 pm

And they all took HCQ with zinc…got it Henry

William Astley
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 9:15 pm

Henry Pool

This stupid Canada study gave people HCQ for four days and their conclusion, is the research team learned nothing about how to use HCQ as a prophylactic. Which is absolutely correct. Nothing learned in that study.

HCQ cannot work as a prophylactic if the dosage was too high and the time to short for the drug to do what it is doing to stop covid.

We know from the next study that the HCQ triple cocktail is very effective in stopping covid, reduces death by a factor of five and reduces hospitalization by 80%.

The secret to saving the patient is to treat the patient with the HCQ triple cocktail early before the virus has spread to their lungs and it is too late. The studies that allege the study in question,…

… proved the triple cocktail does not work gave HCQ to almost dead people where the virus had spread to their lungs and damaged their lungs. That is not medical ‘research’. I do not know what to call that.

The results of this early use HCQ triple cocktail covid study is:

The HCQ triple cocktail (Low dosage HCQ, Azithromycin and Zinc) when given to at risk patients early reduced their risk of hospitalization by 80%.

Early HCQ triple cocktail treatment resulted in 5 times less all cause deaths.

Five times less deaths would have saved 100,000 US lives.

ttps://www.preprints.org/manuscript/202007.0025/v1

COVID-19 Outpatients – Early Risk-Stratified Treatment with Zinc Plus Low Dose Hydroxychloroquine and Azithromycin: A Retrospective Case Series Study

icisil
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 1:23 pm

I bet you like to mask debate with Izaak

ldd
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 1:24 pm

While bigger minds ponder bigger issues, you have this to bring forth. How old are you?

Dr. Emmanuel is a warrior.

Joel Snider
Reply to  ldd
July 29, 2020 3:28 pm

Whereas Henry pool is kind of a lizard-like reptilian.

Reply to  Joel Snider
July 29, 2020 6:24 pm

Ad hominem much there Joel?

sycomputing
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 6:37 pm

Ad hominem much there Joel?

Uh oh, is that a criticism Henry? Look at you. Your hypocrisy is showing again.

https://wattsupwiththat.com/2020/07/29/hump-day-hilarity-banned-by-big-tech/#comment-3043427

Can you cover that mess up? I mean really. No one wants to see your Stupid . . . ew.

MarkW
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 7:33 pm

Hank whining about ad hominems. Now that thar is funny.

Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 8:11 pm

That is not a “ad hominem” Mr. Syscomputing. I cited fact, as she has espoused her knowledge about the subject matter.

Tell us Mr. MarkW, did Immanuel not make any allusions about dream demons affecting health?

sycomputing
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 8:30 pm

That is not a “ad hominem” Mr. Syscomputing.

You mean because you answered Mr. Shewchuk’s claim of:

“Her medical qualifications go far beyond pediatrics.”

with:

“You are correct Mr. Shewchuk. She has a wealth of experience with demon sex and lizard DNA.”

Now it’s not merely your hypocrisy that’s showing, but your lying as well.

Blech, Henry “Cess” Pool . . . you’re becoming something of a bad taste in the rational man’s mouth. Can you get on with your argument here:

https://wattsupwiththat.com/2020/07/29/hump-day-hilarity-banned-by-big-tech/#comment-3043556

I’m getting sleepy and wouldn’t want to miss b**tch-slapping you about the intellectual head and shoulders a little more before I hit the sack. Pretty soon I suspect I’m going to get MOD-ified for being a jerk, and who could blame them?

Anyway, Adrian went off to play with a boat full of kitty’s or something, I’m not exactly sure . . . so you’re it.

Get on with it. The side of your face isn’t yet red enough.

MarkW
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 30, 2020 10:14 am

You insult the person rather than dealing with the subject matter.
That’s the very definition of ad hominem Hank.

Krishna Gans
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 4:10 pm

That’s called reptiloid, what you are citing and linking fake news, as usual.
😀

pochas94
July 29, 2020 1:15 pm

All censorship should be banned. This will result in two f*** words in each paragraph, but we should be used to that by now. The sheer volume of nonsense will require the publishers to cull their archives daily and the rest of us to be selective in our sources. And, it will put the “Masters of the Universe” back in their proper place.

2hotel9
Reply to  pochas94
July 29, 2020 4:52 pm

What needs to be banned is selective editing. A public figure speaks on a subject the entirety of what they say should be broadcast/published/played. Failure to do so should be met with massive, career ending fines and jail time. All this shyte would come to a screeching halt.

Garold
July 29, 2020 1:16 pm

If Big Tech allows informed doctors to speak about solutions, our economy would open up again and begin to pick up where it left off. How is that fair to Joe Biden? Since he can’t rub a noun and verb together, his chances of being the president for a few months before he hands it off to the VP, would be nil.

mikewaite
Reply to  Garold
July 29, 2020 2:27 pm

And who steps up to be the new VP? it wouldn’t be Pelosi by any chance ( or constitutional requirement) would it?

Reply to  mikewaite
July 29, 2020 2:32 pm

New President immediately appoints new VP.

Reply to  Charles Rotter
July 29, 2020 3:32 pm

New VP appointment is subject to confirmation by both houses of Congress (see 25th Amendment).
..
This happened when Agnew resigned and Nixon nominated Ford to replace him.

Garold
Reply to  mikewaite
July 29, 2020 5:40 pm

Someone of equal incompetence as Biden and the new president, I would presume. There’s a large pool to choose from but the decision could fall to their ability to virtue signal because that’s extremely important among deciding circles.

TRM
July 29, 2020 1:22 pm

Ah yes the personal attacks. When you can’t dispute the facts, attack the person. It is the tactic of a very WEAK position.

First:
On c19study.com they list 65 studies (39 peer reviewed). All the “negative” ones have something in common: “Late stage”, “Late treatment” etc. Why are they waiting until late in the treatment cycle to administer it? That is known NOT to work.

Second:
President of El Salvador Nayib Bukele has announced that he is taking hydroxychloroquine as a preventative measure against the coronavirus. Bukele told reporters on Tuesday that “most world leaders” are doing the same and has questioned why world leaders are being advised to use it while the public is not.

Third:
The CDC is over counting covid-19 deaths by 90%
https://childrenshealthdefense.org/news/if-covid-fatalities-were-90-2-lower-how-would-you-feel-about-schools-reopening/

Adrian Mann
July 29, 2020 1:23 pm

Fear not… apparently Jesus will destroy Facebooks’ servers if her videos are not restored. Just checking… nope, they’re still working. Anyway, Jesus wont be a thing when this anti-religiousness vaccine gets out. That or the alien DNA… or something. But, yeah, she’s totally credible. Fully qualified in pediatrics, angels and demons, witches, sex in the dream world, alien DNA… seriously people, what’s happened to you? Whatever happened to critical thinking?

Bruce Cobb
Reply to  Adrian Mann
July 29, 2020 1:33 pm

Ad hominem – the resort of liars and idiots. And you believe you are engaging in “critical thinking”? LOL!

sycomputing
Reply to  Adrian Mann
July 29, 2020 1:37 pm

Whatever happened to critical thinking?

Speaking of Jesus, shouldn’t you tear the beam out of your own eye before pointing out the beam in someone else’s eye?

In case you’re already lost (I forgive you), that means, “Don’t you contradict yourself?”

But, yeah, she’s totally credible. Fully qualified in pediatrics, angels and demons, witches, sex in the dream world, alien DNA… seriously people, what’s happened to you?

But hey, look at this way Adrian, at least your consistent in the Stupid we’ve seen so far from Izaak, Steve and Pete. Now we can add YOU to the Sloppy Thinkers list – give yourself a hand buddy!

Your logical fallacy is:

The Genetic Fallacy: This fallacy avoids the argument by shifting focus onto something’s or someone’s origins. It’s similar to an ad hominem fallacy in that it leverages existing negative perceptions to make someone’s argument look bad, without actually presenting a case for why the argument itself lacks merit.

https://tinyurl.com/bvfmw4k

By the way, how long have the 4 of you been attending IA?

Adrian Mann
Reply to  sycomputing
July 29, 2020 4:13 pm

Did you watch a sermon yet? Stop wasting your time here and go and watch one, so you don’t have to trot out your copy/paste Genetic Fallacy thing again. We got it. You Googled “Logical Fallacy” and copied the one you liked best. Well done. Anyway, you’re now boring and not worth bothering with. I’m off to play “Sailor Cats” instead. Good evening.

sycomputing
Reply to  Adrian Mann
July 29, 2020 5:49 pm

Did you watch a sermon yet? Stop wasting your time here and go and watch one, so you don’t have to trot out your copy/paste Genetic Fallacy thing again.

Ok this is the trifecta of redirection Adrian. 3 times I’ve asked you for evidence for your claims and 3 times you’ve played the Stupid with your nonsense.

Your logical fallacy is:

Burden of Proof: You said that the burden of proof lies not with the person making the claim, but with someone else to disprove.

“The burden of proof lies with someone who is making a claim, and is not upon anyone else to disprove. The inability, or disinclination, to disprove a claim does not render that claim valid, nor give it any credence whatsoever. However it is important to note that we can never be certain of anything, and so we must assign value to any claim based on the available evidence, and to dismiss something on the basis that it hasn’t been proven beyond all doubt is also fallacious reasoning.”

https://tinyurl.com/lpyb9po

Now look at you. And in front of the entire field of viewers on the world’s most viewed website on climate change, etc. I gave you every opportunity to do what YOU SAID you could do, and you refused to do it.

I think you’re a liar. I don’t believe you have the goods on Dr Immanuel.

Going forward, I’m gonna treat you like what you are.

sycomputing
Reply to  Adrian Mann
July 29, 2020 7:58 pm

Anyway, you’re now boring and not worth bothering with. I’m off to play “Sailor Cats” instead. Good evening.

Awww, did you really take yourself and your toys away to play Sea Kitties?

Wait! Come back! I’m sorry!

I didn’t mean to toss you to and fro about the intellectual room like a Garbage Pail rag doll! Well I did but I was mean and I shouldn’t have done it.

It was just too much fun and I couldn’t stop.

Honest, I have a problem . . . pity me.

czechlist
Reply to  Adrian Mann
July 29, 2020 1:43 pm

Hillary Clinton said that, while in the WH, she conversed with Eleanor Roosevelt – who had been dead for 40 years. Yet, she was considered by 0 to be the most qualified person to ever run for president.

Reply to  Adrian Mann
July 29, 2020 1:52 pm

Whatever happened to critical thinking? You won’t find it here.

Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 2:00 pm

Pool posts: “Whatever happened to critical thinking? You won’t find it here.”

You may now vacate the premises then.

When will WordPress get a BLOCK feature that can be applied to individual posters?

Reply to  _Jim
July 29, 2020 2:36 pm

_Jim careful you don’t have a dream tonight of sex with a deamon. If you do, contact Dr. Immanuel.

Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 6:15 pm

Henry Pool showing his ‘western world’ centric view. You’re an idiot, given the bigger picture in the world. That I think we can bank on.

MarkW
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 7:36 pm

Hank’s a leftist, he already knows that he’s the smartest person in any room. He’s proven it to himself time and time against.

Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 8:14 pm

_Jim, people in the “Eastern” world have dreams, just like people in the “Western” world do. What is your point?

PS, could you refrain from calling me names (idiot)?….it makes you look bad. (Ditto for you MarkW)

MarkW
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 30, 2020 10:17 am

Jim already explained that to you Hank.
Hank, will you for once actually deal with the question at hand rather than flinging insults and ad hominems?

Gerald Machnee
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 2:33 pm

I take it that you are referring to YOUR post.

Derg
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 3:14 pm

No kidding when you obscure the debate.

bluecat57
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 3:15 pm

As long as you are posting we won’t find it from you.

Joel Snider
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 4:00 pm

‘Critical thinking’ – from someone who’s every opinion is already predetermined.

William Astley
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 4:03 pm

Henry Pool do you have something to say that is supported by facts? Critical thought is observation and logic based. It is not name calling. You will recognize it when you see it.

What is your theory why a Black Woman from Nigeria who has moved to the US and is now running a Houston clinic that see 10 to 15 covid patients a day.

Houston has one of the worst problems with obesity and diabetes in the US. And Houston has a large ‘black’ population. It is a fact that twice as many US blacks are dying from covid than the US general population.

Why the Lady Doctor would lie about the HCQ cocktails effectiveness, to treat high risk covid patients?

This courageous doctor is risking her career because she knows many of her diabetic, asthmatic, overweight, covid sick patients would have died if they were not treated with the HCQ cocktail.

In the Michigan study they lost 18% of their diabetic, asthmatic, overweight covid sick patients.

The Michigan study found the HCQ cocktail reduced the death rate by 50%. This is a link to the published study.

Odd that Fauci has not read Michigan study linked to below.

Fauci is quoted today in the BCC and he said there is no proof that the HCQ cocktail is a highly effective treatment for covid, if given early in the virus’s progression.

The virus attacks the throat first and then moves on to the lungs. The HCQ cocktail it appears stops the virus from replicating.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7330574/pdf/main.pdf

.”Hydroxychloroquine provided a 66% hazard ratio reduction,
and hydroxychloroquine + azithromycin provided a 71% hazard ratio reduction compared to neither treatment (p<0.001)."

Let me explain what a Hazard Ratio Reduction Factor is… That term was explained in preliminary paper.

HCQ plus azithromycin reduced the covid death rate by 50% and it reduce long term serious damage to patients organs.

Reply to  William Astley
July 29, 2020 8:17 pm

William Astley, in medicine, no drug, no treatment/therapy is 100%. “Curing” 350 out of 350 patients suffering from a sometimes fatal virus infection is suspect.

MarkW
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 7:35 pm

Once again, Hank projects onto others his own short comings.

Gwan
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 7:44 pm

There is NO critical thinking with any of your TROLLING Henry Pool and your other rascal mates
In my opinion you have added absolutely nothing to this debate about treatment for Covid 19.
IF I was running this site you would have been banned but this site believes in Free Speech .
The Facts of the matter is that Hydroxychloroquine HCQ in the correct amount with zinc and an antibiotic administered at an early stage of the disease will prevent DEATHS.
For some unknown reason trials were run with the a predetermined out come of proving that HCQ does not work .
This Doctor claims that she has not lost a patient .
This claim can be verified or not by those in charge and it will be in due course .
If I had family member die from Covid 19 that were denied this treatment and it is proven to work as claimed ,I would think that there would be a very good case against these health officials that have blocked the use of this drug.
HCQ has been used for many ailments and still is and suddenly politically motivated doctors state that HCQ is has dangerous side effects ( which are quite mild ) unless large doses are given.
Quinine has been used for almost 400 year and has saved probably millions of lives and HCQ is derived from Quinine.
If the risks of taking HCQ were at all dangerous it would have been banned long ago .
The risks are very low using HCQ and most people that I know would take a small risk rather than rely on unproven treatment and DIE.
Graham

Mr.
Reply to  Adrian Mann
July 29, 2020 2:00 pm

“Critical thinking” would require that just the presented facts / observations about the efficacy or otherwise of the HCQ treatments be examined.

Who presents the facts / observations has nothing to do with the assessment.

lb
Reply to  Adrian Mann
July 29, 2020 2:37 pm

Adrian
You criticize her religion. That’s boring. The interesting questions should be:

Is she really a doctor?
Has she really cured 350 out of 350 patients?

If both are true, that’s great news!
And if it’s true, and your trying to cover it up with b*llsh*t, then I wonder, what are your goals? Where’s the money? I do not trust you.

Reply to  Adrian Mann
July 29, 2020 6:26 pm

re: “But, yeah, she’s totally credible. Fully qualified in pediatrics, angels and demons, witches, sex in the dream world, alien DNA”

THERE YOU GO AGAIN, projecting your ‘western world’ values on a culture (from Africa that she has to work with) that is about as far removed from ANYTHING you’ve seen or experienced in your life to date.

Adrian Mann – a man of the ‘western world’ only. (NO world travel, experience with other cultures, beliefs et al?)

niceguy
July 29, 2020 1:28 pm

What is the END GOAL of all of that?

They can’t all be doing it for a small evil corp like Gilead.

bluecat57
Reply to  niceguy
July 29, 2020 3:14 pm

The same reason they do anything: To try and take over the world.

Latitude
July 29, 2020 1:34 pm

the second they banned it….it went viral

..and now millions will see it that wouldn’t have

July 29, 2020 1:39 pm

Let’s see if they take this source down too:

(SHOCKER) Dr. Stella Immanuel Talk Say Hydroxychloroquine Na Cure For Covid19 | Pidgin News
Jul 29, 2020, by Plus TV Africa, 69.2K subscribers

July 29, 2020 1:46 pm

It is scary how censored YouTube is today. Yesterday I watched the video but today it is pulled and only hit jobs on her and Trump are up. And all the comments are all negative so clearly any that disagree with the woke censors are deleted.
I fear Trump has left it too late to tackle woke bias in Google et al.

William Astley
July 29, 2020 1:47 pm

The American people are not going to die…. For stinking politics. It is not going to happen.

The Masters of the Medical Universe, and their Master accomplices in Internet control/the fake media…. Are all going to be charged with criminal negligence resulting in death.

This is a quote from the six hospital 2541 Michigan hospital study. (See below for link)

Hydroxychloroquine provided a 66% hazard ratio reduction, and hydroxychloroquine + azithromycin 71% compared to neither treatment (p < 0.001).

50% reduction in death for the HCQ cocktail treated patients and 71% reduction in permanent life changing damage.

This is the biggest news story of the century.

The Masters of Medical Universe … Did not know it is a medical fact that the HCQ cocktail when given to the patient very earlier in the virus’s progression through the human body ….. Is almost a cure for covid.

I would assume everyone assumed Trump has just repeating a silly old man's tale.

They did not know Trump got the cure for covid from a Jewish doctor.

The Jewish doctor found that the HCQ cocktail cured his covid sick patients who were high risk patients.

18% of the high risk patients die if they are not treated. See Michigan study. 257 people of the 2541 patients died. The HCQ cocktail reduced the death rate by more than 50%.

The Jewish doctors results were much better. He because he did not wait 48 hours before treating the very sick covid patients. He had zero deaths and no serious damage to the patients he treated with the cocktail.

The Malaria drug that is used for the cure has been used for 20 years and its side effects are completely known.

And the same Malaria drug is in a 2005 paper published by the US Institute of Health, recommended HCG to treat coronal viruses. The covid virus is a coronal virus and is 78% identical to other coronal viruses.

The Jewish doctor has excited when he ‘discovered’ the HCQ cocktail was a cure for covid. He did not understand why the Medical System completely ignored his discovery.

The Jewish Doctor has gone on to treat 700 covid sick patient with the HCQ cocktail and had only one death.

Now think about the ‘ethics’ of the Michigan six hospital study.

18% of the Michigan randomized HCQ cocktail test 2541, or 457 very sick covid sick patients died.

Half of the 2541 covid sick who suffered permanent damage and/or death from covid….

Did not get the lifesaving HCQ cocktail.

Those that did get the HCQ cocktail, were forced to wait 48 hours….

… I would assume the masters thought the delay in giving the very sick covid patient’s treatment with the HCQ cocktail would result in the test failing….

The result of the Michigan study is that there was a 50% less death rate in those treated with the HCQ cocktail compared to those who got hope.

And in addition, there was a 70% less sever life changing damage due to covid in those patients who received the HCQ cocktail as compared to those who got hope.

https://www.ijidonline.com/article/S1201-9712(20)30534-8/fulltext

Treatment with Hydroxychloroquine, Azithromycin, and Combination in Patients Hospitalized with COVID-19

Results
Of 2,541 patients, with a median total hospitalization time of 6 days (IQR: 4-10 days), median age was 64 years (IQR:53-76 years), 51% male, 56% African American, with median time to follow-up of 28.5 days (IQR:3-53). Overall in-hospital mortality was 18.1% (95% CI:16.6%-19.7%);

This is a link to the interview of the Jewish doctor who used Zinc sulfate plus Hydroxychloroquine plus azithromycin to treat 700 covid patients, who were sick and showing symptoms, with only one death.

https://techstartups.com/2020/04/03/updates-from-dr-vladimir-zelenko-now-treated-700-coronavirus-patients-with-99-9-success-rate-using-hydroxychloroquine-zinc-sulfate-and-z-pak-1-outpatient-died-after-not-following-protocol-exclusi/

Reply to  William Astley
July 29, 2020 2:33 pm

But the video of Dr Zalenko has been deleted for violating YouTube terms of setvice. What are they? Is it up anywhere else?

bluecat57
Reply to  Cccccccc
July 29, 2020 3:10 pm

Try banned .video Brighteon .com

TedM
Reply to  Cccccccc
July 29, 2020 3:35 pm

They used 14 times the recommended dosage of HCQ, a toxic level. It causes toxicity at this level. This study was either a display of total ignorance, or was a deliberate attempt to produce a negative outcome. Quite likely to produce the much vaunted serious side effects.

Robert W. Turner
Reply to  Cccccccc
July 29, 2020 3:59 pm

How long are we going to take this post truth world disrespect?

bluecat57
Reply to  William Astley
July 29, 2020 3:12 pm

You don’t mention ZINC which seems to be a critical part of the protocol.

Nick Graves
Reply to  bluecat57
July 30, 2020 2:55 am

I would hypothesise that if HCQ + Az > 71%, then Zn might just account for the claimed 100%.

IF it is then 100%, that’s a pretty remarkable result for any drug treatment.

This simply doesn’t add up. Does a doctor need to give himself Covid & then cure himself in order to prove/disprove its efficacity? Or a double-blind study of 10,000 doctors?

Would they all then be cancelled?

Whilst double-blind trials are morally reprehensible, a cover-up of this magnitude if revealed would be for a court in The Hague, NL.

bluecat57
Reply to  Nick Graves
July 30, 2020 5:46 am

Kinda like the 100% positive test rates in Florida. Or everyone that dies, dies OF it.

TedM
Reply to  William Astley
July 29, 2020 3:13 pm

And those results were achieved without Zinc.

Ted Middleton
Reply to  William Astley
July 29, 2020 3:37 pm

One interview with Dr Zelenko is here.

July 29, 2020 1:51 pm

Madonna (remember her?) is ‘getting in on the act’ too –

“Madonna supports doctor touting hydroxychloroquine cure. Twitter scolds her, too.”
July 29, 2020
https://www.bizpacreview.com/2020/07/29/madonna-supports-doctor-touting-hydroxychloroquine-cure-twitter-scolds-her-too-953146

Anybody have a link to that leaked video where the Google top execs are lamenting the fact that Orange Man got elected?

Joel Snider
Reply to  _Jim
July 29, 2020 4:23 pm

Madonna scolded by Twitter. That didn’t happen when she threatened to blow up the White House.

Reply to  Joel Snider
July 29, 2020 5:24 pm

Madonna did not threaten to blow up the White House on Twitter.

2hotel9
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 5:27 pm

Yep, she did that at a podium in front of about 25,000 people. Good catch, buddy!! THEN she posted it to twatter, so all you twats could slobber over it.

Reply to  2hotel9
July 29, 2020 6:27 pm

Wrong 2hotel9, she did not post that on Twitter.

Tom Abbott
Reply to  _Jim
July 29, 2020 5:12 pm

Here’s an excerpt from _Jim’s link:

“According to a now-expired website for the group, which was founded by Dr. Simone Gold, physicians staged a “White Coat Summit” in Washington, D.C., Monday and Tuesday to “create the opportunity for frontline doctors to talk directly to the American people.”

“If Americans continue to let so-called experts and media personalities make their decisions, the great American experiment of a Constitutional Republic with Representative Democracy, will cease,” the website stated.”

I think it is a good idea to have frontline doctors talking to the American people. Dr. Gold ought to hold one of these press conferences once a week, to give doctors a chance to give us their opinions. Dr. Gold said she would have a new website up and running soon.

All official government restrictions on using HCQ should be removed. If a doctor wants to prescribe it, the doctor should be able to do so without fear that pharmacists and state officials will refuse the perscription.

Trump should come out and pardon HCQ. 🙂

HD Hoese
July 29, 2020 1:55 pm

From 1989 Centennial (11th edition) Merck Index– Hydroxychloroquine, bunch of numbers and letters for the formula……Use in combination with cyclophohsphamide and azathioprine, q.q.v. in the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis……..Series of articles on clinical use…….THERAP CAT: Antimalarial; antirheumatic, lupus erythematosus suppressant.

Last millennium, must be out of date.

July 29, 2020 1:59 pm

The fastest study when a pandemic starts are field studies.

Anecdotes from one doctor are not worth much but from 1,000 doctors is a field study.

Lots of people in the world were taking regular small HCQ dosess to prevent makaria.

Did covid infect them as much as non HCQ people?

Lupus patients took HCQ too.

How did they do in avoiding covid?

This should have nothing to do with politics.

Double blind is time consuming and expensive for an old genericc drug.

Double blind would NOT replicate small doses taken over a number of years by healthy people to prevent malaria — something that might reduce covid infections too.

A field study of many doctors in the high malaria rate nations could provide valuable data about HCQ that a double blind study would miss.

jorgekafkazar
Reply to  Richard Greene
July 29, 2020 3:04 pm

Yes, this should have nothing to do with politics. But to Socialist true believers, everything is about Socialism. Everything. We should not be surprised that institutions are creating deceptive “studies.”

Reply to  Richard Greene
July 29, 2020 4:44 pm

HCQ is not effective in all countries – malaria has become resistant

For many years the treatment of malaria in Africa has relied on chloroquine, sulfadoxine combined with pyrimethamine, and quinine, with the latter being used mainly to treat severe cases. Quinine remains efficacious, but chloroquine and sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine are failing, and this is leading to an increase in mortality from malaria especially in East Africa.1,2

Although resistance to chloroquine was first detected on the east coast of Africa in 1977, the drug has provided effective treatment for malaria for much of Africa for over 20 years.3,4 Unfortunately this is unlikely to be the case for sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine, the combination adopted by several African countries as the first line treatment for malaria when chloroquine has failed. Systematic surveillance for resistance to malaria drugs and the results of trials of new drugs or drug combinations that could be used to replace chloroquine or sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine are showing a worryingly high level of resistance to sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine across eastern and southern parts of Africa.5,6 Resistance to sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine is particularly severe in north east Tanzania, where clinical failure rates of up to 50% have been described,7 but high levels of resistance have been recorded also in parts of Burundi, Kenya, Rwanda, and Uganda.8 Levels of resistance to sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine are generally lower in West Africa, but clinical failures are not infrequent, and parasites carrying mutations associated with resistance to sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine are distributed widely across West Africa. Genetic studies show that resistance to sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine may have arisen in southern and eastern Africa on only a few occasions, so these resistant strains have spread extensively and rapidly.9 Sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine seems to have little future as a first line antimalarial in Africa. However, the results of a recent study by Plowe et al (p 545) in Malawi raise the possibility that this conclusion may be too pessimistic.10

Catcracking
Reply to  Richard Greene
July 29, 2020 8:33 pm

FYI
That information was presented in separate indoor session by the group covered by Breitbart
One presenter showed the virus impact was significantly reduced in several African countries where the medication is widely distributed for protection against Malaria and most visitors also take the Hydroxychlorquine before visiting.
I have not been able to find the link

July 29, 2020 2:01 pm

The fastest study when a pandemic starts are field studies.

Anecdotes from one doctor are not worth much but from 1,000 doctors is a field study.

Lots of people in the world were taking regular small HCQ dosess to prevent makaria.

Did covid infect them as much as non HCQ people?

Lupus patients took HCQ too.

How did they do in avoiding covid?

This should have nothing to do with politics.

Double blind is time consuming and expensive for an old generic drug.

Double blind would NOT replicate small doses taken over a number of years by healthy people to prevent malaria — something that might reduce covid infections too.

A field study of many doctors in the high malaria rate nations could provide valuable data about HCQ that a double blind study would miss.

Reply to  Richard Greene
July 29, 2020 2:05 pm

re: “Anecdotes from one doctor are not worth much but from 1,000 doctors is a field study.”

Balderdash. Such ‘high and mighty’ pontificating is worthless when its your butt in the sling.

I can’t believe idiots like yourselves would ‘shelve’ a known working cure when ‘found in the wild’ and defer to a CDC or an NIH, looking for ‘guidance’ from a Fauci or a Birx. GTFO.

bluecat57
Reply to  _Jim
July 29, 2020 3:03 pm

I can’t believe morons like you can function in society. The CDC and NIH are so corrupt as to be worthless.

Reply to  bluecat57
July 29, 2020 6:20 pm

Do you have a reading comprehension issue? I think you do …

Read this again, SLOWLY: “I can’t believe idiots like yourselves would ‘shelve’ a known working cure when ‘found in the wild’ and defer to a CDC or an NIH, looking for ‘guidance’ from a Fauci or a Birx.

Just what does that mean? (We don’t seem to have a very sharp crowd here on WUWT anymore; the quality of the posters has drifted down quite a bit since the 2006 time frame when I came on board.)

BlueCat57
Reply to  _Jim
July 29, 2020 6:42 pm

I most certainly do NOT have a reading comprehension issue. It will take some time but I will sort it out. The WordPress comment system sucks. It is different from desktop to app version and even in the app it changes yet again when you read a reply in the notification as opposed to the comments.
You possibly agree with me concerning the CDC and NIH, but I’m not sure.
I was initially disagreeing with your Balderdash paragraph, but may not.
I’ll have to try and figure out who is saying what. That will take some time to line things up.
For now, thank you for drawing my attention to our misunderstanding.

BlueCat57
Reply to  _Jim
July 29, 2020 6:46 pm

For example, my reply to your reading comprehension issue reply did NOT show up despite refreshing the page which means this one is unlikely to either.
Or maybe they will both appear when I revisit tomorrow morning.

bluecat57
Reply to  _Jim
July 30, 2020 7:03 am

OK, I’ve reviewed the play and will retract the “moron…” but stand by my assessment of the CDC, NIH, Fauci and Brix as corrupt to the point of uselessness.

My interpretation is that you are replying to Richard Greene’s comment that begins:

“The fastest..” and ends “would miss.”

He is asserting that “anecdotes from” a large number of doctors are a reliable indication regarding a disease and treatment options in the EARLY phases of the disease spread. (I contend that based on “historic” disease modeling we are still in the “early phases”. New technologies ARE allowing a more rapid response, but I am NOT going to trust the unproven “new”.)

He further asks if people ALREADY taking HCQ (alone?) for other diseases have a lower infection rate. (I haven’t heard any reports recently. The cynic in me says that is because the answer is yes, but if you have facts feel free to share them. I’ll research that.)

He asserts that medical information “should have nothing to do with politics.”

Unfortunately, that is no longer the case. The RESPONSE to this disease is ALL about politics and destroying Trump and America. We can debate that, but that is my opinion based on the FACTS that I am aware of. If you have FACTS that show otherwise then present FACTS. You are welcome to offer your OPINION, but I prefer if you present me with the FACTS you base YOUR opinion on. Don’t just parrot some “expert’s” opinion because I will view that as the logical fallacy of appealing to authority. I want the FACTS you base YOUR opinion on.

He then offers some opinion and observation about Double Blind studies.

Based on what I have heard about the studies showing HCQ to be ineffective vs what the doctors that believe it is effective, they are NOT talking about the same TREATMENT PROTOCOL.

The studies showing ineffectiveness are on patients already IN the hospital and/or late stages of the disease and that those patients have multiple OTHER health issues. Additionally, the treatment is NOT HCQ, an antibiotic and Zinc. It appears to be either HCQ alone, or HCQ and an antibiotic. No Zinc.

The effectiveness proponents are saying that the three item treatment is effective if started EARLY or prophylactically (HCQ/Zinc, the antibiotic is not needed until the disease is contracted and secondary BACTERIAL infections may occur), and is less effective as the disease progresses.

As far as I can tell, the PUBLIC discussion is NOT talking about the same treatment protocol, nor do they include the DEMOGRAPHICS of the patients involved. That means we are calling each other names over incomplete information.

Now to your reply, Jim.

You call Richard’s opinion “balderdash” yet provide no reason for it other than asserting that it “is worthless when its (sic) your butt in the sling.”

That is YOUR opinion. Obviously, Richard is in possession of FACTS that lead him to BELIEVE otherwise.

What EXACTLY is the “known working cure”?

I have NOT heard anyone say there is a universal, effective “cure” for the disease. In fact, my impression is that the VAST (as in 90% plus) majority of the people who contract the disease simply suffer through until it has run its course. 5% or so die, and 5% receive some treatment. The numbers are farted out my ass, but are probably in the ballpark.

My interpretation is that you are NOT referring to the HCQ/antibiotic/Zinc treatment as the “known working cure” “found in the wild”.

I am interpreting that sentence as saying:

Some NEW drug is the “known working cure” that is being shelved in favor of the HCQ cocktail which is “found in the wild”.

Is that incorrect?

I have heard that a variety of NEW high-profit drugs show “promise”. But they don’t assert that comprehensive Double Blind studies have been done for those. They are simply saying that the LOW cost HCQ/antibiotic/Zinc treatment doesn’t work. (Yes, I’m slipping in a “conspiracy”. NOT a “theory” in my opinion, but the reason for opposing that LOW cost treatment.)

Now comes the confusing part.

“and defer to a CDC or an NIH, looking for ‘guidance’ from a Fauci or a Birx. GTFO.“

Where has Richard deferred to the CDC or NIH or the two obviously politically biased doctors?

Maybe it is in a PREVIOUS comment that I am missing because of the design of the comment thread. (Note: There is yet another presentation when you click on Notifications in the desktop version at WordPress .com. Makes it hard to follow the threads.)

If you are responding to another comment, please reference it.

We can just drop the discussion now, or you can reply to the items I present above. Or you can just offer a new reply. Your choice.

PS – I just realized that the OP was about the VIDEO and Tech Giants banning it NOT the treatment.

PPS – Are you actually supporting the doctors in the video? I’m scrolling through the comments and see your link to the “Na” video.

PPPS – Ghalfrunt commented regarding HCQ use for malaria. Catcracking offered an FYI regarding African countries during an “indoor session”.

PPPPS – My “How do I cancel you?” comment was sarcastic.

PPPPPS – My other replies to you showed up in the thread this morning. I do NOT like the WordPress comment system.

Tom Abbott
Reply to  _Jim
July 30, 2020 7:45 am

“For example, my reply to your reading comprehension issue reply did NOT show up despite refreshing the page which means this one is unlikely to either.
Or maybe they will both appear when I revisit tomorrow morning.”

The commenting software is a little unpredictable. Sometimes my posts appear immediately, but most of the time they don’t appear immediately. It seems that the comments are on occasion not updated until the top of the hour. So if you post something and it doesn’t show up, then wait until about five minutes after the next hour and then refresh and your post should appear. That works for me most of the time.

Yes, the commenting software needs a major upgrade, especially a feature where we can see the new posts in a thread when revisiting that thread. At one time the software was set up to highlight new posts in a different color, which made it very easy to scan through the article to find new comments. Very conveniet! But then the new comment software crashed the website and we were forced to go back to the primitive comment software we are using now.

Reply to  _Jim
July 30, 2020 6:50 am

Angry Jim
Take your medications.

Now I will type slowly so even you could understand.

Covid rarely kills people.

So a doctor who had 100 suspected covid patients, and all 100 survived, may not tell us much.

In nations where HCQ is used in small doses to prevent malaria, if the covid infection rate was low, that would be useful information that could be compiled quickly.

Roy Spencer Ph.D published such a study on his blog in mid-March but never updated it — the highest malaria rate nations where HCQ use was common had very low covid rates at that time.

For your information I would be the first to ask for HCQ and zinc from a doctor if I had symptoms of covid and think Fauci is a typical government bureaucrat who pretends to be an expert but knows little.

I believe in less government and more freedom – a libertarian since 1973.

If calling me an idiot makes you feel good, then do it again — I’ve been called an idiot by people MUCH smarter than you !

My climate science blog, with over
61,000 page views;

http://www.elOnionBloggle.Blogspot.com

Why don’t you go there Jim, and leave a nasty comment?

BlueCat57
Reply to  Richard Greene
July 30, 2020 9:55 am

I trust that you read and hopefully liked my comments to you and Jim.

I’m viewing this on a desktop. Haven’t checked my Android app. And wish I could simply see the same thread with the same features (able to “Like/Star” a comment. In fact, this webpage doesn’t show the Notification Bell.

Oh well, I hope we all benefited (I’m guessing that is spelled wrong, but Grammarly doesn’t appear to work on this page.) from our interaction.

bluecat57
Reply to  Richard Greene
July 29, 2020 3:01 pm

How do I cancel you? That’s crazy talk. I bet you think that all other communicable diseases rates should have gone down because of mask-wearing, social distancing and washing. Fool! We are ALL going to DIE! someday. BTW do you know if other disease rates have gone down? No one seems to want to report on that. Common sense tells me they should.

Stevek
July 29, 2020 2:02 pm

I’m not sure if it works but would like to see a study of it when given early and given along with zinc. This study beat matches how the doctors that claim success are using it. This is basic science, come up with hypothesis and test the hypothesis. It should not be that hard and multiple studies should have already been completed months ago. Something strange is going on in that we have not seen these studies done.

Stevek
Reply to  Stevek
July 29, 2020 2:04 pm

Meant “best matches”

bluecat57
Reply to  Stevek
July 29, 2020 3:04 pm

They are out there but suppressed.

tomo
July 29, 2020 2:10 pm

The Battle Creek Sanitarium

In the UK we are now being heavily propagandised by our government’s public health bureaucrats with a pitch that goes:

obese people are more likely to die of Covid-19 so we are mandating bicycle rides on healthcare benefits and introducing a moratorium on junk food advertising before 9pm (includes yogurt and raisins) and starting an initiative to have smaller portion sizes in eateries”

They might as well say “We’re legislating smaller candy bars to save you from Covid-21”

One assumes that the at risk groups of oldies and biological males might have reacted badly to being targeted….

Donald Trump on a bicycle telling you to eat less… and go vegetarian…

– tsk –

and you moan about a licensed, practising insured MD?

LdB
Reply to  tomo
July 29, 2020 8:45 pm

Watching the UK politics at the moment is rather funny but they have history of these PC sorrs of thing. Poor old Noddy got banned for many years until he was given the PC treatment revision. Who knew that Enid Blyton was a closet Racist, xenophobe who perveted her views thru her childrens books.

Mikgen
July 29, 2020 2:23 pm

A study from Portugal looking at patients receiving long term HCQ medication for rheumatological diseases:

Ferreira et al., J. Medical Virology, July 9, 2020, doi:10.1002/jmv.26286
Chronic treatment with hydroxych loroquine and SARS-CoV-2 infection

From the abstract: “After adjustment for age, sex, and chronic treatment with cor-
ticosteroids and/or immunosuppressants, the odds ratio of SARS CoV-2 infection for
chronic treatment with HCQ has been 0.51 (0.37 – 0.70). Our data suggest that chronic
treatment with HCQ confer protection against SARS CoV-2 infection.”

bluecat57
Reply to  Mikgen
July 29, 2020 3:07 pm

Translation? HCQ reduced infection rate to below those not taking it?

Mikgen
Reply to  bluecat57
July 30, 2020 5:06 am

Yes, HCQ reduced the risk by about 50%.

July 29, 2020 2:34 pm

An unusually (almost) even-handed BBC article about this: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/53559938

I have little doubt that a lot of well paid people are working very hard to prevent the US president being proved right about this drug in an election year. If they are deliberately supressing life-saving information then one hopes that repentance will happen sooner rather than later…

bluecat57
July 29, 2020 2:54 pm

Please do NOT confuse us with facts or truth. Ignorance is bliss.

CheshireRed
July 29, 2020 3:12 pm

It’s way past time there are standardised and statutory T&C’s for all social media platforms. Take ‘company policy’ cancellations away from these guys as it’s now clear they’ve abused their positions of authority for political ends.

It should be illegal to cancel any SM account on political grounds, barring proscribed organisations. There also needs to be a clear process of removal, just as there is in employment law.

This left-wing SM dictatorship has to stop.

Another Ian
July 29, 2020 3:39 pm

“Conservation Of Hospital Patients”

“Arizona shows a huge spike in the number of hospitalized patients on July 13.

But there is no corresponding increase in the number of beds being used.”

https://realclimatescience.com/2020/07/conservation-of-hospital-patients/

No doubt helping the US statistics.

Michael Jankowski
July 29, 2020 3:58 pm

Youtube can’t take this down quickly enough.

Meanwhile, they have no problem hosting multiple versions of “Loose Change.”

Oddsox
July 29, 2020 4:48 pm

This is getting ridiculous. This blog has thousands of instances where climate alarmists have misrepresented data, studies, experts etc. who question so-called climate science, but actually believe that this is somehow different.

Tot hose that say there is no evidence that HCQ works when used properly – https://c19study.com/

Tom Abbott
July 29, 2020 4:50 pm

Congressman Louis Gohmert, Republican from Texas, tested positive for the Wuhan virus today. He says he is going to take the HCQ treatment.

Gohmert says he has no symptoms yet. He was getting ready to fly with President Trump to Texas when he was tested, and of course, he missed the flight after testing positive.

I had a neighbor tell me the other day that she had tested positive for the Wuhan virus, and then they ran another test on her about a week later and she tested negative. So it looks like she had a false positive. Maybe Louis had one, too.

Scissor
July 29, 2020 5:10 pm

Fauci demon strates how he is good at everything.

July 29, 2020 5:42 pm

Vietnam resistance Chloroquine and Mefloquine
Zero deaths but no one takes chloroquine
New Zealand no one takes chloroquine for malaria but covid well under control
Japan no one takes chloroquine for malaria but covid under control

etc.
https://www.cdc.gov/malaria/travelers/country_table/a.html
https://ourworldindata.org/coronavirus

July 29, 2020 6:43 pm

Any doctor that claims a 100% cure rate with 350 sick patients is full of you know what. If Immanuel said 343 out of 350 were cured it might be believable.

Tony Anderson
July 29, 2020 7:11 pm

Sycomputing, Henry Pool and others, whether you agree with Dr. Immanuel’s assertion that Hydroxychloroquine is beneficial to treating COVID-19 or not. There are studies being conducted in Australia at the Walter and Eliza Institute to scientifically establish that drugs benefits for coronavirus.
Maybe Dr. Immanuel is finding benefits. Perhaps other doctors are not. But that is how science is, finding out the truth, and if it doesn’t work discard that hypotheses and start again. Some noteable figures who are already taking that drug, such as POTUS are treated with disdain may suffer from Trump Derangement Syndrome.
We are talking about science here not about people who take HCL or what Dr. Immanuel may think about demons.

Reply to  Tony Anderson
July 29, 2020 8:30 pm

Tony, in the field of medicine, what works gets spread among doctors much faster than published studies in reputable journals. Practicing doctors confronted with patients suffocating with the SARS-COVID virus found that rolling their patients over from their back to their stomachs improved their oxygenation levels. Word spread fast among doctors, and now they are all using this (proning) simple technique.

All of these doctors are trying a multitude of drugs and treatments. Dexamethasone and remdesivir have proven effective. HCQ has not. If HCQ worked, doctors would all be using it. Doctors will do just about anything to help their patients.

Bruce Cobb
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 30, 2020 6:15 am

“If HCQ worked, doctors would all be using it.”
There you go again, Henry, employing false logic. Give it up. When you are in a hole, quit digging already.

Reply to  Bruce Cobb
July 31, 2020 10:58 pm

“If antibiotics cured stomach ulcers, all doctors would be using it.” It took YEARS (and one doctor called every name in the book for his persistence) before ANY doctor used that now standard treatment.

(Wish my Dad had known about that, although it was too early anyway – being a veterinarian, he would have undoubtedly self-medicated and saved himself from a rather hazardous surgical procedure.)

Tom Abbott
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 30, 2020 7:58 am

” If HCQ worked, doctors would all be using it. Doctors will do just about anything to help their patients.”

Doctors are being prevented from prescribing HCQ. See my comment below. Forty-four U.S. States have some kind of restriction on prescribing HCQ.

I guess people who have the Wuhan virus will have to find out which six States do not restrict prescribing HCQ and go to a doctor in that State to get a perscription.

The political demonizing of HCQ is costing people their lives. How many? Well, if the “anectdotal” Doctors are correct about the effectiveness of HCQ, then we are looking at a large percentage of deaths that could have been prevented with proper treatment.

William Astley
July 29, 2020 7:45 pm

This is an interesting study. There are so many studies that all show the same thing.

If something is true there will be more and more evidence to support it. This HCQ triple cocktail treatment for covid is not going away.

There is no drug that reduces hospitalization by 80% and reduces deaths by a factor of Five that is not used..

The HCQ side effects are well known as the same drug has been used for 20 years. The HCQ dosage is low and there is a standard simple test to check for heart issues before prescribing the HCQ.

Logically all people in the at risk group, diabetics, per diabetics, obese, elderly, and so on would start the treatment as soon as they show symptoms before the virus has moved from the throat to lungs.

This is a simple treatment with a known safe drug at low dosages for a week or two. The treatment is most effective if given early which explains why this study got so great results.

The HCQ triple cocktail (Low dosage HCQ, Azithromycin and Zinc) when given to at risk patients early reduced their risk of hospitalization by 80%.

Early HCQ triple cocktail treatment resulted in 5 times less all cause deaths.

https://www.preprints.org/manuscript/202007.0025/v1

COVID-19 Outpatients – Early Risk-Stratified Treatment with Zinc Plus Low Dose Hydroxychloroquine and Azithromycin: A Retrospective Case Series Study

Therefore, the odds of hospitalization of treated patients were 84% less than in the untreated group.

Conclusions: Risk stratification-based treatment of COVID-19 outpatients as early as possible after symptom onset with the used triple therapy, including the combination of zinc with low dose hydroxychloroquine, was associated with significantly less hospitalizations and 5 times less all-cause deaths.

Tom Abbott
July 29, 2020 8:10 pm

Dr. Harvey Risch, Harvard Professor of Epidemiology, said tonight that 44 States had restrictions and limitations on both prescribing and selling HCQ and doctors are intimidated all over the country about this.

This is really criminal. This can all be blamed on the Left and the Leftwing Media. Their hatred of Trump is causing them to distort anything about HCQ.

I think it is time to explore the “Right to Try” law that Trump signed not long ago. It allows people to try medications which might help them but which have not been authorized for that use by the FDA, and even drugs and treatments that have not been authorized by the FDA for any illness can be tried. These treatments usually apply to people who have run out of medical options and they try experimental drugs.

HCQ fits right in this category. So would this law override State restrictions on HCQ? It’s time to find out.

Doctors should get together and file lawsuits for the right to prescribe HCQ. They should do this now as it takes time to work through the courts and people are dying every day that might not have died had they had access to HCQ.

Nations like Turkey, that routinely use HCQ for all those who test positive for Wuhan virus, have a much lower death rate than does the U.S. Maybe the difference is in how HCQ is handled. If it is, somebody has some explaining to do.

Todd Hamor
Reply to  Tom Abbott
July 30, 2020 12:28 am
July 29, 2020 8:34 pm

If Dr. Immanuel has a 100% cure rate for treating her patients, maybe she should get her butt back down to Texas, and get to work. She’d be doing much better curing Texans than posing for the cameras in front of the SCOTUS.

sycomputing
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 8:47 pm

If Dr. Immanuel has a 100% cure rate for treating her patients, maybe she should get her butt back down to Texas, and get to work.

Good idea, Henry. She needs to get to those counties in Texas run by liberals, after all, they just aren’t doing very well managing the problem:

https://txdshs.maps.arcgis.com/apps/opsdashboard/index.html#/ed483ecd702b4298ab01e8b9cafc8b83

By the way, have you seen how that oddly coincides with the overall death statistics for the U.S.? I remember telling you about it, but you poo-pooed the evidence. The thing is, if you go to worldometers and sort the total deaths in the U.S. by state, the top 7 states for C-19 deaths make up OVER HALF of all deaths in the U.S.

And what do you know? They’re blue states:

https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/country/us/

Go figger right?

Well . . . surely I jest. I’M not surprised.

Rah
July 29, 2020 8:39 pm

Well I guess come November we will find out if the tech gurus that were questioned today in the HR are truly “the masters of the universe”.

For myself the only evidence I need to believe in the likely efficacy of the HCL, Zpac, zinc protocol, is the fact that big government, big media, big pharma, and big tech, are all working so hard to prevent it’s use and the disiminasion of the results of it’s use.

July 29, 2020 9:08 pm

Can someone get in touch with Dr. Immanuel and find out if having sex with Stormy Daniels (Stephanie Clifford) causes one to need two hands to drink a glass of water and makes one have trouble walking down a ramp?

sycomputing
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 9:25 pm

Look at ya Henry. Now you’ve gone full [snip] [Let’s keep the name calling out of our discussion. -mod]

Ain’t you ashamed?

Well look, anyway I guess I’m off to bed. It was fun intellectually slapping yours and Adrian’s faces repeatedly on both sides till you cried like two red-headed stepchildren stuck in the basement of Stupid.

But I’m sorry. I was in a mean mood this evening.

It WAS still fun though. I won’t lie.

Then I’d be YOU:

https://wattsupwiththat.com/2020/07/29/hump-day-hilarity-banned-by-big-tech/#comment-3043799

Gwan
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 29, 2020 10:30 pm

You are in it right up over over head Henry Cess Pool.
You are spewing it what a tosser .

Tom Abbott
Reply to  Henry Pool
July 30, 2020 8:16 am

“causes one to need two hands to drink a glass of water and makes one have trouble walking down a ramp?”

Henry, you are a serial distorter of the truth when it comes to Donald Trump.

You distort the truth about Trump, then someone explains the actual facts of the matter to you, and then you come back later and tell the same lie over again. I guess you think if you repeat the lie often enough someone will believe it. Or you just like to jerk people’s chains. I think it is probably the latter, as I suspect you don’t really think you are going to convince anyone, especially here.

MarkW
Reply to  Tom Abbott
July 30, 2020 10:23 am

Hank seems to have a desperate need to have his ego validated.
Since he can’t get this, he responds by trying to pull everyone else down instead.

Patrick MJD
July 30, 2020 2:39 am

I got banned from Fakebook for presenting verifiable science. They wanted copy of my drivers’ license, birth certificate or passport to prove who I was. Sure…

Patrick MJD
July 30, 2020 3:42 am

Attacking the person and their “faith” and past comments rather than their observational message. Al Gore was never berated for his “Ice gone buy…” 2013 comments.

While BS like this was usually confined within the borders of a country, with instant MSM, social media feeds, this BS spreads global in an instant.

She is a migrant apparently (The first nit-pick), not sure where in Africa she is from, but I am sure she is feeling pain right now.

Alan Millar
July 30, 2020 6:07 am

I am influenced by what I know about ‘experts’ previous pronouncements and actions.

Like Michael Mann, where leaked emails showed he was in cahoots with other ‘experts’ to hide information, trying to silence critics, had presented data in a misleading way etc in furtherance of his beliefs .

When Mann pronounces on a subject, he might actually be right but I prefer to get my evidence from other sources. His previous actions and pronouncements have tainted him in my eyes and I think it absolutely right to take that into account when judging current pronouncements.

I would take that approach with this woman. Cured 350 out of 350 has she? Has she got the proof of this, what is the validity of this proof?

I mean, according to what they say, Singapore cures 1999 out of every 2000 covid patients. Does everyone believe that? Should they?

Alan Millar

Bruce Cobb
Reply to  Alan Millar
July 30, 2020 8:26 am

Your comparison of Dr. Stella, whom you call “this woman” with dipshit Mann is frankly a retarded one. Try again.

Alan Millar
Reply to  Bruce Cobb
July 30, 2020 11:04 am

“Dipshit Mann”.

I assume from this epithet that his previous actions have tainted him in your eyes and you therefore will not accept what he says without verification from a source you do trust.

Well I see you agree with me because that is exactly my approach. Though I don’t abandon that approach just because that person might have said something I would hope would eventually be proven to be correct.

Tom Abbott
July 30, 2020 9:12 am

The governor of Ohio, DeWine, just announced that he was removing the restrictions on prescribing HCQ and wants to allow doctors to prescribe it if they think it is necessary.

It’s time for all Republican governors to do the same thing.

There are only six States that do not restrict prescribing HCQ so that means a number of these States are run by Repubican governors, and these Republican governors should turn medicine back over to the doctors where it belongs, and take it away from the bureaucrats, where it doesn’t belong.

Daniel
July 30, 2020 10:35 am

Censorship is an awfully growing pattern of current life.
It’s very much frustrating for those individual who publish ( or just pass on to other people) posts and videos which are contrary to mainstream « truth ».
The fact checking duty the Gafas took over was extended much to far. WHO is supposed to be a reliable , golden source. If you do not agree you become censored. The Lancet is considered a golden source : you challenge its study concluding against HCL : you become censored.
Gafas have to be blamed and heavily challenged for this: they make enough profits to find proper ways to avoid such things as pedophil videos. Hope that Congress will achieve something, but how likely?

A Big unresolved issue is the impact on media through ad revenue.
Take the exemple of France Soir, the e-daily which in Europe carves out many tough facts against what Authorities tell and gets repeated by MSM: they got many « bad points » from a company such as Newsguard ( which « fact checks » on behalf of Gafas and other ad institutions what media And SM tell ) when they said the Lancet study was corrupted. When the study was fully retracted, they did not recover any bad point whereas they should in fairness be credited for many « good points ». As their Newsguard rating is decreasing, their ad revenue is decreasing as well. Indeed advertisers cannot afford to allocate business to « dubious » media unless they are themselves open to a decrease of their own rating.
This is for me as a citizen a hugely worrying trend , and may explain why no MSM would depart from official authorities’ talk

dkj
July 30, 2020 10:59 am

I agree that even ridiculous quacks like Stella Immanuel should not be censored. The drivel they post online would not be a problem were it not for the credulous half-wits who believe it.

2hotel9
Reply to  dkj
July 30, 2020 2:06 pm

Ahhh, poor 1/2wit, too stupid to think for yourself. Typical leftard.

Garold
Reply to  dkj
July 30, 2020 2:55 pm

I don’t care is she believes in voodoo, that the Boy Scouts assassinated JFK, and the moon landing was faked. She provides empirical evidence of the efficacy of hydrocloroquin when used in early stages of the illness. Those who don’t accept that reality have ulterior motives.

William Astley
July 30, 2020 11:29 am

In reply to Henry Pool’s comment/

Pool Said …. ” No drug is 100% effective. ”

Let’s See What the Observations Say About Your Hunch.

The HCQ cocktail is 0.14% effective…. Based on the Jewish Doctor’s evidence.

The Jewish doctor is a high reliable source of data. His data has been checked by a Group of professional German medical researchers who are helping him get his data published. His data is simple to analysis.

He did not make up what he is saying. He is real doctor. Odd that BBC did not investigate the Jewish’s doctor and inside decided.. to attack the Black Woman doctor credibility.

The Orthodox Jewish man is treating a community of Orthodox Jews who live in the same community, in New York, in his New York clinic.

The covid positive Orthodox Jews came to the Jewish doctor’s clinic for the covid HCQ cocktail treatment, as soon as they had symptoms. Because they know he has a treatment for covid. And the entire small community of Jews Know that those treated with the HCQ cocktail got better and did not require hospitalization.

The Jewish doctor treated 700 covid positive patients and had one death, a 0.14% death rate or as compared to the US death rate for the general population from covid of 4%.

The effectiveness of the HCQ cocktail is 99.86% when given with the first three days of infection compared to very best vaccines which have never exceeded an effectiveness of 70%.

My point is even if there is a new vaccine, this HCQ cocktail still will be required to save US lives and protect US patients from organ damage.

The virus starts in the throat, spends a week there and moves on the lungs and other organs.

Drug ‘effectiveness’ is also defined as what percentage of the population can take the drug without dangerous side effect.

Fortunately. HCQ, has been used for decades so we know its side effects.

If I, remember correctly, roughly 5% of the population cannot take the HCQ drug due to the patient have other illness and heart issues. There is a standard EKG test to check for heart issues before prescribing the drug which can be done in a clinic.

Here is analysis of the Michigan 6 hospital, 2541 patient HCQ study results to prove that point.

We know in the general US general population that 4% of the population dies from covid.

In the Michigan study 26% of the untreated patients died.

The Michigan study death rate for untreated patients is 4 times the rate in the general population…

We know Those dying from covid are obese, diabetic, asthmatic, and suffer from what is called Metabolic Syndrome…..

Comment: Metabolic syndrome is a fancy name for liver damage that is caused by the super high consumption of sugar which damages the liver in almost an identical matter to alcohol. The liver damage, which causes a host of pathological problems in the body, which the Medical Industry calls ‘Metabolic syndrome’, as opposed to liver damage.

26% of the Michigan study patients who were not treated with the HCQ cocktail died.

Only 13% of the Michigan study patients who were treated with the HCQ cocktail died.

The reason the Jewish doctor only had one fatality out of 700 high risk covid patients where in the Michigan study 26% of the patients died…

13% of the HCQ treated patients died in the Michigan hospital study because the patients did not receive the HCQ treatment within the first two hours of check-in…. It took 24 hours to be 81% of the Michigan patients treated with HCQ.

…and because the patients waited until they were very sick, before they went to the Michigan hospital. Remember 26% of the Michigan patients died.

These are very scared people.

This is a link to the Michigan six hospital study.

https://www.ijidonline.com/article/S1201-9712(20)30534-8/fulltext

Treatment with Hydroxychloroquine, Azithromycin, and Combination in Patients Hospitalized with COVID-19

Overall crude mortality rates were 18.1% in the entire cohort, 13.5% in the hydroxychloroquine alone group, 20.1% among those receiving hydroxychloroquine + azithromycin, 22.4% among the azithromycin alone group, and 26.4% for neither drug (p < 0.001)

Hydroxychloroquine provided a 66% hazard ratio reduction, and hydroxychloroquine+azithromycin 71% compared to neither treatment (p<0.001).

July 31, 2020 4:41 am

If you can be banned from Twitter for questioning transgenderism, why are accounts openly advocating pedophilia still on the site?

https://www.rt.com/op-ed/496690-maps-paedophillia-twitter-children/

2hotel9
Reply to  Phil Salmon
July 31, 2020 6:56 am

Because NAMBA is protected by the Democrat Party. Got to wonder, if Jack Dorsey will not block pedophiles what exactly is he protecting?