Category: Covid-19 Truth Page 32 of 55
After blowback from her viral video in May, RN Nicole Sirotek is speaking out about her experience working in a NYC hospital at the beginning of the #Covid19 crisis and negligent treatments administered on covid patients that lead to unnecessary deaths. Hear how this brave whistleblower is demanding change for Covid patient treatment.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3iV8X8ubGCc
“I’m brave enough to know that what they tell me to think is what I think.”
“I’m brave enough to scream at people who are not as scared as I am.”
“I’m brave enough to resist the temptation to think for myself.”
“I’m brave enough to know that when my gut tells me I’m being fooled, I’m wrong.”
“I’m brave enough to do as I’m told without questioning it.”
“I’m brave enough to get my personal worldview from the media.”
“I’m brave enough to dismiss all ideas that the fact checkers say are ‘false.'”
“Bravery is going into a fight-or-flight response when someone sneezes.”
“I’m brave enough to live in never ending terror of a virus.”
“I’m brave enough to know that politicians know what’s best for me.”
“I’m brave enough to feel ashamed if I’m not wearing a mask in public.”
“I’m brave enough to boldly teach my kids to boldly fear human connection.”
“I’m brave enough to keep my child from going to a school that doesn’t require children to cover their faces all day.”
“I’m brave enough to know that I’m helpless without someone telling me what I’m allowed to do.”
A child passes out in school due to having to wear a mask during P.E..
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fTzJuI1z7K0
A study on the Covid PCR tests, published in the Oxford University Press finds that at 25 amplification cycles, 70% of positive tests for Covid are not really cases because the virus is dead. At 35 amplification cycles, 97% of positive tests for Covid are not really cases because the virus is dead. The US runs 40 amplification cycles, which is 32 times that of 35 amplification cycles. At that amplification, they’re only going to pick up dead viruses, of which none should be called cases.
“A new review of 79 studies comprised of 5,349 individuals found that ‘no study detected live SARS-Covid 2 virus beyond day-9 of the illness.’ If the virus isn’t live it’s obviously not contagious. This, of course, contradicts the 14-day quarantine mandate….”
114:10 “The more vaccines you take, the higher probability of immune system damage.”
116:00 They’re producing the next pandemic in a lab as we speak. Bill Gates predicts the next pandemic will be much worse than this one. “Eventually, it’s going to get to be really deadly even to normal people.”
Justice Gorsuch: Government not free to disregard free exercise of religion during Covid crisis
November 27, 2020
The following is a full text of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch’s concurring opinion in ROMAN CATHOLIC DIOCESE OF BROOKLYN, NEW YORK v. ANDREW M. CUOMO, GOVERNOR OF NEW YORK, in which the court struck down the governor’s Covid restrictions targeting church services
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Government is not free to disregard the First Amendment in times of crisis. At a minimum, that Amendment prohibits government officials from treating religious exercises worse than comparable secular activities, unless they are pursuing a compelling interest and using the least restrictive means available. See Church of Lukumi Babalu Aye, Inc. v. Hialeah, 508 U. S. 520, 546 (1993). Yet recently, during the COVID pandemic, certain States seem to have ignored these long-settled principles.
Today’s case supplies just the latest example. New York’s Governor has asserted the power to assign different color codes to different parts of the State and govern each by executive decree. In “red zones,” houses of worship are all but closed—limited to a maximum of 10 people. In the Orthodox Jewish community that limit might operate to exclude all women, considering 10 men are necessary to establish a minyan, or a quorum.
At the same time, the Governor has chosen to impose no capacity restrictions on certain businesses he considers “essential.” And it turns out the businesses the Governor considers essential include hardware stores, acupuncturists, and liquor stores. Bicycle repair shops, certain signage companies, accountants, lawyers, and insurance agents are all essential too. So, at least according to the Governor, it may be unsafe to go to church, but it is always fine to pick up another bottle of wine, shop for a new bike, or spend the afternoon exploring your distal points and meridians.In “orange zones,” it’s not much different. Churches and synagogues are limited to a maximum of 25 people. These restrictions apply even to the largest cathedrals and synagogues, which ordinarily hold hundreds. And the restrictions apply no matter the precautions taken, including social distancing, wearing masks, leaving doors and windows open, forgoing singing, and disinfecting spaces between services.
Who knew public health would so perfectly align with secular convenience?
As almost everyone on the Court today recognizes, squaring the Governor’s edicts with our traditional First Amendment rules is no easy task. People may gather inside for extended periods in bus stations and airports, in laundromats and banks, in hardware stores and liquor shops. No apparent reason exists why people may not gather, subject to identical restrictions, in churches or synagogues, especially when religious institutions have made plain that they stand ready, able, and willing to follow all the safety precautions required of “essential” businesses and perhaps more besides.
The only explanation for treating religious places differently seems to be a judgment that what happens there just isn’t as “essential” as what happens in secular spaces. Indeed, the Governor is remarkably frank about this: In his judgment laundry and liquor, travel and tools, are all “essential” while traditional religious exercises are not. That is exactly the kind of discrimination the First Amendment forbids.
Nor is the problem an isolated one. In recent months, certain other Governors have issued similar edicts. At the flick of a pen, they have asserted the right to privilege restaurants, marijuana dispensaries, and casinos over churches, mosques, and temples. See Calvary Chapel Dayton Valley v. Sisolak, 591 U. S. ___, ___ (2020) (GORSUCH, J., dissenting).
In far too many places, for far too long, our first freedom has fallen on deaf ears.
*
What could justify so radical a departure from the First Amendment’s terms and long-settled rules about its application? Our colleagues offer two possible answers. Initially, some point to a solo concurrence in South Bay Pentecostal Church v. Newsom, 590 U. S. ___ (2020), in which THE CHIEF JUSTICE expressed willingness to defer to executive orders in the pandemic’s early stages based on the newness of the emergency and how little was then known about the disease. Post, at 5 (opinion of BREYER, J.). At that time, COVID had been with us, in earnest, for just three months. Now, as we round out 2020 and face the prospect of entering a second calendar year living in the pandemic’s shadow, that rationale has expired according to its own terms.
Even if the Constitution has taken a holiday during this pandemic, it cannot become a sabbatical. Rather than apply a nonbinding and expired concurrence from South Bay, courts must resume applying the Free Exercise Clause. Today, a majority of the Court makes this plain. Not only did the South Bay concurrence address different circumstances than we now face, that opinion was mistaken from the start.
To justify its result, the concurrence reached back 100 years in the U. S. Reports to grab hold of our decision in Jacobson v. Massachusetts, 197 U. S. 11 (1905). But Jacobson hardly supports cutting the Constitution loose during a pandemic. That decision involved an entirely different mode of analysis, an entirely different right, and an entirely different kind of restriction.
Start with the mode of analysis. Although Jacobson predated the modern tiers of scrutiny, this Court essentially applied rational basis review to Henning Jacobson’s challenge to a state law that, in light of an ongoing smallpox pandemic, required individuals to take a vaccine, pay a $5 fine, or establish that they qualified for an exemption. Id., at 25 (asking whether the State’s scheme was “reasonable”); id., at 27 (same); id., at 28 (same). Rational basis review is the test this Court normally applies to Fourteenth Amendment challenges, so long as they do not involve suspect classifications based on race or some other ground, or a claim of fundamental right.
Put differently, Jacobson didn’t seek to depart from normal legal rules during a pandemic, and it supplies no precedent for doing so. Instead, Jacobson applied what would become the traditional legal test associated with the right at issue—exactly what the Court does today. Here, that means strict scrutiny: The First Amendment traditionally requires a State to treat religious exercises at least as well as comparable secular activities unless it can meet the demands of strict scrutiny—showing it has employed the most narrowly tailored means available to satisfy a compelling state interest. Church of Lukumi, 508 U. S., at 546.
Next, consider the right asserted. Mr. Jacobson claimed that he possessed an implied “substantive due process” right to “bodily integrity” that emanated from the Fourteenth Amendment and allowed him to avoid not only the vaccine but also the $5 fine (about $140 today) and the need to show he qualified for an exemption. 197 U. S., at 13–14. This Court disagreed. But what does that have to do with our circumstances? Even if judges may impose emergency restrictions on rights that some of them have found hiding in the Constitution’s penumbras, it does not follow that the same fate should befall the textually explicit right to religious exercise.
Finally, consider the different nature of the restriction. In Jacobson, individuals could accept the vaccine, pay the fine, or identify a basis for exemption. Id., at 12, 14. The imposition on Mr. Jacobson’s claimed right to bodily integrity, thus, was avoidable and relatively modest. It easily survived rational basis review, and might even have survived strict scrutiny, given the opt-outs available to certain objectors. Id., at 36, 38–39.
Here, by contrast, the State has effectively sought to ban all traditional forms of worship in affected “zones” whenever the Governor decrees and for as long as he chooses. Nothing in Jacobson purported to address, let alone approve, such serious and long-lasting intrusions into settled constitutional rights. In fact, Jacobson explained that the challenged law survived only because it did not “contravene the Constitution of the United States” or “infringe any right granted or secured by that instrument.” Id., at 25.
Tellingly no Justice now disputes any of these points. Nor does any Justice seek to explain why anything other than our usual constitutional standards should apply during the current pandemic.
In fact, today the author of the South Bay concurrence even downplays the relevance of Jacobson for cases like the one before us. Post, at 2 (opinion of ROBERTS, C. J.). All this is surely a welcome development. But it would require a serious rewriting of history to suggest, as THE CHIEF JUSTICE does, that the South Bay concurrence never really relied in significant measure on Jacobson. That was the first case South Bay cited on the substantive legal question before the Court, it was the only case cited involving a pandemic, and many lower courts quite understandably read its invocation as inviting them to slacken their enforcement of constitutional liberties while COVID lingers. See, e.g., Elim Romanian Pentecostal Church v. Pritzker, 962 F. 3d 341, 347 (CA7 2020); Legacy Church, Inc. v. Kunkel, ___ F. Supp. 3d ___, ___ (NM 2020).
Why have some mistaken this Court’s modest decision in Jacobson for a towering authority that overshadows the Constitution during a pandemic? In the end, I can only surmise that much of the answer lies in a particular judicial impulse to stay out of the way in times of crisis. But if that impulse may be understandable or even admirable in other circumstances, we may not shelter in place when the Constitution is under attack. Things never go well when we do.
*
That leaves my colleagues to their second line of argument. Maybe precedent does not support the Governor’s actions. Maybe those actions do violate the Constitution. But, they say, we should stay our hand all the same. Even if the churches and synagogues before us have been subject to unconstitutional restrictions for months, it is no matter because, just the other day, the Governor changed his color code for Brooklyn and Queens where the plaintiffs are located. Now those regions are “yellow zones” and the challenged restrictions on worship associated with “orange” and “red zones” do not apply. So, the reasoning goes, we should send the plaintiffs home with an invitation to return later if need be.
To my mind, this reply only advances the case for intervention. It has taken weeks for the plaintiffs to work their way through the judicial system and bring their case to us. During all this time, they were subject to unconstitutional restrictions. Now, just as this Court was preparing to act on their applications, the Governor loosened his restrictions, all while continuing to assert the power to tighten them again anytime as conditions warrant. So if we dismissed this case, nothing would prevent the Governor from reinstating the challenged restrictions tomorrow. And by the time a new challenge might work its way to us, he could just change them again.
The Governor has fought this case at every step of the way. To turn away religious leaders bringing meritorious claims just because the Governor decided to hit the “off ” switch in the shadow of our review would be, in my view, just another sacrifice of fundamental rights in the name of judicial modesty. Even our dissenting colleagues do not suggest this case is moot or otherwise outside our power to decide. They counsel delay only because “the disease-related circumstances [are] rapidly changing.” Post, at 5 (opinion of BREYER, J.).
But look at what those “rapidly changing” circumstances suggest. Both Governor Cuomo and Mayor de Blasio have “indicated it’s only a matter of time before [all] five boroughs” of New York City are flipped from yellow to orange. J. Skolnik, D. Goldiner, & D. Slattery, Staten Island Goes ‘Orange’ As Cuomo Urges Coronavirus ‘Reality Check’ Ahead of Thanksgiving, N. Y. Daily News (Nov. 23, 2020), https://www.nydailynews.com/coronavirus/ny-coronaviruscuomo-thanksgiving-20201123-yyhxfo3kzbdinbfbsqos3tvrk u-story-html.
On anyone’s account, then, it seems inevitable this dispute will require the Court’s attention. It is easy enough to say it would be a small thing to require the parties to “refile their applications” later. Post, at 3 (opinion of BREYER, J.). But none of us are rabbis wondering whether future services will be disrupted as the High Holy Days were, or priests preparing for Christmas. Nor may we discount the burden on the faithful who have lived for months under New York’s unconstitutional regime unable to attend religious services.
Whether this Court could decide a renewed application promptly is beside the point. The parties before us have already shown their entitlement to relief. Saying so now will establish clear legal rules and enable both sides to put their energy to productive use, rather than devoting it to endless emergency litigation. Saying so now will dispel, as well, misconceptions about the role of the Constitution in times of crisis, which have already been permitted to persist for too long. It is time—past time—to make plain that, while the pandemic poses many grave challenges, there is no world in which the Constitution tolerates color-coded executive edicts that reopen liquor stores and bike shops but shutter churches, synagogues, and mosques.
From: Department of Health and Human Services, State of Alaska
SARS-CoV-2 Virus Real-Time PCR
The Alaska State Public Health Laboratories in Anchorage and Fairbanks use real-time reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (rtRT-PCR) to accurately identify the presence or absence of SARS-CoV-2 viral genetic material (ribonucleic acid, or RNA) in clinical specimens collected from the respiratory tract of patients.
At the Alaska State Public Health Laboratories, our main PCR assay for SARS-CoV-2 has an end point at 37 cycles, and our backup assay to maintain capacity has an end point of 40 cycles.
Related:
5:35 “For many students, the consequences of not being in school are far greater than the health risks of dealing with covid.”
Quotes I transcribed:
8:30 “We took a unique path. We did not lock people up. We did not close any businesses…. I didn’t even define what an essential business was, because I don’t believe that I have the authority to tell you your business isn’t essential.”
9:00 “In return, the mainstream media spent countless hours and endless column inches in their papers attacking me for it. And frankly, that’s the only reason that I’m in the nation spotlight today. Liberals … have been literally kicking me in the head every night on national TV for the decisions that I’ve made for South Dakota. Rachael Maddow, Elizabeth Warren….”
“The vast majority of South Dakotans have thanked me.”
21:00 “I also consulted with attorneys who specifically focus on Constitutional authority. I wanted to know what authority did I have that the U.S. Constitution gives me, because I have taken the oath to uphold that Constitution. And I wanted to know what the Constitution of the state of South Dakota told me my authority was and what it wasn’t.”
26:30 “I’m a Christian, and I believe people are attracted to us because they want more of what we have.”
27:20 Forgiving the haters: “I had a pastor tell me one time: ‘Kristi, people are going to throw out offenses all the time. You’re the one who decides if you’re going to pick them up and carry them around. Then you’re the one carrying the burden, so who’s losing in that situation.’ I think that’s true. People are going to offend us all the time, and we need to just decide we’re going to let it lay, walk by it and just go on and be happy, and understand that what we have is special.”
She invites those who appreciate freedom to move to South Dakota!
New makeup of U.S. Supreme Court values the Constitution, and so the City of Anchorage relaxed its stranglehold on church gatherings, says Kate Vogel, the Municipal Attorney. Dec. 8, 2020, Anchorage Assembly meeting.
OUTSTANDING! I transcribed these quotes:
“Good evening, little people. Here’s what we want you to believe today. And pay close attention. We’ll be emotionally manipulating you with fear to get you to believe what doesn’t make any logical sense to you.”
“The only way to fight a virus that carries a 99.98% survival rate is with poverty that we’re getting you to create for yourself. And if you don’t think that makes sense, then remember to be afraid, so you’ll comply out of your emotional reactivity.” [Actual survival rate is 99.7% or 99.8%]
1:25 The Sequence Of Events We’re in the Middle Of Right Now:
1) You keep your business closed, so you go into poverty
2) You and everyone else are then dependent on the government for aid
3) Then everyone votes for increased gov’t control to get financial aid
4) …while having to stay compliant with gov’t mandates to qualify
5) Socialist/Communist state then results
“If this sounds like you’re ushering in and then living in a socialist/communist state, it’s because you will be. But we’re calling it something different so you don’t realize it yet. We’re calling it ‘covid relief,’ but it’s really relief from economic destruction that we’ve told you to do to yourself.”
“Because you’re watching me right now to have me tell you what to think, that means you’re not thinking for yourself, and therefore are dumb enough to fall for this. So we’ll carry on.”
“‘Covid relief,’ those are words that make you feel like the elite are protecting you, so you trust them, right?”
“Destroying your livelihood and staying committed to going deep enough into poverty for long enough so we’ll eventually give you a little bit of money is a financial plan you can trust.”
“In his very non-dictatorlike ways, Newsom responded…. In other words, shut your businesses down so you’ll need our financial aid. That’s like saying ‘if you want to be happy, get depressed so we can give you anti-depressants to make you happy.
“Hollywood is an essential business now tasked with ushering in acceptance of socialism through entertainment.”
“This just in! We at the mainstream media will not report on brave people defying draconian orders to open their businesses. We don’t want you to see hugely growing numbers of people choosing bravery and common sense over fear. Because we don’t want you to be inspired to do the same, we won’t show it to you. Instead, be afraid so you stay weak and compliant by considering this: covid will kill you 100% of the time — except for 99.98% of the time.” [Actual survival rate is 99.7% or 99.8%]
“Luckily, we’ll continue telling you what to think because we’re protecting you [JP winks].”
He also mentioned Vitamin D!: “Give them all 3-5,000 IU of vitamin D every day, which has been shown to radically reduce the likelihood of infection.”
Top Pathologist Claims COVID-19 Is “The Greatest Hoax Ever Perpetrated On An Unsuspecting Public”
Top pathologist Dr. Roger Hodkinson told government officials in Alberta during a zoom conference call that the current coronavirus crisis is “the greatest hoax ever perpetrated on an unsuspecting public.”
Hodkinson’s comments were made during a discussion involving the Community and Public Services Committee and the clip was subsequently uploaded to YouTube.
Noting that he was also an expert in virology, Hodkinson pointed out that his role as CEO of a biotech company that manufactures COVID tests means, “I might know a little bit about all this.”
“There is utterly unfounded public hysteria driven by the media and politicians, it’s outrageous, this is the greatest hoax ever perpetrated on an unsuspecting public,” said Hodkinson.
Did Scientists In Israel Prove That Wearing A Mask Shortens Your Life??
The doctor said that nothing could be done to stop the spread of the virus besides protecting older more vulnerable people and that the whole situation represented “politics playing medicine, and that’s a very dangerous game.”
People have lost touch with reality. Something is seriously wrong with the psyche of many Americans!
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John Hinderaker: A survey shows that the average person thinks 9% of people have died from covid. If that were to be true, we would all personally know many who have died from covid, which isn’t true. In reality, only a tiny fraction of 1% have died from covid:
“I mentioned there is this survey in which the average answer that Americans gave to ‘what percentage of our population has died from covid,’ the average answer is 9%. If 9% of the people in this country died from covid, your relatives, your friends, your neighbors, your coworkers, people who go to your church, they would all be dropping like flies.
How a person can simultaneously say ‘I don’t know anybody who’s died from Covid…,’ but then when asked that question, ‘I think 9% of the population has died,’ I don’t know how anybody could possibly believe that.
There used to be such a thing as common sense, based upon a person’s own experience. If somebody came along and tried to sell a line of B.S., the average person would test that proposition against his experience and his observation and he might say ‘I don’t think so. That’s not the way I see it. That hasn’t been my experience.’ It seems as if that’s just gone. Now it’s the guys in the white coats, headlines, something we heard on cable news. And there are many people who have seemed to obtain this ability to internalize those things without checking it against their own common sense, which I think if very dangerous.”
From minute-1:08:35: The Coronavirus and the Constitution | Constitution Day Celebration Panel
Disappointedly, the Constitution isn’t discussed much at all, but interesting points made, especially this quote!:
1:08:35 John Hinderaker: A survey shows that the average person thinks 9% of people have died from covid. If that were to be true, we would all personally know many who have died from covid, which isn’t true. In reality, only a tiny fraction of 1% have died from covid:
“I mentioned there is this survey in which the average answer that Americans gave to ‘what percentage of our population has died from covid,’ the average answer is 9%. If 9% of the people in this country died from covid, your relatives, your friends, your neighbors, your coworkers, people who go to your church, they would all be dropping like flies.
How a person can simultaneously say ‘I don’t know anybody who’s died from Covid…,’ but then when asked that question, ‘I think 9% of the population has died,’ I don’t know how anybody could possibly believe that.
There used to be such a thing as common sense, based upon a person’s own experience. If somebody came along and tried to sell a line of B.S., the average person would test that proposition against his experience and his observation and he might say ‘I don’t think so. That’s not the way I see it. That hasn’t been my experience.’ It seems as if that’s just gone. Now it’s the guys in the white coats, headlines, something we heard on cable news. And there are many people who have seemed to obtain this ability to internalize those things without checking it against their own common sense, which I think if very dangerous.”
Panel: “The Coronavirus and the Constitution”
Chairman: Ronald J. Pestritto
“Is Freedom of Assembly Dead?”
Robert Barnes | Barnes Law, LLP
“The Failure of Expertise”
Alex Berenson | Author and Journalist
“The Politics of the Coronavirus”
John Hinderaker | Powerline
This study finds that asymptomatic (tests positive but feels no symptoms) spread is *Not* a Significant Source of the Coronavirus19 Pandemic.
Published: 20 November 2020
Post-lockdown SARS-CoV-2 nucleic acid screening in nearly ten million residents of Wuhan, China
All close contacts of the asymptomatic positive cases tested negative, indicating that the asymptomatic positive cases detected in this study were unlikely to be infectious.
What good do the masks do, really?
We are seeing jurisdictions everywhere imposing mask bans at a rate that approaches the number of bars being threatened with liquor license revocation for failing to enforce social distancing. If that sentence seems complicated, then you are beginning to appreciate just how confusing all the arguments are about face coverings. After all, we have N95s, surgical masks, homemade cloth masks (enjoy the video), and the classic train robber bandana. Just for good measure, as I wore my cup-style dust mask on my last pass through Costco, I saw staff members wearing required face coverings that came from lathe section at Woodcraft.
Notice how surgical masks, especially, shoot aerosols out the sides, directly at passengers on airplanes, seated beside the wearer.
“There’s no good explanation why we don’t have a comprehensive, international vitamin D campaign going on right now.”
Summary:
After a week’s break, we’re back! This time with a truly puzzling bit of information.
Vitamin D has now been shown in study after study to cut Covid mortality in the elderly by a massive amount – up to an 89% reduction in deaths.
This data has been steadily accumulating for months. Vitamin D has been known to be a powerful immunomodulator for decades. It’s also known to be extremely safe…almost ridiculously safe.
Yet the UK, US and France (among other nations) neither advocate for Vitamin D supplementation in their general populations as a guard against Covid-19, nor do their current treatment protocols include it.
I have to ask: WTF? Seriously, what’s going on here? Whatever it is, it’s not based on science, nor is it concerned with patient health or survival.
So if you are a doctor there’s absolutely no reason not to be administering a large Vitamin D bolus to every patient upon check-in at the hospital. To every person out there, as a preventative for both Covid and other viral illnesses, you really should be taking Vitamin D.
WATCH VIDEO HERE:
Censored! Most Recent Covid Video Banned By YouTube
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Ivermectin is off-patent generic, available since 1981, so it’s only $20, compared to $3,000 Remdesivir that doesn’t work, but Big Pharma has pushed hard (because it’s $3,000, and they’re “love of money” driven). King Fauci won’t even mention Ivermectin.
23:30 Recommended treatment protocol
Summary:
The data is 100% in agreement: All studies show a clinical benefit for use of Ivermectin. It works as a pre-exposure prophylaxis, post exposure prophylaxis, and when given to both early and late hospitalized patients.
Early, late, pre and post! 100% of the time it works every time! [play on Anchorman quote there]
As importantly, one study shows a profound improvement in the symptoms for the “long haul” Covid sufferers, for which no other treatments seem to have worked.
If you think you’ve been exposed, or have been exposed, or work in a high risk situation, or you have Covid symptoms, or you are a long haul sufferers, the data is clear: take Ivermectin immediately.
The sooner the better. As is always true of an antiviral. Or antibiotic. That should be crystal clear to everyone except the designers of the tragic RECOVERY trial in the UK, and various W.H.O. study designers. They seem to be a bit dense on the topic for *cough$$$*cough some unknown reason$.
If your health provider won’t provide Ivermectin, then go elsewhere. You have a quack, or a slow learner on your hands, not an up-to-date doc.
WATCH VIDEO HERE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z5-S49EqCJ8
