McCullough has been advocating for direct exposure to covid in order to build natural immunity for a long time, perhaps even since the alpha strains. I remember him saying so in interviews with Alison Morrow. I disagreed with it then because despite the fact that natural immunity appears to be the checkmate against covid, those early strains seemed to be legitimately a significant risk to the elderly. Ivermectin seemed a much more preferable countermeasure than direct exposure back then, considering what we've been able to glean about it's efficacy in India and Japan.
Nowadays, I can see the reasoning. Why fuck about with Ivermectin? That's just another selection pressure for covid to grow and evade. Just catch Omicron. You're almost certain not to die, even in comparison to earlier strains which were overwhelmingly non-fatal, even as a fat old geriatric, and by the end you're protected.
Ivermectin isn't just another selection pressure, stopping the mechanism the vaccine uses to replicate is impossible for the virus to mutate around it. The virus requires that cell machinery to work.
And this is the real reason why they want to block ivermectin, because it works on that entire class of RNA viruses. There's no pandemic 2.0 to bring about microchips and the great culling if people start using ivermectin.
Think about it this way, you can evolve a horse into a giraffe, you just have an environment where they have to eat leaves higher and higher up - that's like vaccines, synthetic antibodies, etc. But you can't evolve a horse into a turtle, they're just too different - that's like ivermectin.
Japan started clinical trials on Ivermectin early 2021, from what little I could find about the trials is it seemed to help quite a bit in the early stage when symptoms first showed but did nothing if you were one of the unlucky one who needed a ventilator to live and likely to die, by that point it was too late. People on the right seem to treat it like a wonder drug, it's not a cure all potion from an rpg but it does help those who catch it early and don't just assume flu or cold.....Hydroxy whatever the name seems to be better though.
Obviously a therapy will only work while you have the disease it is treating. Agents that work against the virus will only work while you have the virus.
Ivermectin shows considerable effectiveness even in late treatment, indicating that some virus is still present or it has some other mechanism of action as well (such as anti-inflammation).
McCullough has been advocating for direct exposure to covid in order to build natural immunity for a long time, perhaps even since the alpha strains. I remember him saying so in interviews with Alison Morrow. I disagreed with it then because despite the fact that natural immunity appears to be the checkmate against covid, those early strains seemed to be legitimately a significant risk to the elderly. Ivermectin seemed a much more preferable countermeasure than direct exposure back then, considering what we've been able to glean about it's efficacy in India and Japan.
Nowadays, I can see the reasoning. Why fuck about with Ivermectin? That's just another selection pressure for covid to grow and evade. Just catch Omicron. You're almost certain not to die, even in comparison to earlier strains which were overwhelmingly non-fatal, even as a fat old geriatric, and by the end you're protected.
Ivermectin isn't just another selection pressure, stopping the mechanism the vaccine uses to replicate is impossible for the virus to mutate around it. The virus requires that cell machinery to work.
And this is the real reason why they want to block ivermectin, because it works on that entire class of RNA viruses. There's no pandemic 2.0 to bring about microchips and the great culling if people start using ivermectin.
Think about it this way, you can evolve a horse into a giraffe, you just have an environment where they have to eat leaves higher and higher up - that's like vaccines, synthetic antibodies, etc. But you can't evolve a horse into a turtle, they're just too different - that's like ivermectin.
Japan started clinical trials on Ivermectin early 2021, from what little I could find about the trials is it seemed to help quite a bit in the early stage when symptoms first showed but did nothing if you were one of the unlucky one who needed a ventilator to live and likely to die, by that point it was too late. People on the right seem to treat it like a wonder drug, it's not a cure all potion from an rpg but it does help those who catch it early and don't just assume flu or cold.....Hydroxy whatever the name seems to be better though.
https://mainichi.jp/english/articles/20200317/p2a/00m/0na/026000c
Obviously a therapy will only work while you have the disease it is treating. Agents that work against the virus will only work while you have the virus.
Ivermectin shows considerable effectiveness even in late treatment, indicating that some virus is still present or it has some other mechanism of action as well (such as anti-inflammation).
This is well better than hydroxychloroquine at all stages.