I have friends whose sons and daughters believe in this stuff... It is a crazy world nowadays... Common sense seems to have disappeared...
Culp in bid to unseat Newhouse promotes Ivermectin
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Re: Culp in bid to unseat Newhouse promotes Ivermectin
pasayten
Ray Peterson
Ray Peterson
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Re: Culp in bid to unseat Newhouse promotes Ivermectin
I think the ivermectin scheme was a brilliant method to get the conspiracy folks dewormed. Not sure who came up with the idea but it has worked perfectly. Unfortunately I order ivermectin injectable for deworming my cows and they are sold out. Can’t believe anybody would ingest injectable stuff but the same crowd believes pasteurized milk will kill you. Kooks!
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Culp in bid to unseat Newhouse promotes Ivermectin
https://www.bellinghamherald.com/news/c ... 52598.html
'“I want to make sure you and your family have everything available to combat this virus if you or someone you love gets it,” Culp wrote in a Feb. 9 email to supporters, with the subject line, “A Personal Message about the Chinese Virus.” TOP VIDEOS WATCH MORE × There is a pebble beach near Ferndale only accessible by one road Culp said he recently paid the Florida clinic for drugs including ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine. Most doctors won’t prescribe them, he wrote, because of “lies coming from Big Pharma, the US Government, the media, and of course Dr. Fauci.” In reality, most doctors do not prescribe those drugs because – despite being hyped by vaccine skeptics – they have not proven effective in the prevention or treatment of COVID-19 and may harm patients, according to medical experts and federal and state public health authorities. Indigenous Affairs Weekly roundup of news affecting Native American communities in the Northwest. SIGN UP This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has warned against the use of hydroxychloroquine outside of hospitals or clinical trials, citing side effects including “serious heart rhythm problems that can be life-threatening.” In September, the American Medical Association joined two national pharmacist groups in opposition to prescribing or dispensing ivermectin for COVID-19, responding to a five-fold surge in calls to poison control centers from people who ingested the drug. Some were taking concentrated dosages meant for de-worming horses. In his email to supporters, Culp said he paid the clinic $110 for an online appointment with a doctor and another $155 for the prescriptions to be mailed from a pharmacy. “Easy,” he wrote. He advertised the clinic again Thursday in a message to his more than 16,000 followers on GETTR, the conservative social media platform founded by a Trump adviser as an alternative to Twitter. Dr. Christine Johnston, an infectious diseases specialist at the University of Washington School of Medicine, said hydroxychloroquine, an anti-malarial drug, “has been studied now in several well-done studies that have shown no benefits for using it” to treat or prevent COVID-19. $2 for 2 months Subscribe for unlimited access to our website, app, eEdition and more CLAIM OFFER A large 2020 clinical trial co-led by Johnston found people who received hydroxychloroquine were no less likely to become infected than those who received placebos. It also found no evidence that people who got hydroxychloroquine were less likely to develop symptoms when infected.
Read more at: https://www.bellinghamherald.com/news/c ... rylink=cpy
'“I want to make sure you and your family have everything available to combat this virus if you or someone you love gets it,” Culp wrote in a Feb. 9 email to supporters, with the subject line, “A Personal Message about the Chinese Virus.” TOP VIDEOS WATCH MORE × There is a pebble beach near Ferndale only accessible by one road Culp said he recently paid the Florida clinic for drugs including ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine. Most doctors won’t prescribe them, he wrote, because of “lies coming from Big Pharma, the US Government, the media, and of course Dr. Fauci.” In reality, most doctors do not prescribe those drugs because – despite being hyped by vaccine skeptics – they have not proven effective in the prevention or treatment of COVID-19 and may harm patients, according to medical experts and federal and state public health authorities. Indigenous Affairs Weekly roundup of news affecting Native American communities in the Northwest. SIGN UP This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has warned against the use of hydroxychloroquine outside of hospitals or clinical trials, citing side effects including “serious heart rhythm problems that can be life-threatening.” In September, the American Medical Association joined two national pharmacist groups in opposition to prescribing or dispensing ivermectin for COVID-19, responding to a five-fold surge in calls to poison control centers from people who ingested the drug. Some were taking concentrated dosages meant for de-worming horses. In his email to supporters, Culp said he paid the clinic $110 for an online appointment with a doctor and another $155 for the prescriptions to be mailed from a pharmacy. “Easy,” he wrote. He advertised the clinic again Thursday in a message to his more than 16,000 followers on GETTR, the conservative social media platform founded by a Trump adviser as an alternative to Twitter. Dr. Christine Johnston, an infectious diseases specialist at the University of Washington School of Medicine, said hydroxychloroquine, an anti-malarial drug, “has been studied now in several well-done studies that have shown no benefits for using it” to treat or prevent COVID-19. $2 for 2 months Subscribe for unlimited access to our website, app, eEdition and more CLAIM OFFER A large 2020 clinical trial co-led by Johnston found people who received hydroxychloroquine were no less likely to become infected than those who received placebos. It also found no evidence that people who got hydroxychloroquine were less likely to develop symptoms when infected.
Read more at: https://www.bellinghamherald.com/news/c ... rylink=cpy
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