What Can You Do About Ivermectin?
Because we are past the point of waiting for those at the top to do the right thing
There are few certainties in this world at the moment, it would be fair to say. We are seemingly in the midst of the brief historical period that will one day be looked back on (probably not with affection) as the Great Disinformation Wars. That said: I would categorise the effectiveness of Ivermectin as a prophylactic and early treatment option for Covid-19 infectees as close to the top of this exclusive certainty list.
That is why i’ve gone so hard on it, and anyone who truly wants to wake people up to an agenda lying underneath the pandemic — or, more simply, would just like to help save lives that our Big Pharma overlords appear stunningly indifferent to — should be making it their main focus as well.
The presence of corruption in our health and pharmaceutical industries was my first red pill, way back in the day, so I saw early in the pandemic this latest and most extreme manifestation for what it was. And I still watch it, like many others, absolutely appalled by just how nakedly shameless this corruption has become.
I still have hope in some miraculous change of heart at the top levels of society: that Tony Fauci, in a last minute act of redemption before his inevitable brutal public fall from grace, decides to come clean; that the World Health Organisation is exorcised of its satanic possession and reverses its current stance; and that the flow-on effect even reaches our pitiful politics down-under, where the IVM flag is still being valiantly flown by a climate-change-denying ex-furniture salesman.
Yet these people who occupy the upper echelons have given no reason to maintain hope in such come-to-Yeshua spiritual transformations. So, to channel my inner doomer: to hold such hope now feels increasingly counter-productive. It is going to have to come from the ground-up.
And maybe that is for the best. In fact, I think this is how it needs to play out: these lofty individuals, these esteemed bodies, these sources of authority that we have long devolved our responsibility for key health decisions onto must die a slow and painful (metaphorical) death in front of our eyes, so that it properly hits home that the responsibility for these decisions must be our own.
If you are one of the people who is now, like me, convinced that there are treatments for Covid-19 (mainly Ivermectin, but let’s not forget ol’ mate HCQ) currently being denied by our Government and health bureaucracies — and (also like me) you have no expectations that these gatekeepers will change their positions any time soon — you may be starting to ask the question: what the (insert chosen expletive) can I do about it?
Because we really do need to do something about it. This shiz is getting real, fast: let’s be honest. I don’t think a neutral, passive stance on some of these Covid civil infringements can be justified for much longer, especially when they look set on bringing in the kids.
Such civil action is particularly important in Australia, still tenuously holding on to its claim of being the Lucky Covid Country. It is a highly likely scenario that, sometime in the near future, we will leave behind once and for all this dream of a zero-Covid future — one that has been declared unrealistic by almost 90% of experts — and embrace the uncomfortable reality that the rest of the world has long been dealing with. With such a scenario looming, the following question can act as motivation for collective action: what tangible actions can we take to help ensure that life saving treatments will be available for our loved ones should they need them?
If you are already asking this question, that is absolutely amazing, because there is very limited scope for a conspiracy theorist to be changing the minds of the general public. We urgently need to shift the heavy work off the shoulders of climate-change-questioning, ex-furniture selling politicians (not that Craig Kelly hasn’t served his purpose) if we hope to get anywhere with this.
If you have never engaged in discussion of this type before, it can be difficult to know where to start.
In a shameless and unrepentant plug of my own hard work, you are more than welcome to share my articles. You can even share this post!
But I would start with this one, which tries to explain as concisely as possible why both HCQ and IVM are still important, even with a vaccine and even in the relatively Covid-free expanses of Australia.
That said, I would focus on Ivermectin. I do strongly believe HCQ does and can work — but clearly not as well, and the debate is far messier, weighed down as it is by the Orange baggage of the United State’s 45th President.
You might want to share this aggregating site, which provides analyses of all current studies on Ivermectin. It is easy to navigate, with summary boxes at the top, followed by easy to understand summaries of individual papers and the overall body of research.
But few people have the time and skills necessary to fully comprehend the nuances of these studies (if you do, you are either fully aware of the promise of Ivermectin, or alternatively probably a paid shill). Thankfully, there are plenty of other gifted analysts who can do this for us, while also pulling together the broader contextual factors that are crucial to understanding how we have gotten here.
If they are a bit of a reader, I would suggest this recent piece from a journalist who has been documenting and writing about the Ivermectin story right from the beginning.
If you think videos are more likely to be engaged with, I would suggest this short 20 minute conversation. It ticks off all of the major hot button issues and exposes the overall suppression agenda, virtually beyond reasonable doubt.
If you think someone would benefit from something more anecdotal and personal, I would suggest this short interview recounting the remarkable events in a nursing home in Toronto, when aged care residents recently dosed with Ivermectin performed better than their younger and healthier carers during a subsequent Covid outbreak.
But simply sharing links and hoping for the best is not how we will get this done. We need real, meaningful conversations that occur in real life with real people, where exchanges in good faith about a difficult and controversial topic can bring about more profound and lasting impact.
As with all forms of teaching, all we aim to do is plant seeds. To plant them humbly and with detachment, and to tap into the belief that we all have (black-pillers and doomers excluded) that things don’t have to be as bad as they might seem; that a better world might actually be closer than we think.
Whether someone is in place to listen to and receive what we are telling them is largely out of our hands — all we can do is what we can, and leave the rest to whoever/whatever you believe is really in charge.
If things really don’t improve at the top, we may find ourselves having to have these conversations with our Doctors. In fact: of course we should be having these conversations with our Doctors? We are readily invited to have such discussions when it comes to vaccines, after all.
This is where the heavy weapons might need to be brought out. The biggest one at the moment is the website of the Front Line COVID-19 Critical Care Alliance.
If they are a journal article reader, then the first stop is FLCCC’s recently accepted review paper — which combines first hand experience on the frontlines treating patients, with the scientific research and real world data from around the world. Alternatively, there is the especially handy one pager.
Now, to finish, I would also discreetly point out that the FLCCC Alliance has what is widely agreed to be the best practice protocols for prevention and early outpatient treatment of Covid 19 patients — including the specific doses of Ivermectin that are being used in real life settings.
Oh great: now he is encouraging self-medication of unapproved drugs.
Firstly, no, of course i’m not. Secondly, even if I actually was, I obviously wouldn’t admit to it outright.
But hey: if you miraculously did happen to have some Ivermectin handy, and suddenly found yourselves or one of your loved ones afflicted with the dreaded Kung Flu, at least you know where to go.
Self medication of unapproved drugs might seem a bit extreme, but real health freedom and empowerment is going to be a brave new world.