Why does ivermectin work for COVID? Can someone drop some links for me?
You're viewing a single comment thread. View all comments, or full comment thread.
Comments (28)
sorted by:
Ivermectin is an antiparasitic. A virus lives in its host just like a parasite. Ivermectin cannot distinguish between a parasite and a virus so it fights off both.
https://odysee.com/@bonniesmit:0/Dr.-Ryan-Cole--StoptheMandate:2
Viruses are not alive.
The mRNA vaccine is not a vaccine but is referred as such for the sake of avoiding all the technical speak. While a virus may not be considered a living organism, it replicates in a host, thus acting as if it were alive. I guess I could have said, "A virus mimics the actions of "living" by replicating itself inside of a host in a similar way that a parasite does inside said host." Better?
All that to say, it doesn't change my response to the OP's question.
Viruses may not be alive but do replicate. The spike protein invades cells via the ace 2 receptor, it kills the cell. When the cell dies the proteins in the living cell convert to spike proteins, which mimic the genetic make-up of the invader spike protein. The dead cell then sheds the spike proteins and invade neighboring cells and the process continues until either the body's immune response stops the replication or the patient dies.
Ivermectin has 22 different benefits for killing the virus and aiding in natural immune response..
Viruses may not be alive....killing the virus....
Maybe more accurate to say, zinc stops the replication of the spike proteins. And Ivermectin has 22 benefits to stopping the reproduction of the virus.
When I "kill a monster" in a video game I am not really killing anything am I?
The term "kills the virus" is a colloquialism, you are arguing semantics.
But if cv is actually nano tech, not a virus, then it'll appear to be alive
Exactly. It replicates inside a host acting as though it is "living".