First the article says this: "Growing up in a small town, rural area, we've all accidentally been exposed to ivermectin at some time. So, it's something people are familiar with. Because of those accidental sticks when trying to inoculate cattle, they're less afraid of it," he said. And then the article says this: McElyea said, however, that people are suffering real ramifications from taking a dosage meant for a full-sized horse, including "scary" instances of vision loss, nausea, and vomiting.
This makes no sense, and when a thing makes no sense it isn't true. People who are accustomed to dosing their livestock with ivermectin would also know it's dosed according to weight. I know this because I have horses and have had to set the applicator dosing amount to different horse weights. Ergo, these same people would not be so stupid as to dose themselves with the entire applicator in one fell swoop.
As far as I can tell, there is no situation where you would just blindly dump the whole syringe into your horse or cow.
Not anymore than you would dump the whole bottle of Aspirin down your throat at once.
So where is it that are people ignorant enough to buy a medicine with a horse on the front, with a weight based dosing mechanism, and think that putting it all into a human being, all at once, makes sense?
The whole premise is BS, just like the notion of two lifelong anti-Trump Democrat scientists downing fish tank cleaner because Trump said so was BS.
This is why they made such a big deal out of the chick who took fish tank cleaner and killed her husband with it. People believed that garbage so they’ll believe this too. FBI prolly talked her into it anyway.
But the only alternative is she murdered her husband with an hcq overdose then took a small amount herself afterwards to be able to claim plausible deniability
First the article says this: "Growing up in a small town, rural area, we've all accidentally been exposed to ivermectin at some time. So, it's something people are familiar with. Because of those accidental sticks when trying to inoculate cattle, they're less afraid of it," he said. And then the article says this: McElyea said, however, that people are suffering real ramifications from taking a dosage meant for a full-sized horse, including "scary" instances of vision loss, nausea, and vomiting.
This makes no sense, and when a thing makes no sense it isn't true. People who are accustomed to dosing their livestock with ivermectin would also know it's dosed according to weight. I know this because I have horses and have had to set the applicator dosing amount to different horse weights. Ergo, these same people would not be so stupid as to dose themselves with the entire applicator in one fell swoop.
Media has brainwashed these people to think farmers/rachers are "dumb hicks".
According to the FDA, "Y'all".
That’s what I found weird too.
As far as I can tell, there is no situation where you would just blindly dump the whole syringe into your horse or cow.
Not anymore than you would dump the whole bottle of Aspirin down your throat at once.
So where is it that are people ignorant enough to buy a medicine with a horse on the front, with a weight based dosing mechanism, and think that putting it all into a human being, all at once, makes sense?
The whole premise is BS, just like the notion of two lifelong anti-Trump Democrat scientists downing fish tank cleaner because Trump said so was BS.
If I had to take the covid shot or enough ivermectin for the world’s largest horse, I’d pick the ivermectin without hesitation 😂
This is why they made such a big deal out of the chick who took fish tank cleaner and killed her husband with it. People believed that garbage so they’ll believe this too. FBI prolly talked her into it anyway.
But the only alternative is she murdered her husband with an hcq overdose then took a small amount herself afterwards to be able to claim plausible deniability
Exactly
In a study, people that tried to overdose to kill themselves had to really take a lot to cause harm.