She got the jab 8 months ago, caught a cold last week and her body shut down all her organs, she got myocarditis, and died. My neigbor got the jab too. He is now completely against the vaccine. I got to him too late to educate him. I moved there about 6 months ago and he was already jabbed. Sad man. She was fit, would do mirathons and drills. Only in her 30s. To me it sounds like ADE.
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Sure, I'll cave to the pressure of some anonymous person on this site with 7 posts to their name! I have now done a fairly thorough review, and I can find no medical professional, who is in favor of ivermectin use to fight covid, who says taking the veterinary version would be a good thing to do (they highly caution against it). What is funny, is the same people who complain about all the unknown ingredients of the covid shots, will gladly ingest a substance with 88% unknown ingredients, and a long list of safety issues. What are the known side effects of the "horse paste"? What are the long-term implications of the "horse paste"? Hint: nobody knows because until now, humans haven't ingested it.
I was with a family who were in the first stages of covid; they thought it was something else and weren't feeling that bad when we visited (we didn't know anything about that :) ). The got progressively worse and were later tested positive for covid. Of the five people in their family, two 20-something daughters recovered pretty fast, one never showed symptoms, however, the 60-ish parents are not doing well at all, with very bad coughs at this point. I started showing symptoms 6 days after visiting them, and I have many of the covid symptoms, but fortunately, no bad cough yet.
I'm just surprised that people are willing to ingest a fairly large quantity of something that they have no idea what is in it. Just for argument's sake, what if there is an ingredient in there that is completely harmless to horses, but not so good for humans? Sort of like some human medicine that contains chocolate, but someone decides, "Well, it worked for me, so it will probably be ok for my dog".