I got into an argument over the weekend with a guy who said he works in the hospital, maybe a physician, scoffed when I told him my doctor proscribes IVM and HCQ like she's a quack.
On Ivermectin he kept asking "you know what it is?"
"An anti-parasitical."
"Yes. How does an anti-parasitical stop a virus?"
My mother got to the same block.
I mentioned that Ivermectin and HCQ, along with Zinc, make a passage for Zinc to enter the cell and inhibit cell replication. Of course, the next step is how zinc in a cell inhibit cell replication, but I'm glad I can remember that far.
Does it really matter, though? If a medicine man knew a certain leaf or berry would cure an illness, maybe he has a story that it's blessed by the Earth Mother or what not. Does it matter? He saw that it works, he remembers that it works, and he uses it.
Look up dry needle physical therapy. PTs are doing it now. They refuse to call it acupuncture, but look at it, describe it, and try not see any similarities
I got into an argument over the weekend with a guy who said he works in the hospital, maybe a physician, scoffed when I told him my doctor proscribes IVM and HCQ like she's a quack.
On Ivermectin he kept asking "you know what it is?"
"An anti-parasitical."
"Yes. How does an anti-parasitical stop a virus?"
My mother got to the same block.
I mentioned that Ivermectin and HCQ, along with Zinc, make a passage for Zinc to enter the cell and inhibit cell replication. Of course, the next step is how zinc in a cell inhibit cell replication, but I'm glad I can remember that far.
Does it really matter, though? If a medicine man knew a certain leaf or berry would cure an illness, maybe he has a story that it's blessed by the Earth Mother or what not. Does it matter? He saw that it works, he remembers that it works, and he uses it.
Look up dry needle physical therapy. PTs are doing it now. They refuse to call it acupuncture, but look at it, describe it, and try not see any similarities