It makes a lot of sense. Perhaps people thought they were above animals when parasites don't give a fuck whether you are human or not.
FYI, where I live, they took out the most popular anti-parasite pill that was widely advertised for the past few decades from drugstore shelves and made it require a prescription. It was previously over the counter. It's not even HCQ, ivermectin or Fenbendazole.
They know you have worms in you and they want to keep them there.
Edit: I just read a bit more into the PDF and found this
Ivermectin does not pass through the blood-brain barrier and so
has no effect on parasites which have entered the brain. Even
though it is the most effective anti-helminth on the market, it has
no effect on fungal parasites. If you believe you are infected with
a fungus, consider fenbendazole, which treats both helminths
and fungus. If you gain temporary relief from fenbendazole or
ivermectin, but your symptoms keep recurring, it is possible your
central nervous system has been infected. Mebendazole will
bypass the blood-brain barrier to treat such infections.
Mebendazole is what they took out of the drugstore shelves and made a prescription a requirement to buy it. Now it makes more sense.
I looked into mebendazole. Actually ordered a bunch from overseas last year. My research indicated that it is still perfectly legal in the US and does not require a prescription, having been sold OTC for many years. The (ostensible) reason for it not being available is that it was replaced by newer, superior drugs that do the same thing better. Either way you can't find it or buy it here in the US. But it can be ordered from other countries. I got mine from reynoldsmeds.com.
Also: haven't read it yet, but will. But ... the MMS advocates say it works for this too. The books by Jim Humble have other protocols that they day work for this as well. My personal experience with nebulized hydrogen peroxide (which works through the same action as mms) is positive as well, although there was no official diagnosis of a parasite in the case I observed.
Will do. Anecdotally can confirm from personal experience with assistants to hero vets who find parasites in pets and hint that some meds can be taken by both humans and animals with no problems, off label off the record... And owners come back with gratitude for clearing up long-term problems that their docs never made headway on, only treating symptoms with pills that caused more side effects than they resolved. Their lab results never showed parasites, but some people expelled things that looked like them. My only conclusion is that the tests exclude parasites or the results do.
It makes a lot of sense. Perhaps people thought they were above animals when parasites don't give a fuck whether you are human or not.
FYI, where I live, they took out the most popular anti-parasite pill that was widely advertised for the past few decades from drugstore shelves and made it require a prescription. It was previously over the counter. It's not even HCQ, ivermectin or Fenbendazole.
They know you have worms in you and they want to keep them there.
Edit: I just read a bit more into the PDF and found this
Mebendazole is what they took out of the drugstore shelves and made a prescription a requirement to buy it. Now it makes more sense.
I looked into mebendazole. Actually ordered a bunch from overseas last year. My research indicated that it is still perfectly legal in the US and does not require a prescription, having been sold OTC for many years. The (ostensible) reason for it not being available is that it was replaced by newer, superior drugs that do the same thing better. Either way you can't find it or buy it here in the US. But it can be ordered from other countries. I got mine from reynoldsmeds.com.
Yeah, I noticed they also took out Pyrantel in my country. They are just hitting all of the antiparasite drugs.
Also: haven't read it yet, but will. But ... the MMS advocates say it works for this too. The books by Jim Humble have other protocols that they day work for this as well. My personal experience with nebulized hydrogen peroxide (which works through the same action as mms) is positive as well, although there was no official diagnosis of a parasite in the case I observed.
Apparently there is a long history of whistleblowers saying that labs routinely remove positives for parasites from results.
I never heard that. If you happen across one of the parasite whistleblowers, please post it. Thanks.
Will do. Anecdotally can confirm from personal experience with assistants to hero vets who find parasites in pets and hint that some meds can be taken by both humans and animals with no problems, off label off the record... And owners come back with gratitude for clearing up long-term problems that their docs never made headway on, only treating symptoms with pills that caused more side effects than they resolved. Their lab results never showed parasites, but some people expelled things that looked like them. My only conclusion is that the tests exclude parasites or the results do.
For anyone reading this thread, the pdf has many links testifying to poor diagnosis of parasites. No whistleblowers though.