My friend's mom just got diagnosed with terminal glioblastoma (brain cancer). Knowing about Ivermectin, I've been looking up scholarly research articles to present to my friend so it doesn't just get brushed aside as a tinfoil-hat kind of snake-oil cure. Yes, there are promising signs for how Ivermectin can treat different types of cancers, including glioblastomas.
However, in researching doses, I came across an article about treating cancers with Doramectin (which, as the name suggests, is an anti-parasitic related to Ivermectin; however, Doramectin is almost exclusively used in veterinary medicine, whereas IVM is used in both humans and animals).
One line in the study (I looked up the full text through my local library) stood out to me:
[Doramectin] is absorbed more quickly, and has a longer lasting effect and plasma half‑life in animals compared with IVM ...
So I'm thinking, the elites were scared of Ivermectin getting publicized, not so much because they don't want us to get our dirty little hands on Ivermectin, but because Ivermectin is the gateway drug, so to speak, to other forms of related drugs that could be even more potent.
Figured I'd throw this out into the comments maybe someone someday could look into it. I know of an old farmer that cured his cancer by injecting his blood into a pregnant cow and then drinking her colostrum milk. That's the first milk a cow makes and is very important in developing the immune system of her calf
My naturopath told me to take bovine colostrum in capsule form when I was having a weak immune system. I've heard of other people buying it from dairy farmers for the same reason. Injecting his blood into the cow, though? I wonder what's with that?
It's been awhile since I heard the story but he either had blood cancer or something in stage 4 that was traveling through his blood. He thought he would get the cow to make immunity to it specifically that way.