Anonymous ID: a2cc2a Aug. 1, 2020, 6:37 a.m. No.10148693   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8830

these evil faggots are shit scared of the hydroxycholoroquine combo cure. you know this is a cure for all the virus' that kill our sick and elderly as well as a potential cure for others. Q told us that cures would come right?

 

they have been over prescribing antibiotics for years now, weakening everyone's immune systems, on purpose

 

how many of them have the "inside line" on investing in the covid19 vaccine?

 

check out the following article, written by an "online technology reporter" in Australia for their propaganda media ABC - the author is Ariel Bogle - [has locked her tweets] (https://twitter.com/arielbogle)

 

the article refutes the Dr's summit and shits on Trump, however look at the pathetic references they use:

 

  • Derek Lowe, a long-time drug discovery researcher and author of In the Pipeline, a long-running science blog on the Science Translational Medicine website. (derekb.lowe@gmail.com) (https://twitter.com/dereklowe)

 

  • Elise Thomas, a misinformation researcher at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute. (elisethomas@aspi.org.au)

 

  • George Buchanan, a researcher at the University of Melbourne. Associate Professor in the School of Computing and Information System. (george.buchanan@unimelb.edu.au)

 

Hydroxychloroquine is a poor coronavirus treatment but a perfect parable for our times

 

https://www.abc.net.au/news/science/2020-08-01/hydroxychloroquine-coronavirus-drug-now-right-wing-ideology/12510812

 

The group had all the trappings of medical authority.

 

Wearing white coats as they stood with serious faces in front of the US Supreme Court earlier this week, they called themselves "America's Frontline Doctors".

 

In the video of their press conference, which was livestreamed on Facebook, the group promoted a familiar but controversial narrative: that the drug hydroxychloroquine could help treat COVID-19.

 

They made their claims despite large scientific studies showing the drug doesn't benefit people hospitalised with the disease.

 

The original clip was removed from Facebook but it lived on, with a retweet from US President Donald Trump and a boost on Instagram from celebrities like Madonna. After that, right-wing and conspiratorial online communities — including those in Australia — made a point of keeping the video available online.