>trying to monopolize the lifesaving drug Daraprim,
Both Daraprin and HCQ are used to treat blood borne parasites. HCQ the Plasmodium Falciparum malaria and Daraprim toxoplasmosis.
> So why would an animal with countless generations of predator avoidance programmed into it suddenly break that programming and offer itself up as a meal? The answer is a singled-celled microscopic organism called Toxoplasma gondii.
>T. gondii is not a bacterium or a virus, but is actually a parasite distantly related to the one that causes malaria. T. gondii can live within almost any warm blooded animal (in fact it was recently detected within beluga whales in the Arctic) but it can only reproduce within the digestive system of cats, which means that, whatever animal it has infected, if it isn’t a cat, it wants to find its way into a cat.
Why do they freak out at the possibility HCQ would be widely used?
Does HCQ make our blood toxic to predatory parasites?
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.00572/full
https://stfc.ukri.org/news-events-and-publications/features/how-to-beat-a-mind-controlling-parasite/