>>15866525
kek
hari krsna prabhu
>>15866496
sounds like a LARP
Rogan is comped.
Can't trust one thing from him, even when it's true.
kekkkek
gotta use another source.
To me, the reason Ivermectim works to improve the vision and sense of smell is that some parasites or other (exomes?) worms , whatever, commandeer parts of the nervous system for manipulation purposes.
Maybe those entities can be manipuated from outside via images or key words / triggers.
They probably are a manifestation of some spirit or other, so are living entities.
That could be the root of the "men in black" "mr. smith" phenomenoa
The parasites may communicate with each other via the hosts
Remember the book "Mind Parasites"
https://www.curledup.com/mindpara.htm
'The Mind Parasites is a disturbingly creepy story of monsters that live within the depths of human consciousness, feeding off our energy and keeping us depressed, dumbed-down, anxious and living below our potential. Sounds like a common, everyday disease! But noted author Colin Wilson’s horror story is fiction, and you have to keep reminding yourself of that little fact as you read this classic metaphysical thriller.
A professor of archeology discovers the existence of mind parasites while on a dig at an excavation site that has a dark and disturbing history of its own. When Gilbert Austin, our hero of sorts, receives the documents of a dead colleague, he is intrigued by passages referring to these mind monsters that live and feed off of human consciousness. Austin has an experience of his own that proves the parasites exist, and soon he is finding even more proof at an archeological dig in Turkey, where he confides in his colleague.
Eventually, they learn that the parasites have existed for centuries, and that they are now preparing to destroy the human species. The war against the mind parasites begins with worldwide consequences as a small group of people who possess the mental strength and control are gathered together to fight the mind monsters.
The fate of humanity rests with the ability of very few people to sharpen their minds enough to control the sheer ignorance and laziness of the majority. That alone is enough to send chills down the reader’s spine, and much of this book echoes our own modern predicament, where the tribal or mass consciousness allows all kinds of horrible things to occur in our world, including their own misery and unhappiness. The Mind Parasites is part sci-fi, part horror novel, with plenty of solid commentary on the paradigms that shape human society and evolution thrown in, giving it more of a nonfiction feel, and many times I had to remind myself I was reading a novel and not a first-person account by a real scientist reporting on a real situation.