Dr. Stella Immanuel Reveals COVID-19 Cure — She Also Believes in a Lot of Conspiracies

Common Sense Conspiracy

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A group of doctors stormed Washington trying to dispel fear mongering related to the novel coronavirus COVID-19 that has ravaged the country and become a divisive political lightning rod in recent weeks. One doctor in particular, Dr. Stella Immanuel, made really big waves with her outright revelation that all this is silliness because the cure has been right in front of our preferably unmasked faces all along.

Dr. Immanuel insists that hydroxychloroquine, the controversial drug that Donald Trump heralded as a quick fix for COVID-19 a few months back, does indeed cure the virus, and so effectively in fact that at her practice, they don’t even worry about wearing high-quality masks because the drug virtually eliminates the virus from circulating.

Her speech became super-viral (no pun intended) when Donald Trump Jr. and the President himself started retweeting the video, recognizing it as even more proof of what Mr. Trump has been saying all along. After all, Trump has even went as far as to insist that he himself takes hydroxychloroquine as a preventative measure.

Mind you, this is all in stark contrast to the opinions of many in the mainstream media and the FDA, who just recently pulled the plug on the drug saying there is absolutely no evidence that it has any effect on coronavirus whatsoever.

The mainstream media wasted no time discrediting Immanuel with all hands on deck. Now, it is coming to light the good doctor believes in some conspiracy theories that, well, a lot of our readers tend to be interested in as well. She even believes in reptilian leaders and that there is a vaccine being developed to eliminate religion. She may even be one of our loyal readers here at the CSC for all we know, so hopefully she’s getting good, reliable information to feed her curiosity. In any case, she is already being banished from social media (not just the speech, but her entire presence) for spreading “disinformation” and now she says there is an effort going on to have her medical license taken from her because she believes in hydroxychloroquine. And she really believes in it, saying out flat that there is no reason to wear masks when we have a cure right here that is readily available.

What do you think? Is Dr. Immanuel nuts? Or the real deal? Would you take hydroxycholorquine if you thought it would protect you from the virus? We want to hear what you think in the comments below. We have posted the video below, but these video links are being taken down just as fast as they come up because there are many that wish to silence this talk as quickly as possible. We are working on a way to get the video up permanently on our site without having to rely on links in the next couple of days.

Source: Common Sense Conspiracy
 

dimension-1hacker

Active Member
Messages
834
A group of doctors stormed Washington trying to dispel fear mongering related to the novel coronavirus COVID-19 that has ravaged the country and become a divisive political lightning rod in recent weeks. One doctor in particular, Dr. Stella Immanuel, made really big waves with her outright revelation that all this is silliness because the cure has been right in front of our preferably unmasked faces all along.

Dr. Immanuel insists that hydroxychloroquine, the controversial drug that Donald Trump heralded as a quick fix for COVID-19 a few months back, does indeed cure the virus, and so effectively in fact that at her practice, they don’t even worry about wearing high-quality masks because the drug virtually eliminates the virus from circulating.

Her speech became super-viral (no pun intended) when Donald Trump Jr. and the President himself started retweeting the video, recognizing it as even more proof of what Mr. Trump has been saying all along. After all, Trump has even went as far as to insist that he himself takes hydroxychloroquine as a preventative measure.

Mind you, this is all in stark contrast to the opinions of many in the mainstream media and the FDA, who just recently pulled the plug on the drug saying there is absolutely no evidence that it has any effect on coronavirus whatsoever.

The mainstream media wasted no time discrediting Immanuel with all hands on deck. Now, it is coming to light the good doctor believes in some conspiracy theories that, well, a lot of our readers tend to be interested in as well. She even believes in reptilian leaders and that there is a vaccine being developed to eliminate religion. She may even be one of our loyal readers here at the CSC for all we know, so hopefully she’s getting good, reliable information to feed her curiosity. In any case, she is already being banished from social media (not just the speech, but her entire presence) for spreading “disinformation” and now she says there is an effort going on to have her medical license taken from her because she believes in hydroxychloroquine. And she really believes in it, saying out flat that there is no reason to wear masks when we have a cure right here that is readily available.

What do you think? Is Dr. Immanuel nuts? Or the real deal? Would you take hydroxycholorquine if you thought it would protect you from the virus? We want to hear what you think in the comments below. We have posted the video below, but these video links are being taken down just as fast as they come up because there are many that wish to silence this talk as quickly as possible. We are working on a way to get the video up permanently on our site without having to rely on links in the next couple of days.

Source: Common Sense Conspiracy
is there proof? I agree that fear mongering is occurring, the corona virus so far is not worse then the common flu. Eating fermented foods reduces the chance to almost zero of catching things like the flu and so on, proven by many scientific studies. None of this would of occurred if people exersized, only ate fermented and other healthy foods, fasted two days a week, and so on. People are lazy. getting rid of religion is easy when the population is trained to think about proof rather then baseless assumptions of the world because of what the prior generation believed and told that generation to believe. Think about this, every reason needs a reason be true or there is no reason for it to be true. Ask yourself why you do or do not believe a god exists a hundred times, I think nobody here would last ten times!
 

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Inferno

Junior Member
Messages
85
This is something I am very confused about. There are loads of studies that show it works and loads that show it doesn't work. How can this even be possible? Either it's affects are unreliably random or we are being lied to, the latter being more likely.
 

Orpheus Rex

Member
Messages
479
This is something I am very confused about. There are loads of studies that show it works and loads that show it doesn't work. How can this even be possible? Either it's affects are unreliably random or we are being lied to, the latter being more likely.

It's all in how you parse the studies. Not every study is created equally. You've got to be able to read them with understanding, see which ones have greater methodological merit, where the confounding factors are in each one, and which ones are fraudulent.

And remember, the Lancet reports that more than 50% of all peer-reviewed medical studies are fraudulent - because science!
 

dimension-1hacker

Active Member
Messages
834
It's all in how you parse the studies. Not every study is created equally. You've got to be able to read them with understanding, see which ones have greater methodological merit, where the confounding factors are in each one, and which ones are fraudulent.

And remember, the Lancet reports that more than 50% of all peer-reviewed medical studies are fraudulent - because science!
prove that those sources are accurate, I thought up a thought experiment indulge me. Morty walks around on what he is told is less then a trillionth of one percent of the earths total land mass after living for 20 years, and reads a few articles online. What these articles are describing, he has never been to those places, saw the events described in the articles, all the articles. Articles cannot be verified to be accurate by reading other articles about people describing certain articles in this context studies and articles about any events to be accurate in any way, Morty cannot begin to sort fact from fiction. Morty goes to school, he is surrounded by a few people older then him and a few people younger that ECO read the same articles as Morty. Some of these people say these things are accurate but aren't those people in the same boat too? He reads in textbooks about history, science, and so on, but its just a textbook morty has never been a few miles outside the town, morty has never verified that the studies actually accurred and or were not altered to favor a certain result. The sum is morty can verify nothing about anything. Think about it before saying this seemingly obsurd concept is false, sometimes the truth is obsurd while the lie we used to tell ourselves were oversimplistic.

Author: Rick Sanchez dX
 
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