MUST LISTEN TO VIDEO ON COVID

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soggykitten

Well-known member
Jul 3, 2020
2,322
1,369
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#3
Interesting as far as the kids part at the beginning. This comes when people are afraid to send their kids back to school. And after President Trump said it should happen.
 

soggykitten

Well-known member
Jul 3, 2020
2,322
1,369
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#4
I would suggest Operation WarpSpeed, the Trump video of today his appearance in North Carolina is important to with regard to the vaccine.

Not me. No vaccine for this one. Question with regard to the Trump speech. What does Fuji films innovation laboratory have to do with vaccine?
 

soggykitten

Well-known member
Jul 3, 2020
2,322
1,369
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#5
The first case of Covid reported in North Korea. Un put the NK on lock down yesterday.

Imagine. A new world order born of a virus.
 
Aug 10, 2019
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#6
Of course a few short hours after being posted youtube has taken the video down....I didn't get a chance to see it, is there another source or can someone give a re-cap?
 

Silverwings

Senior Member
Jul 27, 2016
1,368
500
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#7
Of course a few short hours after being posted youtube has taken the video down....I didn't get a chance to see it, is there another source or can someone give a re-cap?
No, it is gone everywhere. This is war people, I had heard others talking about being censured now it has happened to me, or to what i just posted yesterday, this is scary, and demonic, think 5 years down the road, what things will be like.
 

PennEd

Senior Member
Apr 22, 2013
13,614
9,127
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#8
There is a video sharing website called Altcensored.

I absolutely do NOT vouch for everything on there being ok. However they strive to not censor opinions and videos.

I checked, and the Drs video is not on yet.

There is also a free speech alternative to Twitter. It’s called Parler.
 

Truth7t7

Well-known member
May 19, 2020
7,685
2,495
113
#9
Of course a few short hours after being posted youtube has taken the video down....I didn't get a chance to see it, is there another source or can someone give a re-cap?
A group of about 8 doctors, a few from foreign countries, explaining how Covid19 isn't a harm to school aged kids, 99.6% are not affected, (A symptomatic) no signs, and how they aren't the infected carriers as many claim

Sad to see how the censorship is on YouTube, same happened to the Doctor from Bakersfield CA

Control the (Fake News) narrative
 
Aug 10, 2019
552
437
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Canada
#12
A group of about 8 doctors, a few from foreign countries, explaining how Covid19 isn't a harm to school aged kids, 99.6% are not affected, (A symptomatic) no signs, and how they aren't the infected carriers as many claim

Sad to see how the censorship is on YouTube, same happened to the Doctor from Bakersfield CA

Control the (Fake News) narrative
Ontario Canada's Public Health dept just published Infection Mortality rates by age....for those 0-9 years of age they put it at 0.002% Its on page 9 of the following link. Even those 80+ years have better than a 90% survival rate based on IFR.

https://www.publichealthontario.ca/...tRpvqQVBCmdpOfXNhb-V83s9kxnMNJlmP9Lpd3Mr2djb8
 
Jul 23, 2018
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#13
No, it is gone everywhere. This is war people, I had heard others talking about being censured now it has happened to me, or to what i just posted yesterday, this is scary, and demonic, think 5 years down the road, what things will be like.
what was on the vid?
 

Truth7t7

Well-known member
May 19, 2020
7,685
2,495
113
#14

soggykitten

Well-known member
Jul 3, 2020
2,322
1,369
113
#15
The website that the first lady doctor referred to in order to find this video is dark now. The propaganda against this video is so sharp, there are sites that speak of that site being dark because of the false information about curing Covid 19.
 
S

Scribe

Guest
#16
Ok, now I have to listen to it but logic is telling me that there is a reason why it has been taken down by so many. Most likely it is harmful advice. But I will check it out and see what all the drama is over.
 

Truth7t7

Well-known member
May 19, 2020
7,685
2,495
113
#17
Ok, now I have to listen to it but logic is telling me that there is a reason why it has been taken down by so many. Most likely it is harmful advice. But I will check it out and see what all the drama is over.
The rooms of darkness shine at your presence, we are grateful :giggle:
 
E

EleventhHour

Guest
#18
Ok, now I have to listen to it but logic is telling me that there is a reason why it has been taken down by so many. Most likely it is harmful advice. But I will check it out and see what all the drama is over.
If one want to get at the truth one would need to follow those doctors back accounts.
Dark money flows in many directions.

July 15 they formed their little organization so they are not a long standing medical association.
As well, one doctor in the group attributes women's health problems to succubus and incubus.... Okay :rolleyes:
 
S

Scribe

Guest
#20
The only explanation I heard on the video about how the drug worked was that it blocked the virus from getting through to the lungs which is NOT true. So They are LIARS.

He said that they are not seeing the virus passed from children to teachers. Duh! Now that is just stupid.

He basically said Zinc was a cure, and that has been proven to be a lie over and over.

All their rhetoric was total blowing smoke and saying nothing. Looked like a fake infomercial. Why would anyone fall for this unconvincing video? SMH

Here is some background information on the people in the video. Get ready... your about to go for a ride!!!

Travis M. Andrews and
Danielle Paquette
July 28, 2020 at 5:58 p.m. EDT
After social media companies removed a viral video showing doctors making unsubstantiated claims about the novel coronavirus, one doctor’s past phrases in particular began trending on Twitter: demon sperm. It turns out Stella Immanuel has a history of making particularly outlandish claims — including that the uterine disorder endometriosis is caused by sex with demons that takes place in dreams.

The video showed a group that has dubbed itself America’s Frontline Doctors, standing on the steps of the Supreme Court and claiming that neither masks nor shutdowns are necessary to fight the pandemic, despite a plethora of expertise to the contrary. It was live-streamed by the conservative media outlet Breitbart and viewed more than 14 million times — fueled by tweets by Donald Trump Jr. and multiple retweets by President Trump, which have since been deleted.

Facebook, YouTube and Twitter have removed the videos. Twitter told The Washington Post that they were “in violation of our covid-19 misinformation policy.”

In the viral video, Immanuel made the unsubstantiated claim that hydroxychloroquine is a “cure for covid,” the disease caused by the coronavirus. As a previous Post story put it: “There is no known cure for the novel coronavirus or the disease it causes, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the World Health Organization. Multiple studies have disputed claims that antimalarial and antiviral drugs such as hydroxychloroquine, azithromycin and chloroquine can help treat or even prevent the coronavirus. Last month, the FDA revoked an emergency approval that allowed doctors to prescribe hydroxychloroquine to covid-19 patients even though the treatment was untested.”

Claims about hydroxychloroquine to treat covid-19 have gained traction despite a lack of scientific evidence. How did this happen? (Elyse Samuels, Meg Kelly, Sarah Cahlan/The Washington Post)
As the Daily Beast’s Will Sommer first noted, Immanuel has asserted that many gynecological issues are the result of having sex with witches and demons (“succubi” and “incubi”) in dreams, a myth that dates back at least to the “Epic of Gilgamesh,” a Sumerian poem written more than 4,000 years ago. She falsely claims that issues such as endometriosis, infertility, miscarriages and STIs are “evil deposits from the spirit husband.”

Furthermore, Sommer reported that in “a 2015 sermon that laid out a supposed Illuminati plan hatched by ‘a witch’ to destroy the world using abortion, gay marriage, and children’s toys, among other things, Immanuel claimed that DNA from space aliens is currently being used in medicine.” She also offered prayers through her website to remove generational curses transmitted through placenta.

In a news conference Tuesday, Trump addressed the video, saying: “I think they’re very respected doctors. There was a woman who was spectacular.” He did not specify which woman. He added of hydroxychloroquine, “I happen to think it works in the early stages.”

When asked directly about Immanuel and why he might trust someone who believes that alien DNA is used in modern medicine, Trump responded: “I thought she was very impressive, in the sense that, from where she came — I don’t know what country she comes from — but she said that she’s had tremendous success with hundreds of different patients. I thought her voice was an important voice, but I know nothing about her.”


Immanuel, a registered physician in Texas, was born in Cameroon. Along with her medical clinic, she runs a church called Fire Power Ministries.

In her Twitter bio, Immanuel describes herself as a doctor, author and speaker as well as “God’s battle axe and weapon of war.”

The doctors who appear in the various iterations of the viral video include James Todaro, an ophthalmologist and bitcoin investor who was one of the earliest proponents of hydroxychloroquine, and Simone Gold, a Los Angeles-based doctor and lawyer who has long claimed that lockdowns will kill more people than the coronavirus. But Immanuel stands out for beliefs that are particularly out of step with scientific consensus.

In just the past 24 hours, Immanuel posted a video challenging “everyone in D.C.,” “the talking heads on CNN,” Anthony S. Fauci and “senators, all of them” to give her a urine sample, baselessly claiming that they all take hydroxychloroquine; claimed that “Big Tech is censoring Experts and suppressing the CURE” for the coronavirus; and threatened that God will crash Facebook servers for allegedly deleting her page.


“Hello Facebook put back my profile page and videos up or your computers with start crashing till you do,” she tweeted. “You are not bigger that God. I promise you. If my page is not back up face book will be down in Jesus name.”

Immanuel’s Facebook page is still active, and she posted to it multiple times Tuesday. She did not respond to a request for comment from The Post.

After Sommer’s story broke, Twitter racked up more than 55,000 tweets that included the phrase “demon sperm” as of 4 p.m. Tuesday, prompting a litany of jokes about the strangeness of this particularly news-saturated year.

Others, though, found it demonstrably less amusing. Physician and scientist Eugene Gu tweeted, “Just because someone is a doctor it doesn’t mean that person is smart. … Think for yourself.”

Immanuel has said she received her medical degree in Nigeria, where the top health agency aimed to correct the record Tuesday.

“Remember, there is NO specific cure for #COVID19,” the Nigeria Center for Disease Control tweeted. “Some trial drugs show promising results but are yet to be validated for use.”


Chikwe Ihekweazu, the director general, urged people to avoid self-medication. In Nigeria, hydroxychloroquine is used only in clinical trials as researchers assess its safety.

“Neither passionate speeches nor tweets have any impact on our decision-making process,” Ihekweazu said in an interview.

In a separate speech in Washington, Immanuel said she first prescribed the drug in Africa’s most populous country. “I went to medical school in West Africa, Nigeria, where I took care of malaria patients, treated them with hydroxychloroquine and stuff like that,” she said, according to a transcript of the event. “So I’m used to these medications.”

But doctors in Nigeria urged caution Tuesday, hoping to make clear where the nation’s medical community stands on the controversial treatment.

“This kind of ‘fake news,’ these rumors all over social media — it’s a huge challenge for us as health workers,” said Ndukwe Emmanuel Ifeanyi, a national committee member of the Nigerian Association of Resident Doctors, which represents more than a third of the country’s physicians. “People don’t know what is real. People get hurt.”