Frankly, I don't care if HCQ is the end all be all of cures or any of that.
But it is incredibly bizarre that it has been so heavily attacked. No drug gets attacked like that, and considering I read mostly Science news, I can say that there is a lot of confusion in that realm about it. Most articles are "but it does seem to work..."
Whatever you and your doctor thinks works, if you get the cooties, that is what you should go with. It's entirely possible Hydroxychloroquine might not work for you, especially considering when you get the virus. But it and anything should be a viable option. And this disinformation campaign by media and fucking twitter of all things is a total disservice to patients.
Twitter should absolutely be sued for medical malpractice for inserting themselves and their banhammer in the talk about it. They aren't doctors. They are Marxists.
Like Trump said, it’s largely being ragged on because he supported it. It gives people hope, and would act as a potential end to the artificial emergency created to lockdown the nation. They can’t have that.
It’s also generic, so there’s not much money to be made there.
The notion that people would be allowed to die due to politics makes me want to punch a hole in all of these idiots faces. Politics vs. life, and they have the nerve to turn that around and try to say the President is the one playing politics over lives, unbelievable.
With all the projection the media does, at this point if I hear them say Trump did something bad, I assume they did it or it didn’t happen. I honestly don’t even check other news anymore. It’s always made up nonsense. It’d be nice to have an honest and neutral news source, but I haven’t found one.
Right when Trump first mentioned HCQ, I looked into it a bit. And like, it's been FDA approved for so long, we know its side effects, we know what conditions it's contraindicated for, and we know that short term side effects are mostly mild.
We know it's cheap and easy to supply too, and that it's used to mundane things like arthritis treatment.
So... even if it did nothing at all... What's the harm in using it? As long as you don't give it to people that are obviously going to have adverse reactions, what's the worst that will happen?
I remember getting downvoted to hell on /r/Coronavirus for saying that Trump's Right to Try policy made sense. We can't afford to wait for a dozen peer reviewed double blind clinical trials to test its efficacy, and the trials have already been performed for its safety. So either it does nothing and we waste a few bucks, or it works and we save lives that would have otherwise died.
But it is incredibly bizarre that it has been so heavily attacked.
It's not that strange when you consider that HCQ is a cheap generic and the other drug that showed promise was Remdesivir, an expensive brand-name drug manufactured by Gilead, whose stock dropped sharply when President Trump started Tweeting about HCQ. The Democrats want the economy shut down for the election: they don't want an affordable treatment available. And there's a LOT of money at stake if they can make us all take a mandatory vaccine, which will be much harder to make mandatory if HCQ is a cheap and effective treatment.
The thing is, Hydroxychloroquine needs to be prescribed by a doctor. You can't buy it in the supermarket.
So what is the harm in allowing the video?
A person cannot watch the video and decide to use it, worst case they can do is ask their doctor.
I would expect your doctor to make a well thought out informed decision not based entirely on a YouTube video.
So was Google afraid that doctors would prescribe something ineffective because they watched the video?
Or is it because they don't want the general population to learn more about the chinavirus?
Frankly, I don't care if HCQ is the end all be all of cures or any of that.
But it is incredibly bizarre that it has been so heavily attacked. No drug gets attacked like that, and considering I read mostly Science news, I can say that there is a lot of confusion in that realm about it. Most articles are "but it does seem to work..."
Whatever you and your doctor thinks works, if you get the cooties, that is what you should go with. It's entirely possible Hydroxychloroquine might not work for you, especially considering when you get the virus. But it and anything should be a viable option. And this disinformation campaign by media and fucking twitter of all things is a total disservice to patients.
Twitter should absolutely be sued for medical malpractice for inserting themselves and their banhammer in the talk about it. They aren't doctors. They are Marxists.
Like Trump said, it’s largely being ragged on because he supported it. It gives people hope, and would act as a potential end to the artificial emergency created to lockdown the nation. They can’t have that.
It’s also generic, so there’s not much money to be made there.
Clown Tamer haha
The notion that people would be allowed to die due to politics makes me want to punch a hole in all of these idiots faces. Politics vs. life, and they have the nerve to turn that around and try to say the President is the one playing politics over lives, unbelievable.
Above a certain level, you don't see human beings anymore, just numbers on a page.
Then, you don't stop to think, that might be a person, with their own life.
No,they're just a number.
This is not evil, unto itself, but this is how otherwise ordinary people do evil things.
The second you see them as a number is the second you become Evil.
That’s the thing GEOTUS does, he knows and said so often that they (the people) are not just a number to him.
With all the projection the media does, at this point if I hear them say Trump did something bad, I assume they did it or it didn’t happen. I honestly don’t even check other news anymore. It’s always made up nonsense. It’d be nice to have an honest and neutral news source, but I haven’t found one.
Right when Trump first mentioned HCQ, I looked into it a bit. And like, it's been FDA approved for so long, we know its side effects, we know what conditions it's contraindicated for, and we know that short term side effects are mostly mild.
We know it's cheap and easy to supply too, and that it's used to mundane things like arthritis treatment.
So... even if it did nothing at all... What's the harm in using it? As long as you don't give it to people that are obviously going to have adverse reactions, what's the worst that will happen?
I remember getting downvoted to hell on /r/Coronavirus for saying that Trump's Right to Try policy made sense. We can't afford to wait for a dozen peer reviewed double blind clinical trials to test its efficacy, and the trials have already been performed for its safety. So either it does nothing and we waste a few bucks, or it works and we save lives that would have otherwise died.
It's not that strange when you consider that HCQ is a cheap generic and the other drug that showed promise was Remdesivir, an expensive brand-name drug manufactured by Gilead, whose stock dropped sharply when President Trump started Tweeting about HCQ. The Democrats want the economy shut down for the election: they don't want an affordable treatment available. And there's a LOT of money at stake if they can make us all take a mandatory vaccine, which will be much harder to make mandatory if HCQ is a cheap and effective treatment.
Bill Gates admitted in an interview that the vaccine they were developing is very painful.
Fuck that mess.
I'll go with HCQ.
So does Fauci.
So does Fauci.
The thing is, Hydroxychloroquine needs to be prescribed by a doctor. You can't buy it in the supermarket.
So what is the harm in allowing the video?
A person cannot watch the video and decide to use it, worst case they can do is ask their doctor.
I would expect your doctor to make a well thought out informed decision not based entirely on a YouTube video.
So was Google afraid that doctors would prescribe something ineffective because they watched the video? Or is it because they don't want the general population to learn more about the chinavirus?
All valid points.
But you're forgetting the key topic here, and that is Orange Man bad.
Allowing doctors to prescribe a potentially effective drug at pennies on the dollar means Trump was right and they were wrong.
The last 4 years proves that they can't have that.
What about right to try. If a person doesn't have the freedom to make a bad decision, are they truly free? I dont think hcq is a bad decision