And yes: Last I checked, ivermectin is an anti-helminthic!
Quick decode here for folks who may not be all tuned up on infectious diseases, and therefore have not yet read about such things:
Ivermectin is a thing that kills off *worms* that get into a mammalian body.
CoVid, on the other hand, is a *viral* infection, and so one might wonder why something that has been seen to kill off a *parasitic* invasion, might have some bearing on this rather completely different vector of infection and its consequence.
I can see that I am being pedantic, and this is not entirely appropriate.
Of course, it is just possible that there could be some other things that parasite-killing agents do, that somehow ameliorates the vectors and/or consequences of a *viral* agent.
But for me, that's a bit of a leap I'm afraid.
And so, I find myself just condescending about all of that as a conjecture, because it makes me think that people have reached a conclusion that is not based on any real understanding of the various kinds of infectious disease and the way that these things actually *work*
But mammalian biology is quite complex of course, and so there's plenty of room still to learn more - not just about the vectors of infectious diseases, but also the collateral consequences of all such things, and whether there are some second and third order effects in which somehow an anti-biotic (again *not* for viral stuff ordinarily,) or heaven to Betsy: anti-helmithics! could - I suppose somehow impart benefit.
Colour me doubtful however :)
As a (once upon a time) student of science, and subsequently a mathematician and engineer, I'm afraid that I tend to look at the world along different axes:
I want to try to look at the problem, and take it apart.
I want to figure out how things *work* in order to find cause and effect, and therefore *solutions* to problems, given these foundations of "knowledge" as we (of my ilk) like to think of this :)
But - end of day: Our Scientific method notwithstanding: Who can really be entirely sure that somehow some crazy magic happens when you ingest a substance that is known to kill off worms, whilst trying to control a disease that has a viral origin.
Again: Colour me dubious :)
After having now really dialed in to who Ellie is, and partly because I too *now* also live in this part of America, I can see the way that many people in our communities really don't engage the world in the way that I and Ellie do.
They seem to have come to a different way to engage it all.
"Don't waste my time with your books and your high-falluting suggestions that you think some kind of more formal or rigorous thinking has a *better* answer for!
We're just taking Ivermectin, or something or other that the neighbors tell us is working for them, and it seems like it has saved us from what's killing everyone else around us.
And if it didn't - in some cases, then that's because God struck them down for not going to Church!"
Yikes!
I see I'm on a bit of a tear here now :)
I guess what I'm trying to say, is that the way that I try to engage life is to look at things, and ask questions, and then try to take what I see apart and try to understand the *underlying mechanisms*
But maybe those of us who do this are just all fools, and Marjory Taylor Greene's approach to life is somehow a better answer.
Sorry. I guess I'm just a zealot for having a foundation for reasoning about things in the world around me.
And if there is a God, I don't think she/he/they/it was really ever out to get me for failing to kiss the ring :)
But it seems, that trying to think for oneself is a rather irksome inconvenience to many.
Leeches would probably provide you with the same amount of protection from whatever it is you’re medicating against with cattle wormer. Big leech won’t tell you this. FYI
Oh, you’re a fucking liar. You ain’t been taking nothing out of hearts my wife’s an RN you ain’t nothing but a damn supervisor. The only person taking things out of a body is a doctor, which is not you go lie somewhere else.
Yup, FB is very bad doo doo, and sadly, Twitter too became the land of the Trolls :)
Let's hope that this new landscape that Substack is affording, will invite a more civil discourse, and an attempt to share our ideas and aspirations with one another in the most thoughtful ways we can.
It's so very easy - I now see (though obviously not from you,) to descend into mud-slinging on the grade school playground.
And this, will never do!
.
Will you please carry on in your holding that guiding candle before us? It's a rather refreshing example in our modern-day potentially reckless impersonal electronic landscape.
I know you were talking about Missoula and I was in Seattle Washington on business when September 11th hit. Therefore, We drove back to the Midwest instead of waiting on our flight because we were so close to the second tallest building on the West Coast at the time. We stopped in Missoula and stayed overnight. Went over to a little bar by the restaurant and everybody was so friendly. In Missoula, I bought some huckleberries in white chocolate, and I didn’t even really know that there was a huckleberry at the time because they don’t grow in my part of the country. I just couldn’t believe the breathtaking beauty of Montana. So I had to say something. I also have similar family members that do the ivermectin and or Trumpsters and I know all about it.
I just want you to know I felt your pain…. But boy, I would love to be in Montana right this minute!
I sympathize...at age 70, my oily skin can still give me a surprise on occasion! In the early 80's, I read Paula Begoun's groundbreaking book about skin products: "Don't Go to the Cosmetics Counter Without Me. Common generic "Acne wash", with a bit of baking soda scrub, followed with an oil free moisturizer (glycerin and aloe mostly). The good news is that wrinkles will come, slowly and not nearly as bad...because if the oily skin! You mentioned allergy issues (minerals), of course that's different. Good luck on your writing, may your fountain pen never run dry!
You also have a super cool description in your Substack ID.
As to male G-spots, I have a couple of thoughts:
The first is that I think the Ancient Greeks (as well as the Romans, who received whatever education they had *from* the Greeks,) seemed not to be so worried about this aspect of male sexual response.
The second thought, is that this erogenous zone may not be entirely unique to men.
I say: "Let's just run with all this," and see if we can't try to find happiness as well as love and compassion for our partners and friends too, while we're all trying to understand the special gift we were given to be alive.
Vaccines save lives.
Ivermectin is for cattle.
Yup
Scott,
You just have me laughing right away :)
And yes: Last I checked, ivermectin is an anti-helminthic!
Quick decode here for folks who may not be all tuned up on infectious diseases, and therefore have not yet read about such things:
Ivermectin is a thing that kills off *worms* that get into a mammalian body.
CoVid, on the other hand, is a *viral* infection, and so one might wonder why something that has been seen to kill off a *parasitic* invasion, might have some bearing on this rather completely different vector of infection and its consequence.
I can see that I am being pedantic, and this is not entirely appropriate.
Of course, it is just possible that there could be some other things that parasite-killing agents do, that somehow ameliorates the vectors and/or consequences of a *viral* agent.
But for me, that's a bit of a leap I'm afraid.
And so, I find myself just condescending about all of that as a conjecture, because it makes me think that people have reached a conclusion that is not based on any real understanding of the various kinds of infectious disease and the way that these things actually *work*
But mammalian biology is quite complex of course, and so there's plenty of room still to learn more - not just about the vectors of infectious diseases, but also the collateral consequences of all such things, and whether there are some second and third order effects in which somehow an anti-biotic (again *not* for viral stuff ordinarily,) or heaven to Betsy: anti-helmithics! could - I suppose somehow impart benefit.
Colour me doubtful however :)
As a (once upon a time) student of science, and subsequently a mathematician and engineer, I'm afraid that I tend to look at the world along different axes:
I want to try to look at the problem, and take it apart.
I want to figure out how things *work* in order to find cause and effect, and therefore *solutions* to problems, given these foundations of "knowledge" as we (of my ilk) like to think of this :)
But - end of day: Our Scientific method notwithstanding: Who can really be entirely sure that somehow some crazy magic happens when you ingest a substance that is known to kill off worms, whilst trying to control a disease that has a viral origin.
Again: Colour me dubious :)
After having now really dialed in to who Ellie is, and partly because I too *now* also live in this part of America, I can see the way that many people in our communities really don't engage the world in the way that I and Ellie do.
They seem to have come to a different way to engage it all.
"Don't waste my time with your books and your high-falluting suggestions that you think some kind of more formal or rigorous thinking has a *better* answer for!
We're just taking Ivermectin, or something or other that the neighbors tell us is working for them, and it seems like it has saved us from what's killing everyone else around us.
And if it didn't - in some cases, then that's because God struck them down for not going to Church!"
Yikes!
I see I'm on a bit of a tear here now :)
I guess what I'm trying to say, is that the way that I try to engage life is to look at things, and ask questions, and then try to take what I see apart and try to understand the *underlying mechanisms*
But maybe those of us who do this are just all fools, and Marjory Taylor Greene's approach to life is somehow a better answer.
Sorry. I guess I'm just a zealot for having a foundation for reasoning about things in the world around me.
And if there is a God, I don't think she/he/they/it was really ever out to get me for failing to kiss the ring :)
But it seems, that trying to think for oneself is a rather irksome inconvenience to many.
Ivermectin literally is the answer to any viral infection
I have been taking it as needed for virus like symptoms since last July
have traveled all over 50 cities in Europe flew over 100’s not one sickness
Leeches would probably provide you with the same amount of protection from whatever it is you’re medicating against with cattle wormer. Big leech won’t tell you this. FYI
Leeches are actually *really* cool!
They do all sorts of things that I'm still hoping to learn more about if I ever get to read all of the history I wish to.
But this is an entirely different matter than your very valid (imho) point Scott :)
I’ll take my chances
is all I can say is it works for me and it’s on formulary in Europe
I know what the COVID vaccine did to me and I will take my chances
Most people don’t know that ivermectin is best absorbed through a suppository.
I hope you give it a try.
I’m a RN for 31 years have been taking clots out of hearts the size of baseballs since the vaccines
I’m doing just fine with oral but how I love anal
Oh, you’re a fucking liar. You ain’t been taking nothing out of hearts my wife’s an RN you ain’t nothing but a damn supervisor. The only person taking things out of a body is a doctor, which is not you go lie somewhere else.
And golly: Clots the size of *baseballs?*
Isn't a baseball larger than the entire heart?
I'm trying to imagine therefore wherein such a clot could possibly reside. That's certainly far too large even to fit within the left ventricle.
Seems like the pump wouldn't really be working at all in the face of that kind of plumbing obstruction :)
I’m trying every vaccine and loving it.
No balls in my cardiac area.
Perhaps there is some other cause.
nurse Tracy thank you for your service in removing baseball clots⚾️
I sensed that from you, perhaps an aura or orb I saw.
Dang, I missed another of your lives. Thanks for letting me watch and listen after the fact!
I’m really bad about planning ahead…
Cathy,
Love your self-description on the Stack:
Yup, FB is very bad doo doo, and sadly, Twitter too became the land of the Trolls :)
Let's hope that this new landscape that Substack is affording, will invite a more civil discourse, and an attempt to share our ideas and aspirations with one another in the most thoughtful ways we can.
It's so very easy - I now see (though obviously not from you,) to descend into mud-slinging on the grade school playground.
And this, will never do!
.
Will you please carry on in your holding that guiding candle before us? It's a rather refreshing example in our modern-day potentially reckless impersonal electronic landscape.
Montana is the most beautiful state in the country!
I agree
I know you were talking about Missoula and I was in Seattle Washington on business when September 11th hit. Therefore, We drove back to the Midwest instead of waiting on our flight because we were so close to the second tallest building on the West Coast at the time. We stopped in Missoula and stayed overnight. Went over to a little bar by the restaurant and everybody was so friendly. In Missoula, I bought some huckleberries in white chocolate, and I didn’t even really know that there was a huckleberry at the time because they don’t grow in my part of the country. I just couldn’t believe the breathtaking beauty of Montana. So I had to say something. I also have similar family members that do the ivermectin and or Trumpsters and I know all about it.
I just want you to know I felt your pain…. But boy, I would love to be in Montana right this minute!
It’s pretty amazing, but the price of huckleberries is out of my pay grade!
My cousin thinks he's wonderful and works in DC .
I sympathize...at age 70, my oily skin can still give me a surprise on occasion! In the early 80's, I read Paula Begoun's groundbreaking book about skin products: "Don't Go to the Cosmetics Counter Without Me. Common generic "Acne wash", with a bit of baking soda scrub, followed with an oil free moisturizer (glycerin and aloe mostly). The good news is that wrinkles will come, slowly and not nearly as bad...because if the oily skin! You mentioned allergy issues (minerals), of course that's different. Good luck on your writing, may your fountain pen never run dry!
I didn’t haven’t this done
Yeah, it’s frustrating for sure
It’s a completely unnecessary revision.
Hey "It"
You also have a super cool description in your Substack ID.
As to male G-spots, I have a couple of thoughts:
The first is that I think the Ancient Greeks (as well as the Romans, who received whatever education they had *from* the Greeks,) seemed not to be so worried about this aspect of male sexual response.
The second thought, is that this erogenous zone may not be entirely unique to men.
I say: "Let's just run with all this," and see if we can't try to find happiness as well as love and compassion for our partners and friends too, while we're all trying to understand the special gift we were given to be alive.