Dr. Stella Immanuel, one of the “highly medical” who supported US President Donald Trump’s refuted theory of hydroxychloroquine, also believes dreamy sex with demons will make you sick.
Immanuel, one of the key speakers in a viral video filled with incorrect information from Frontline Doctors of the United States, a skeptical coronavirus organization that caught the president’s attention this week. Facebook, Twitter and YouTube have banned video under their misinformation policies after accumulating millions of views, thanks in component to a Trump retweet Monday.
In the video Emmanuel and other doctors incorrect information about the virus, adding false statements that mask nothing and that hydroxychloroquine can cure COVID-19. Immanuel states in the video that he effectively treated 350 patients with the drug.
Trump doubled his for Tuesday’s video when asked about the effectiveness of hydroxychloroquine, which the U.S. Food and Drug Administration It no longer approves as a treatment for COVID-19.
“I think they’re reputable doctors,” Trump said of the organization in the video, before seeming to applaud Emmanuel in particular.
“There’s a woman who impresses in her statements about (hydroxychloroquine) and who had a great fortune with that,” Trump said at a briefing Tuesday. “And they took him, they took his voice, I don’t know why they took her, but they took it.”
Scientific studies have shown that hydroxychloroquine can cause more damage than when used to treat COVID-19 symptoms.
Trump said Tuesday that the opposition to the drug was about him.
“Politically, it doesn’t seem too popular because I do,” he said, after praising Emmanuel’s support.
CNN reporter Kaitlan Collins has lobbied Trump on some of Emmanuel’s marginal beliefs, adding his theories about medicine in extraterrestrial DNA.
“I think her voice was a vital voice, but I don’t know anything about her,” Trump said. He then left the press convention amid additional questions.
“I think her voice is a vital voice, but I don’t know anything about her,” President Trump said of the video he retwed in which a woman claims the mask doesn’t paint and that there’s a cure for the Covid-19. Instead of explaining the contradiction since he approved the mask, Trump left the room. pic.twitter.com/k8jKdrI1oz
– Kaitlan Collins (@kaitlancollins) 28 July 2020
Immanuel presents herself as a doctor/minister and has driven over the years a variety of uns serious, magical and religiously tinged medical conspiracy theories, the Daily Beast reports. Their outlandish claims come with the confidence that extraterrestrial DNA is used in medical remedies and that some medical disorders are caused by demons having sex with sleeping humans.
A 2013 video shows Emmanuel preaching about the so-called “incubus and succubus,” which she describes as male and female sex demons. She claims that the demonic sperm of these creatures is to blame for gynecological disorders such as cysts or endometriosis.
His YouTube channel is also driving false conspiracy theories about extraterrestrial DNA, curses and microchips in vaccines.
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“Great technologies censor experts and heal,” he wrote in a tweet with a component of the video Tuesday. “I’m not going to be silenced.”
Immanuel then shared the Daily Beast article about his demons, calling it a “big” summary.
“Great paintings to spread those demons,” he wrote in a tweet at the end of the story. “Would you like to write an article about witchcraft? And while we’re at it, I might get the hell out of you.
He later thanked the media for giving him “free ads” with his policy of his marginal opinions.
“Yes, America!” wrote in a tweet on Wednesday. “Some want to be released from the demon sperm.”
Surely there is no clinical evidence, beyond or providing, to Emmanuel’s claims about extraterrestrial beings or demons.
Immanuel says in the video that he went to medical school in Nigeria and is now a general practitioner in Houston, one of the cities most affected by coronavirus in the United States.
There’s no cure, according to medical experts from all over the world.
”There is no evidence in a rigorous examination showing hydroxychloroquine in mixture with azithromycin or zinc or any mixture you use that has a merit in the coronavirus remedy to date,’ said Dr. Amesh Adalja, lead researcher specializing in infectious diseases. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Dr. Simone Gold, who also appears in the US video Frontline Doctors, accused social media platforms of “censorship” for removing the clip.
“There are opposing perspectives in medicine,” he tweeted. “The characteristics of the treatment for COVID-19 deserve to be discussed and discussed among our colleagues in the medical field. However, they deserve never to be censored and silenced.
Gold, Immanuel and his colleagues do not provide genuine clinical evidence throughout their ideals in banned videos. They also target Dr. Anthony Fauci, the largest infectious disease specialist in the United States, who also has a common goal of conservatives in recent months.
Facebook said the video “shares false information about COVID-19 remedies and treatments,” spokesman Andy Stone told The Associated Press.
The social media company blocked the video on several high-level Facebook and Instagram accounts.
Facebook coded the video after pop star Madonna shared it with her 15.4 million Instagram followers, Forbes reports. The video is no longer visual in your account.
This is the moment when social media corporations have criticized a super viral video full of far-right conspiracy theories about the virus. The last Plandemic, a 26-minute video with discredited scientist Judy Mitkovits.
Plandemic’s video has published a wide variety of unsubstantiated conspiracy theories about Bill Gates, vaccines, Fauci and masks, evidence.
It was seen more than 8 million times before being eliminated.
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: With associated press