Maybe we can get someone on Fox News to recommend a quicker suicide, I don’t have all day
oK bUt If u AcTuAlLy LiStEn tO wHaT He SaId hE never sAiD to DrInK Or iNjeCt BleAcH ^ Someone I know hit me with that. Like in real life. Well, on a Zoom. I told them that maybe they should reconsider their sources of information if somehow they've been trained to defend someone who is so clearly a moron, and then we moved on to other topics. edit; there may be people here who think this could be about them. If you are reading this, you are not the person in the story. 100% guarantee. I'll end this with a "injection is faster, folks. knocks the corona out cold, i've heard. been injecting twice a day. Two times. And Melania both, we are, the bleach, doing it"
Ugh a long standing friend of mine tried this on me. He will defend Trump constantly but always under the guise of "playing devil's advocate" and "trying to paint a different perspective". Like, pal, at some point you stop playing the role, and it just becomes your thought process.
I am no trump fan. I wish he had decided to drink bleach and use UV light, instead. But it seems taking hydroxycholoquine isn't without merit: https://www.upi.com/Health_News/2020/05/13/Zinc-might-boost-effectiveness-of-malaria-drug-against-COVID-19-experts-say/2801589374701
No no no no. That's not a trial, it's not peer-reviewed, and they are just saying that for people with COVID19 the addition of zinc to hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin might be better than hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin alone (which seems to have no benefit). This says nothing about hydroxychloroquine being prophylactic, or safe. From a peer-reviewed study published in JAMA last week: https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/2766117 ... To our knowledge, this study is the largest report of adverse effects of hydroxychloroquine among patients with COVID-19. Cardiac arrest was more frequent in patients who received hydroxychloroquine with azithromycin, compared with patients who received neither drug, even after adjustment.Among patients hospitalized in metropolitan New York with COVID-19, treatment with hydroxychloroquine, azithromycin, or both, compared with neither treatment, was not significantly associated with differences in in-hospital mortality.