A federal judge yesterday ordered the Biden administration to halt a wide range of communications with social media companies, siding with Missouri and Louisiana in a lawsuit that alleges Biden and his administration violated the First Amendment by colluding with social networks “to suppress disfavored speakers, viewpoints, and content.”
But not for coronaviruses. For parasites. And not in the doses that are intended for animals, but for humans. And not purchased from a farm supply store, but through a pharmacy.
That’s not what I said though. They spread a lie by saying it was only for horses, and were never silenced or corrected. They were allowed to lie. “Rules for thee, but not rules for me.”
Some people were actually buying the horse variant of it…
I’d like a verified source showing this was actually occurring at any sort of large scale. Assuming you have it, does that make it okay to suggest Ivermectin (the drug) is only for horses like the media did? Is lying okay when it’s done to save lives? I’m just curious.
https://abcnews.go.com/Health/covid-treatments-evolving-threat/story?id=75946569
That story uses only anecdotal, non-scientifically recorded data. 50 - 60 calls a day simply to ask about it, and one or two cases of people actually using it. This same story claims people were drinking hand sanitizer, I guess we need to start lying about that as well.
Unless you are saying the president of Missouri’s Poison Center is lying, then this is still substantive.
And more than what you have provided so far. Can’t claim it is lie either without evidence.
They literally don’t provide any data. It could be one call and they’d say they’re “still responding.”
Still substantive.
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