• March 29, 2024

What The CDC Website REVEALED About Afghan Refugees Is Absolutely Insane!

Since COVID has popped onto the scene last year there has been a debate for months over what the correct treatment of this virus should be. The powers that be had decided long ago that one treatment mentioned combating COVID was so bad and that it had to be averted by everyone.

Ivermectin was one of those treatments mentioned to fight COVID, but Dr. Fauci and friends shut that down immediately saying that it was incredibly dangerous for people. It is a horse dewormer and it could not be used to treat this virus at all despite loads of data from other doctors around the world saying that it was a viable treatment option.

In the last week or so, the treatment has been mentioned again all over social media as more people have seen the positive effects of using this particular treatment. Of course, the government has doubled down further saying that it should not be used at all no matter what positive outcomes have occurred with it.

Now, word has spread that according to the CDC, it’s part of the guidance plan to resettle refugees, and as Ricky Ricardo would say to Lucy in the popular 50s show “I Love Lucy”, it seems like the government has some “splaining to do”.

 

https://twitter.com/thehill/status/1433879739702329347?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

 

 

Red State Nation had the scoop:

Joe Rogan also went on social media Wednesday to inform fans he contracted COVID-19 and list the medications he took, including monoclonal antibodies, prednisone and an antiparasitic drug that has recently prompted federal health warnings.

“We immediately threw the kitchen sink at it. All kinds of meds,” Rogan explained. “Monoclonal antibodies, ivermectin, Z-pak, prednisone, everything. And I also got an anti-D drip and a vitamin drip.”

“Here we are on Wednesday and I feel great,” he explained. “I really only had one bad day. Sunday sucked, but Monday was better, Tuesday felt better than Monday and today, I feel good.”

He added: “I actually feel pretty f— good.”

Rogan said he underwent such treatments for three days.

Television and film actress Kirstie Alley, 70, also revealed on Twitter that she used Ivermectin and a cocktail of other drugs that helped her with her Covid-19 battle!

The Food and Drug Administration DA and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have urged consumers against the use of ivermectin as a COVID-19 treatment after poison control centers nationwide reported a sharp uptick in people facing serious health effects after taking animal formulations of the drug.

The FDA had previously issued concerns over self-medication with ivermectin intended for animals, noting some people might mistakenly believe the drug can substitute for ivermectin intended for humans.

But, while the mainstream media described the use of ivermectin as dangerous, CDC guidelines from their own website show that refugees from Afghanistan had to take ivermectin to get into the United States!

And for those interested because there is no date on the page…

This showed up on April 3, 2021.

And to confirm, here’s the CDC Guidance straight from their website:

While these recommendations have been implemented in many overseas sites, logistical and procurement issues still limit their full implementation in some. All Middle Eastern, Asian, North African, Latin American, and Caribbean refugees should receive presumptive therapy with:

All Middle Eastern, Asian, North African, Latin American, and Caribbean refugees should receive presumptive therapy with:

Albendazole, a single dose of 400 mg (200 mg for children 12-23 months)
AND

Ivermectin, two doses 200 mcg/Kg orally once a day for 2 days before departure to the United States.

All African refugees who did not originate from or reside in countries where Loa loa infection is endemic (Box 1) should receive presumptive therapy with:

Albendazole, a single dose of 400 mg (200 mg for children 12-23 months)
AND

Ivermectin, two doses 200 mcg/Kg orally once a day for 2 days
AND

Praziquantel, 40 mg/kg, may be divided into two doses before refugees depart for the United States.

So, what is it?

Good or bad, folks?

I guess it comes down to rules for thee but not for me.

 

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