A theory I'm kicking around in my head lately is that maybe the reason Hydroxychloroquine and Ivermectin works so well in curing viral infection is because what is attributed to a 'virus' is in fact disease brought about from a parasitic infection.
What if the reason that no one has successfully isolated any virus is the simple fact that viruses don't actually exist, but are simply an expression of some type of genetic material from parasitic organisms, that causes disease in the infected host?
I haven't found anything on this theory online, so this is a call for input from my fellow theorists here in the hope that any of you guys have come across useful studies or literature on this subject.
One thing I saw recently was using zinc for acne, and I'm like hmmm....
Is it because of its anti-parasitic qualities?
So, one issue I've had of late is blurry vision, which I believe to be attributable to staph gunking up my sinuses and making it so my body doesn't produce tears properly.
Eye drops don't help...until I found a specific one that has zinc sulfate...which is an astringent. Now, if your eyes are dry and blurry, an astringent doesn't sound helpful, and they actually dry out my eyes bad enough to make them start tearing on their own (kinda the point, but it almost hurts they get so dry...and maybe drying out staph or other parasites). It has cut the blurriness overall by like 90%, whereas other drops, even expensive ones like Systane, merely smear things around. And I think it may be just to the antiparasitic quality of zinc.
That's very interesting.
Yeah, so maybe most infections can be treated with anti-parasitics...because infections are generally parasitic, aren't they?
Along with the toxoplasmosis idea, or even the Vril or further if you get further down the conspiracy spiral, maybe anti-parasitics are a genuine threat to the hivemind. It's something I've thought about for a bit too.
It's definitely got me wondering just how many diseases are really caused by parasites?
The toxoplasmosis angle is wild in and of itself; as much as 60%(!) of the population may be infected. And we really don't know very much about what toxoplasmosis infections do to human health and behavior still.
Or even other infections or even disruptions in our microbiome.
There's probably more effects than people think, behaviorally. And not just to adapt to parasites, but actual changes the parasites make intrinsically in you. It's a creepy concept.