Trump Doubles Down on Demon Sperm Doc
By Will Sommer and Adam Rawnsley
Daily Beast
July 28, 2020
The President of the United States doubled down on his support of a doctors “summit” peddling the debunked COVID-19 drug hydroxychloroquine—just as social media companies crack down on the viral coronavirus disinformation that came out of the event.
Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube removed a viral video of the event which had garnered millions of views after President Trump and others retweeted the clip. SquareSpace also suspended the website for America’s Frontline Doctors, which put on the event. The video featuring the eccentric Dr. Stella Immanuel, who claimed that the controversial anti-malaria drug hydroxychloroquine was a “cure” for COVID-19 and that masks aren’t necessary, was pulled from the platforms for sharing misinformation about the disease. Twitter also briefly locked the Twitter account of the president’s son, Donald Trump Jr., when he tweeted the video and called it a “must watch!!!”
The viral video, which racked up more than 13 million views on Facebook, drew more attention to some of Immanuel’s more bizarre previous medical claims. The Daily Beast reported Tuesday that Immanuel has claimed in the past that some gynecological ailments are caused by people having sex in a dream-world with demons, with the demonic semen as the origins of the afflictions.
Immanuel has also claimed that doctors used alien DNA in medical treatments, and that lizard-like “reptilian” aliens are involved in the United States government. She thanked The Daily Beast on Tuesday for “summarizing” her work. “The Daily Beast did a great job summarizing our deliverance ministry and exposing incubus and succubus. Thank you daily beast. If you need deliverance from these spirits. Contact us,” she tweeted.
But she has refused to provide proof of her claim that she’s cured hundreds of COVID-19 patients with hydroxychloroquine.
That didn’t chasten Trump, however, who praised Immanuel and her fellow Frontline Doctors at a Tuesday afternoon press conference. “I can tell you this, she was on air along with many other doctors,” he said. “They were big fans of hydroxychloroquine and I thought she was very impressive in the sense that from where she came, I don't know which country she comes from, but she said that she's had tremendous success with hundreds of different patients, and I thought her voice was an important voice, but I know nothing about her.”
“For some reason the internet wanted to take them down and took them off,” Trump said of the group. “I guess Twitter took them off and I think Facebook took them off. I don't know why I think they're very respected doctors.”
Trump then described a woman, apparently Immanuel, as "spectacular" in her statements about hydroxychloroquine.
“I don't know why they took her off, but they took her off, maybe they had a good reason, maybe they didn't, I don't know,” Trump said.
As one reporter pressed Trump about masks, the president curtly stormed out of the briefing room.
The backers of America’s Frontline Doctors and their White Coat Summit went even further than praise. Immanuel’s bizarre statements and the content removals have prompted their allies to double down.
Jenny Beth Martin, the co-founder of Tea Party Patriots, which helped organize the doctors summit, retweeted Immanuel’s complaints that she and other participants were being “attacked, ridiculed and discredited” in the wake of the event.
“Doctors are being silenced by Big Tech,” Martin tweeted. “The leftist media don't want hydroxychloroquine to work because it will mean President @realDonaldTrump was right!”
Dr. Simone Gold, the leader of the America’s Frontline Doctors group which featured Dr. Immanuel, took to Twitter to criticize social media companies for “censoring Physicians from speaking about COVID-19 and Hydroxychloroquine.”
Gold has become a popular pundit on the right for her controversial takes on the coronavirus pandemic. The doctor and Stanford law school graduate has endorsed the use of the Trump-approved drug hydroxychloroquine, which the FDA says is not an effective treatment for COVID-19, and is against the use of masks, calling it a “superstition.”
Before the summit, Gold worked with Tea Party Patriots to author a form letter to President Trump labeling lockdowns a “mass casualty event” and inviting Americans to ask their physicians to sign it and do an interview with Tea Party Patriots.
Gold’s admirers have also taken up the fight. She’s been a big hit on the right wing podcast circuit, doing interviews with pundits Dennis Prager, Charlie Kirk, and radio host Mark Levin. All three have since criticized the social media crackdown on content from the sumit, with Prager University republishing Immanuel’s criticism of Dr. Anthony Fauci. Levin lashed out at The Daily Beast’s coverage of Immanuel, calling it a “vicious smear machine” for accurately quoting her previous remarks.
Breitbart, whose video about the summit was suspended by Facebook, reposted the offending clip on their front page.
Earlier in the day at another White Coat Summit event, Immanuel slammed “professional hacks” in medicine who have criticized the use of hydroxychloroquine. But she saved special vitriol for doctors who refuse to prescribe the drug because they’re supposedly afraid of professional consequences, calling them “good Germans” — a reference to Germans after World War II who claimed they had never supported the Nazis.
“You’re no different than a murderer,” Immanuel said. “You’re no different than Hitler.”
__________
Viral sensation Dr. Stella Immanuel says Jesus will destroy Facebook if her COVID video doesn’t go back up
By Karu F. Daniels
New York Daily News
July 28, 2020
Dr. Stella Immanuel blasted Facebook and Twitter after it removed her
controversial video touting hydroxychloroquine as a “cure” for COVID-19.
The Houston physician, who went viral for her video, declared on
Twitter that Jesus Christ would destroy Facebook’s servers if her videos
weren’t restored to the platform.
“Hello Facebook put back my profile page and videos up or your computers
with start crashing till you do,” she tweeted overnight. “You are not
bigger that God. I promise you. If my page is not back up face book will
be down in Jesus name”
In the clip, allegedly filmed during a “White Coat Summit” in front of
the Supreme Court in Washington, D.C., the self-proclaimed “Deliverance
Minister” stands with a group of doctors who praised hydroxychloroquine
and said how masks and lockdowns are not needed to stop the spread of
the novel coronavirus.
“Hello, you don’t need a mask. There is a cure,” Immanuel said in the video.
According to the Texas Medical Board, Immanuel is a licensed
pediatrician — and also recognized as religious minister, who has a long
history of making bizarre claims about medical topics and other
controversial issues.
On Tuesday, The Daily Beast
published an extensive collection of some of Immanuel’s sermons and
articles posted on her website, describing them as “definitely
ludicrous.”
She refers to herself as “God’s battle axe and weapon of war” and
claims that medical issues like endometriosis, cysts, infertility, and
impotence are caused by sex with “spirit husbands” and “spirit wives,” a
phenomenon described essentially as witches and demons having sexual
intercourse with people in a dreamworld.
“They turn into a woman and then they sleep with the man and collect
his sperm,” Immanuel said, according to the outlet. “Then they turn into
the man and they sleep with a man and deposit the sperm and reproduce
more of themselves.”
“They are responsible for serious gynecological problems,” Immanuel
said. “We call them all kinds of names — endometriosis, we call them
molar pregnancies, we call them fibroids, we call them cysts, but most
of them are evil deposits from the spirit husband,” Immanuel said in
2013. “They are responsible for miscarriages, impotence — men that can’t
get it up.”
The outlet claims to have also found that in 2015 Immanuel claimed that
an Illuminati plan had been concocted by “a witch” to destroy the world
using abortion, gay marriage, and children’s toys.”
EDITOR'S NOTE: When Trump uses a whacko conspiracy theorist like Immanuel to prove his unproven corona cures, he's certainly not helping his reelection chances.
EDITOR'S NOTE: When Trump uses a whacko conspiracy theorist like Immanuel to prove his unproven corona cures, he's certainly not helping his reelection chances.
2 comments:
Several Nurses from the Clear Lake area had also forwarded the FB post. They were taken down. Then FB could not keep up with the number of health care professionals that were reposting the information. I think there is something to it. Hydroxychloroquine and Zinc seem to lesson the effects and shorten the duration of COVID-19.
Lots of claims by lots of physicians that have actually treated people with it that Hydroxychloroquine and Zinc are effective. I find it extremely disheartening at how this whole thing has been politicized. Trump hatred is so strong and so many people are completely overwhelmed by it...it's hard to know what to believe anymore.
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