Sunday, August 2, 2020

Demons and Witches licensed by Texas Medical License Board


Last week our Orange King praised a Houston doctor for her use of hydroxychloroquine in "curing" 300 patients who were suffering from the coronavirus.  
This “learned” pediatrician/minister, Dr. Stella Immanuel,  who emigrated from Cameroon (one of the Orange King’s S.H. African countries) , has  other mind boggling theories; she claims that medical issues like endometriosis, cysts, infertility, and impotence are caused by sex with “spirit husbands” and “spirit wives”—a phenomenon she describes as “witches and demons having sex with people in a dreamworld.” She added that the witches and demons “ are responsible for miscarriages, impotence”…….And there’s more -  in her  2013 “sermon” - she continued, saying the witches and demons "are responsible for serious gynecological problems,……. 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.”

 I checked and noted that she was licensed to practice in my state by the Texas Medical License Board.  OMG…can you imagine bringing a child to this woman’s office for treatment/care?

Disgust department: How about Georgia's Senator David Perdue having to pull one of his political ads showing his opponent, Jon Ossoff with a new nose; Perdue's buddies decided a computer adjusted bigger nose would make Ossoff look "more Jewish" which sells well with Perdue's anti-semitic followers. 
And South Carolina's Cracker Boy Graham darkened the skin of his Black opponent, Jaime Harrison in his political ads. Is cracker boy running scared?


 On a happier, brighter note: I don't usually write about medical studies that haven't had sufficient time/controls and human participants to prove a thesis. But, occasionally an interesting item pops up that will put a smile on all my dog loving friends:
 Eight dogs,  part of the German Armed Forces, were trained for a week to detect the Corona virus in samples of saliva. Then they were given more than 1,000 infected and non-infected samples and were able to detect 94% of cases. They correctly identified 157 positive samples and 792 negative samples but missed 30 positive samples and gave false positives for 33 samples.
The study was a small pilot project tested by the German Armed Forces, the University of Veterinary Medicine in Hannover and the Hanover Medical School.

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