Covid Buyer’s Club: This Renegade Doctor Is Importing Experimental Coronavirus Treatments
A note from Ben Braddock: I am by no means a health professional, merely an expert. This is what I do personally, not a medical prescription. Be sure to “consult with a trusted doctor” before making lifestyle changes or taking new supplements.
After publishing several seminal pieces on modern health by Dr. Ben Braddock, we were tipped off by some concerned public health bureaucrats that he has been orchestrating a conspiracy to subvert the Great Reset by single-handedly attempting to end the COVID-19 pandemic. Like Ron Woodroof in the movie Dallas Buyer’s Club—who smuggled unapproved pharmaceutical drugs into Texas to treat early AIDS patients—Braddock has apparently been importing experimental coronavirus treatments and distributing them with the help of various Latin American organized crime syndicates. The concerned bureaucrats asked us to deplatform Braddock by removing his pieces from our site and refusing to publish him further. We decided instead to request an interview to learn more about this plot.
Braddock wasn’t easy to find. Our reporter, Gustavo Pierre, flew to Medellin, where he was greeted by a swarthy man named Franco who confiscated his electronic devices, put a hood over his head, and drove him for a length of time that could not be determined due to the disorienting effects of Lana Del Rey’s “Chemtrails Over the Country Club” being blared on loop. When the hood was removed, he found himself in an opulent villa overlooking a sparkling blue-green lake. He was led out to the pool, where he encountered Dr. Braddock lying facedown in the sun, completely nude, being massaged by two stout Russian women.
Throughout the course of the interview, old men in white robes appeared with questions for Dr. Braddock—speaking a strange language which Braddock explained was Aramaic. He would not divulge details of what they were working on, explaining only that it was some sort of mRNA vaccine that had the effect of altering gene expression in such a way that “the tragic consequences of the Agricultural Revolution will be corrected very soon.”
When asked about the allegations made against him—had he been smuggling COVID-19 treatments into the United States?—Braddock replied “Yes, I am finally doing what I should have done all along. Alea iacta est.”
Countere: COVID-19 is a complicated disease. The best and brightest have been working on treatments and some mildly effective ones have been adopted, but now we have the vaccines and soon the pandemic will be over. Why are you still focusing on experimental treatments?
Braddock: The conventional vaccines aren’t very efficacious aside from the Russian one. The mRNA gene therapy is a bit more efficacious but still allows the virus to circulate—just with mild symptoms—which will lead to mutations. The current vaccination strategy will not cause the virus to disappear, and they’ll be constantly chasing the mutations like they do with the seasonal flu shot, which is a feature not a bug—considering how much money they stand to make.
Pfizer has already confirmed that a third dose will be needed and then a yearly booster, and even then it’s still a guessing game as to which strain will be dominant. Avoiding the virus isn’t realistic, especially with vaccine leakage driving ever more contagious variants. The realistic response is to become a very healthy and fit person and have the right treatments stockpiled so that when you do get it, it’s a very mild case.
We already have good treatment regimens that just aren’t being followed by enough doctors. But the NIH, FDA, CDC, all of those crooks, are refusing to promote any of the treatments that work. They shill meme treatments like Remdesivir—a drug that causes the liver to secrete N02, poisoning the lungs—while ignoring and even suppressing the many effective drugs we do have. Drugs that have been around for decades and are very safe.
Countere: Tell us a bit about your medical credentials. What qualifies you to make these claims which run counter to the guidelines set out by the National Institutes of Health and other public health agencies? Where have you been getting your information?
Braddock: Well I’m speaking with myself, number one, because I have a very good brain and I’ve said a lot of things. Coming from a Native American background I had a very different medical education which I believe gives me a unique perspective. I spent three days in the vision pit and the voice told me when I was there, “We are the winged ones, the eagles and the owls. We are a nation and you shall be our brother. You will learn about herbs, and roots, and you will heal people. You will ask them for nothing in return. A man’s life is short. Make yours a worthy one.” I listen to a lot of other voices and at the appropriate time I’ll tell you who’s voices those are. But my primary consultant is myself and I have a good instinct for this stuff, probably because of my German and Indian blood. And I have tremendous direct experience with the virus itself. How many COVID patients has Dr. Jill Biden treated?
Countere: What inspired you to start importing experimental COVID drugs?
Braddock: I give full credit to the gay community. A few months in, I started noticing really just how similar this pandemic was to the AIDS crisis of the 80s. I mean, Fauci ran that one too and this has basically been the same playbook. Scare-mongering and all. You know, he was telling people back then that you might catch HIV just through routine contact with someone who had it. Led to a terrible stigma where many patients died neglected and alone as nurses were afraid to enter their hospital rooms. He also claimed that AIDS cases would eventually explode among the heterosexual population, which of course never happened.
Anyway, in the course of my research, I found that usage of many of the effective AIDS treatment, like pentamidine in patients with PCR pneumonia, came not from the federal health agencies or Big Pharma but from people in the gay community and renegade doctors who treated them. These treatments emerged through a decentralized bottom-up phenomenon that led to effective early breakthroughs and stood in stark contrast to the top-down approach which yielded treatments like AZT, which ended up being much more deadly than the HIV virus itself. With COVID-19 we’ve seen this dynamic play out, where effective treatments were identified by very smart people on the ground, while the conventional centralized top-down approach led to widespread usage of ventilators which directly killed tens of thousands of people.
The NIH treatment guidelines are still complete garbage. We’ve known that blood clots are a major risk for quite some time now, and the NIH still advises against giving blood thinners to outpatients and advises against monitoring blood clotting biomarkers or even evaluating patients for deep-vein thrombosis. At this point it all just feels deliberately murderous. There are great treatment protocols out there, like the ones that the Frontline COVID Care Alliance put out, so for NIH to continue to drag their asses is inexcusable. Now I understand the frustration that prompted Larry Kramer to tell Fauci that he should face a firing squad.
The final piece of inspiration came from watching Dallas Buyers Club, which tells the story of how some of those early AIDS patients circumvented the slow and corrupt white coat approval process and began importing and distributing medications themselves. I had already done these sort of grey market transactions in acquiring nootropics, so it didn’t take too much work in figuring out logistics.
Countere: Can you tell us a bit about these experimental treatments and how they work?
Braddock: The main one is ivermectin. You can technically get it from feed stores as horse/cattle deworming paste, however these are dosed for horses and not humans so you would be running a risk of overdose resulting in nausea, upset stomach, etc. The FDA put out a warning on this saying that some people were overdosing on ivermectin—making it sound as if this was occurring with ivermectin prescribed by doctors—when in reality a few people had upset stomachs from taking enough medicine to treat a 2000lb horse. If the FDA really cared about safety would just allow human-dosed ivermectin to be available over the counter. At these doses (12mg once daily for 5 days) it’s almost absurdly safe. So this is what I mostly import and give to people. The only side-effect that’s been reported back to me is a couple of people with mild herxheimer detox reactions, probably stemming from parasitic infections that the ivermectin wiped out. As a sushi-enjoyer I occasionally take anti-parasitics and have had these reactions but they’re minor.
[I Ate the Favorite Foods of Trump, Putin, & Kim Jong Un]
The theory is that ivermectin in combination with zinc works to inhibit viral replication. Ivermectin treatment has even turned around advanced cases beyond the viral stage where patients have been intubated, so I suspect it also must regulate the immune system in some powerful way. In one case, the family of an elderly lady had to go to a judge to get a court order to force the hospital to give it to her, and when they did she recovered very quickly.
So the exact mechanism of how ivermectin works isn’t confirmed, but what is confirmed is that when you give it to people in clinical studies and natural experiments it drastically reduces the severity, mortality, and duration of the disease. Combine it with other therapies like aspirin, zinc, quercetin, and vitamin D and you get even better outcomes. We’re talking an over 90% reduction in mortality. Now the hacks are putting out studies trying to say it doesn’t work so well, but it’s very deceptive, they put out headlines like “Ivermectin Does Not Alleviate Mild COVID-19 Symptoms, Study Finds.” Well it’s not supposed to alleviate mild symptoms, it’s supposed to alleviate moderate, severe, and deadly ones. Having mild symptoms just means that your immune system is responding to the virus appropriately.
Hydroxychloroquine is one that’s taken a lot of heat but I still think it is useful so I also import it. You really need to have it on hand before getting sick though—there’s a very narrow window early in the infection for when you have to take it and after that it’s basically useless. You also have to take it in combination with bromhexine (an over the counter expectorant) for it to work. It was first used in the treatment of SARS and basically blocked it from entering the cells, but SARS2 (COVID-19) is tricky because when they were engineering it they added a new furin cleavage site which hydroxychloroquine doesn’t block, so with COVID-19 you have to block two pathways and hydroxychloroquine only blocks one. Bromhexine blocks the other one though, so if you take this combination it’ll work as a prophylactic or early treatment. Some patients with heart issues don’t tolerate it well, so I typically encourage people towards ivermectin, but I believe that people are ultimately responsible for their own health—so if they really want it I’ll give it to them so long as they understand the risks.
[The Countere Guide to Spotting NPCs]
Aside from that it makes sense to have methylprednisone on hand, it’s probably the most effective oral corticosteroid we’ve seen in the clinical trials. I also keep a stash of budesonide and a tabletop nebulizer. When I had COVID-19, it was very early in the pandemic when we didn’t have a good sense of which treatments were effective. Symptoms were mild until one morning I woke up to find that I had to make a conscious effort to breathe. My dad dropped off a budesonide inhaler his doctor had given him for asthma and suggested it might help. I took it along with some Bronk-Aid aka ephedrine aka legal speed and it got rid of the respiratory symptoms very quickly. Come to find out later, my dad had stumbled on an important discovery and budesonide happens to be a solid treatment. Another cheap generic which works well yet gets no attention.
The really important thing with all of these treatments is understanding that a COVID infection has a viral incubation phase, an immune reaction phase, and a pulmonary phase. Some treatments you would only take at certain times, others are appropriate throughout the entire course of the illness. Refer to these protocols.
Over-the-counter medications that I keep an inventory of are: quercetin, zinc, vitamin D, vitamin C, melatonin, aspirin. I also keep a lot of flush niacin (nicotinic acid) on hand.
I really want to emphasize aspirin here. Both it and melatonin act as blood thinners, which counteracts the increased threat of blood clots we see with COVID. That is very important to stay on top of. I believe the clot risk is the single most serious aspect of this disease and that most of the respiratory issues are caused by microclots in the capillaries that envelop the alveoli of the lungs. Proactive use of anti-clotting medication is often enough on its own to prevent a COVID-19 infection from becoming much more uncomfortable than a common cold.
Countere: How would someone go about setting up a “COVID Buyers Club”?
Braddock: You can go on indiamart.com and submit a requirement where you list which drugs you need. Sellers will reach out with quotes and you can make arrangements from there. I like to split my orders across a couple of different companies instead of risking one big order being seized by customs. As a backstop I also have arrangements in place with Mexican and Colombian cartels who are very skilled at imports. Sometimes you can just get a prescription from a doctor to fill at your local pharmacy, or if your own doctor won’t, there is a directory of some telemedicine doctors who use ivermectin.
Countere: There is talk in the press about “Long COVID”, a potentially long term chronic illness caused by the virus. What are your thoughts on treating this?
Braddock: I think this—where it is legitimate, you have to keep in mind that a lot of what is reported as Long COVID is psychosomatic or caused by living in the unreality of life under lockdown—is actually an issue with the immune system’s mast cells remaining in overdrive and flooding the body with histamines which make the person feel a variety of symptoms from fatigue to hair loss to heart palpitations and tinnitus. This can be treated by taking a large dose of vitamin C (2000-4000mg) daily for a week, and then taking large (500mg-1g) doses of niacin to flush the histamines out into the bloodstream, where the high vitamin C levels degrade and destroy them. Normally this causes a flush where you turn red and feel like you have sunburn but this is harmless. Flushes should be spaced about 8 hours apart. By frequently depleting the mast cells and replenishing the enzyme which regulates them (your body derives this from niacin), you can restore proper function to the mast cells and eliminate the brain fog and other manifestations of Long COVID. Some have also reported flush niacin to be very helpful in treating an active COVID infection.
I’ll also mention that it’s good practice to take low-dose aspirin for a couple weeks after a moderate-severe infection and to supplement with glycine to help repair any inflammatory damage to the blood vessels. My favorite glycine is SolSupps when it’s in-stock but otherwise NOW brand is pretty good.
Countere: Any final thoughts?
Braddock: None of this should be taken as medical advice, you should consult your doctor, I do not assume responsibility or liability for anything, but especially not any stupid actions taken on the readers part like misreading chloroquin as chlorine and drinking bleach as a result. Download and distribute the treatment protocols from https://covid19criticalcare.com (under “Essential Documents”). Be careful about dosing. Be proactive about laying in a supply of therapeutics large enough for yourself, family, and friends. Don’t wait until exposure or symptoms to get these because you’ll miss the crucial early treatment phase. Don’t stress, be blessed, and put your trust in God.
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