When history finally writes the story of COVID, the pandemic will not just be remembered for the virus itself, but for the way truth was smothered beneath corporate interests and bureaucratic arrogance. Few examples illustrate this better than the demonisation of Ivermectin — one of the most bizarre and tragic chapters in modern medicine.
From Nobel Prize to “Horse Paste”
Before 2020, Ivermectin was one of medicine’s quiet success stories — a Nobel Prize–winning antiparasitic used safely by millions around the world. It eradicated river blindness, treated scabies and intestinal worms, and was so trusted that it featured on the World Health Organization’s list of essential medicines.
Then COVID arrived.
In the scramble for treatments, some doctors noticed that Ivermectin seemed to show promise — not as a miracle cure, but as a cheap, safe antiviral with measurable benefit. Early studies were encouraging, and countries such as India, Mexico and Peru reported sharp drops in hospitalisations after introducing it.
Yet instead of curiosity, what followed was a coordinated smear campaign. The same drug hailed for decades as a medical breakthrough was suddenly ridiculed as “horse dewormer.” Doctors prescribing it were threatened. Pharmacies refused to fill prescriptions. Media outlets parroted the line that it was “dangerous” — ignoring decades of human use and the drug’s impeccable safety record.
The Power of the Patent
Why such hostility to a harmless, off-patent drug?
Because Ivermectin was cheap. Dirt cheap. There were no billions to be made from a 40-year-old molecule. And so, as Dr Pierre Kory and others have documented, Big Pharma — aided by public health authorities — quietly ensured that the narrative stayed fixed: new, patentable antivirals were “science,” while Ivermectin was “misinformation.”
Billions were poured into shiny new drugs that cost hundreds per dose. And yet, none matched the safety profile or affordability of Ivermectin. As Dr John Campbell’s recent video “John Takes Ivermectin” highlights, the irony is now painful — a respected medical educator, simply mentioning his own use of Ivermectin for what he believes was COVID, still feels compelled to whisper it like a secret.
The Evidence Today
The data now are overwhelming. As Campbell quotes from Dr Kory’s War on Ivermectin, there are over 90 controlled studies, involving more than 130,000 patients, showing statistically significant benefits — from reduced hospitalisation and faster recovery to lower mortality. Meta-analyses, the gold standard of medical evidence, confirm the effect, particularly when used early.
Yet, in the so-called “advanced” nations, Ivermectin remains effectively banned. Doctors who dare to prescribe it risk being reported or struck off. Even today, the medical establishment refuses to revisit its mistakes. The lie has been told for so long that admitting the truth would destroy credibility — and perhaps expose liability.
The Cost of Denial
In places like India, Ivermectin helped turn the tide. But in the West, thousands — perhaps tens of thousands — may have died unnecessarily while awaiting the next profitable drug. The tragedy is not just medical but moral. When ideology and profit dictate what counts as “science,” trust collapses — and medicine ceases to serve humanity.
Dr Campbell’s quiet confession is a reminder that courage still exists among clinicians. But his need for caution also shows how toxic this issue remains. The pandemic may be over, yet the censorship persists, and the lesson goes unlearned.
Where to From Here?
It is long past time for a reckoning. The studies are out there. The data are clear. What remains is accountability — and an honest re-evaluation of how regulators, academics and media allowed a life-saving treatment to be turned into a punchline.
The world deserves better than slogans and selective science. It deserves truth — even when it’s inconvenient, even when it’s not profitable.
“The war on Ivermectin,” as Dr Kory calls it, was never really about medicine.
It was about control. And in that war, truth was the first casualty.
No comments:
Post a Comment