Ooh sounds rough. I didn’t get it that badly to begin with. Hub got it very badly, slightest touch he’d be covered head to toe with the worst reaction I ever saw. I read that if you drink goat milk from goats who are fed poison oak or ivy, you get immune. I knew someone who raised milk goats and sold the milk, and I asked if they would feed their goats poison oak, goats love it. She said fine. Hub would drink some every day even though he doesn’t like goat milk. Finally her goats ran out of poison oak at her place so I collected bags for her (using gloves of cours). After a few months of drinking this milk, hub got 100% immunity to poison oak. There isn’t poison ivy here.
Why Are Statins So Dangerous?
Unpacking one of the largest scams in medicine
https://www.midwesterndoctor.com/p/why-are-statins-so-dangerous
Excerpt:
One of the biggest misconceptions is that cholesterol causes heart disease and that statins, which lower cholesterol, prevent it. Not only is this untrue, but the highly profitable statins are also among the most harmful pharmaceuticals available (and share many eerie parallels to the COVID vaccines).
Despite growing evidence that lowering cholesterol does not reduce heart disease, the medical industry continues to push statins. Studies have shown that the benefits of statins are minimal, with data manipulated to exaggerate their effectiveness.
Statins are aggressively promoted, not because of their efficacy, but due to financial interests in the pharmaceutical industry. Guidelines on cholesterol and statins are often created by experts who have conflicts of interest. Many doctors and patients are penalized for not adhering to these guidelines.
Statins cause significant harm, with side effects like muscle pain, cognitive issues, and even life-threatening conditions such as diabetes and liver dysfunction. Despite widespread patient reports of these injuries, the medical community often dismisses them, attributing them to a “nocebo effect” or imagining the problem.