the original ‘wild’ Wuhan had about a 7-10 days to bad symptoms so there was some wiggle room on when to start and maybe some sniffles as a clue.
But this Delta one is 3-5 days to bad symptoms, not always sniffles, and it takes off at a sprint. It’s hard to know when ‘early’ is anymore.
The FLCCC recently updated their IMASK+ protocol for prevention to include Ivermectin twice a week. I wonder if that is why? Seems likely, especially given what I think I know about how long Ivermectin stays in your system.
There’s always a reason. the ivermectin didn’t work. They didn’t start it early enough. they did t take it long enough. wrong dose. Whatever the excuse it clearly is not a magic cure as some believe
C’mon, man.
In this environment, my advice to someone who is either vaxxed/unvaxxed or previously not exposed (recovered):
At the first sign of fever, engage treatments at home widely discussed/posted at length here at FR and, most importantly, don’t be a dumbass and refuse to stay isolated (fever = communicable).
Fever is the tell. Always has been. No such thing as ‘asymptomatic spread’ (that was CCP propaganda used by Fauxi et al to justify all the BS lockdown/masking).
It ain’t rocket science.
In my own virus case - pre-Delta - my fever appeared out of nowhere, not a single person present in the conference room the day prior became ill, and the fever started slow/low, accelerating to 104 within 24 hours.
My personal mistake was waiting, but this was March 2020. And, to summarize, my illness was still only 72 hours to fever breaking after starting my own ‘treatment’ after roughly 36 hours from fever onset.
There’s no excuse for ‘waiting’ now, and those consulting medical services must DEMAND treatments not outlined in recklessly negligent NIH protocols.
Most importantly, an intelligent person already has what’s required in their medicine cabinet BEFORE becoming ill.
The converse of the latter merits the result of a life/death IQ test for anyone ‘at-risk’ of complications (pretty much the ONLY group subject to risk of severe illness and death).