Under the heading "politics", today, everywhere on Twitter, people are talking about "demon sperm". It all started with the doctor, Stella Immanuel.
On Monday (July 27th), Donald Trump reposted on Twitter the approval of Dr. Stella Imannuel for hydroxychloroquine. It is no longer a secret that Turmp is insisting on adopting a drug that cures malaria, such as hydroxychloroquine, which he has long cited as a miracle-cure for the coronavirus, despite research that seems to say otherwise. Science is increasingly saying that hydroxychloroquine does not protect against Covid-19 and can cause serious heart problems.
In a viral video, posted by Breitbard and later deleted from Facebook after 13 million views, Stella Immanuel speaks before the Supreme Court at the White Summit about the "cure" of Covid-19. To see what is said in the video, read here.
But how did we go from hydroxychloroquine to demon sperm?
Despite being a doctor, Immanuel has some strange theories about medications and life, which the Daily Beast pointed out. Immanuel is said to believe that government is run by reptiles, that alien DNA is currently being used for medical purposes in humans, that there is a vaccine that turns people against religion, and that gynecological issues such as cysts or endometriosis come from witch sex. and demons in dreams, or as she calls them "women and men souls," whose "evil deposits" can make women infertile.
The Daily Beast revealed a sermon in which Immanuel talks about "Nephilim", a biblical being often characterized as an angel-human creature. According to Immanuel, nephilim take the form of demonic spirits and "hunt women" in dreams.
"They turn into a woman, sleep with the man and collect his semen. "Then they store the sperm and reproduce more like themselves," she explained, according to the Daily Beast.
Immanul says that witches can also do the "astral project" and "sleep with people", "but apparently you will know this if you dreamed that you had sex with a demon because your life will stop very soon", she says.
The video where the doctor claims to have found the cure for the virus was deleted by platforms such as Twitter, Facebook and YouTube, but Trump gave it even more media attention. He told a news conference that Immanuel and her colleagues were "respected doctors."
"I thought it was very impressive. "I do not know where she comes from, but she said she has had tremendous success with hundreds of different patients and I thought her voice should be heard."
Based on her Instagram posts, the doctor believes in "God". In one post she says, "My life is in the hands of the Lord" and elsewhere she writes: "Psalm 23".
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Meanwhile, Immanuel writes that "he is in the city and available" and that "he would like to meet with Trump". There is no news yet if they will meet, but it is 2020, nothing surprises us anymore.
Source: The Cut