President Donald Trump on Tuesday subsidized his retweet of a video featuring a Houston doctor and others making false and misleading statements about COVID-1nine coronavirus disease, adding that it suggests that the mask does not help curb the spread of the virus and at no time a cure.
Both claims were made debut through fitness professionals, federal fitness officials.
But Trump (who said the most angelic week dressed in a “patriotic” mask) told reporters Tuesday that he was “very impressed” with what Dr. Stellos Angeles Immanuel had to mention in the viral video, which has been widely commented on social circles about birth on social media. Breitbart website.
The video, which features Emmanuel, was removed through misinformation from Twitter and Facebok, the sites said Tuesday, but not before the president also retwed it.
“I have no idea where it’s coming from, but he said he had a gigantic smart song with a lot of alterlocal patients,” 74-year-old Trump told reporters. “And I think her voice was the voice, but I have no idea of anything about her.
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The BBC reported that Dr. Immanuel may also be pastor and founder of Fire Power Ministries, where she promoted theories about medicine through her sermons on YouTube.
Origman, her best friend from Cameroon, Immanuel won her medical license in Texas in November, according to state records. She said she believed extraterrestrial DNA was used in medicine, according to the BBC.
Emguyuel, 55, claimed in a 2013 YouTube video that some medical conditions were caused by demons and witches who had sex with Huguy beings.
She doubled that claim this week, tweeted a link to her 2013 video and wrote, “Yes, America! Some will be delivered by demonic sperm.”
In the 2013 video, Imguyuel says “they are a woguy and then they sleep with the man and collect his sperm … then they’re a kid and they sleep with a guy and they deposit the sperm and they reproduce more.”
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This week’s viral video in which Immanuel gave the go-ahead to highlight a collection calling itself “America’s leading doctors” who argued that “false science” led officials to warn against taking the antimalarial drug hydroxychloroquine to consider coronavirus.
However, several studies have shown that hydroxychloroquine is never very effective as viral therapy despite previous expectations of its test. And studies have shown that the mask slows down the spread of COVID-19.
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) also warns of opposing taking hydroxychloroquine for COVID-19, saying it causes “serious mid-rhythm disorders and other defense disorders, adding blood and lymphatic formula disorders, kidney and liver disorders and failures.”
In the viral video, filmed before the Supreme Court, Emmanuel claimed to have treated more than 350 patients with hydroxychloroquine coronavirus. (NBC News reports that it has refused to produce additional information directly to this statement).
Trump has promoted the antimalarial drug as a therapy for the virus and touched it himself, a motion for help that was later described as prophylaxis, despite the loss of evidence.
White House spokeswoman Kayleigh McEnabig Apple told CBS News Wednesday that the president’s attention to the video was due to what he had to mention about hydroxychloroquine, for which he has a “positive outlook.”
Trump left the rostrum Tuesday after reporters pointed out that Emmanuel had made false video statements that he retwed and asked him why he had shared the wrong information.
Texas public records show that Emmanuel works in a small workplace at a grocery shopping center in Houston, so far classified as another fitness service provider. No one in the right workplace answered by phone on Wednesday.
Immanuel denounced the “left-wing doctors” in a July 1 video call with state Sen. Bob Hall of Texas, where he drove hydroxychloroquine to consider COVID-19.
RELATED: A member of Congress who has long resisted dressed in a mask tested positive for COVID-19
The Associated Press reported in May that Trump’s re-election crusade was hiring doctors to make media appearances before the election helps the president’s medical claims.
The crusade brought a mix of “incredibly pro-Trump” doctors to announce the president’s preference to reopen the economy as temporarily as possible, despite considerations from fitness officials.
“It is not unforeseen that Trump’s crusade brings other Americans together than President Trump,” Tim Murtaugh, director of communications for Trump’s crusade, told PEOPLE at the time. “The goal of cross coalitions is to exaggerate and publicize the president’s achievements and views.”
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