
Late-night talk show hosts, including Jimmy Fallon, Stephen Colbert, and Jimmy Kimmel, once held nothing back in their criticism of Ivermectin, often shamelessly referring to it as “horse paste.” But now, Ivermectin has made an astonishing resurgence, thanks to a significant validation from the FDA.
Jimmy Dore, a liberal anti-woke comedian, recently took aim at corporate media and what he terms “Pfizer-sponsored” liberal comedians. He highlighted a critical moment in the ongoing legal battle surrounding Ivermectin. “The big news was, the FDA lawyer in court… had to defend all these stupid stuff they said about Ivermectin,” Dore pointed out. He emphasized that Ivermectin, a Nobel Prize-winning human medicine, has saved countless lives globally, except in the United States.
Dore brought to light the fact that the FDA, through its lawyer, was compelled to admit that doctors have the authority to prescribe Ivermectin for COVID-19 treatment. This admission cast doubt on the FDA’s earlier positions and advisories. Ashley Cheung Honold, a Department of Justice lawyer representing the FDA, conceded during oral arguments in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit, “FDA explicitly recognizes that doctors do have the authority to prescribe Ivermectin to treat COVID.”
Dore, with a substantial online following, wasted no time in scrutinizing America’s liberal comedians who had, just a year ago, perpetuated wild disinformation and referred to Ivermectin as a “horse drug.”
His first target was Jimmy Fallon, who humorously labeled the drug a “horse dewormer,” a joke that didn’t land well. “Americans got together to fire up the grill, grab a cold beer, and toss back some horse dewormer,” Fallon said in what appears to be totally unfunny joke.
Stephen Colbert, a notorious liberal comedian suffering from chronic TDS, quipped, “Don’t worry about the anti-vaxxers being unprotected cause they have found a new drug that also does not protect them. It’s called Ivermectin, which is a horse dewormer. So you’ll probably still get Covid but on the bright side you could win the Preakness.”
Dore seized on this, highlighting the irony in Colbert’s reference to the Preakness race, an event in Baltimore, Maryland, where a significant portion of black population remains unvaccinated. “Figures for a guy who once voted for Strom Thurmond,” he added, referring to the Republican senator from South Carolina who was in the Senate for such a long time that he might have thought it was his personal house.
Colbert even featured a graphic of a horse kicking viruses in the bloodstream, prompting Dore to ask, “So how much do you think Pfizer paid for that graphic?”
Jimmy Kimmel, another insulting liberal comedian, expressed concerns about people choosing Ivermectin over vaccines, noting an uptick in calls to poison control centers related to the drug. “We’ve still got a lot of pan-dimwits out there. People who are still taking Ivermectin. You know the poison control centers have seen this spike in calls from people taking this livestock medicine to fight the coronavirus,” said Kimmel.
Dore then exposed Kimmel for what he is by saying, “He didn’t look into Ivermectin, because if he had, he would know that what he’s saying is stupid. It’s as dumb as the people he thinks he’s making fun of!”
The anti-Woke stand-up comedian, who has been exposing his fellow liberal comedians and Democrats for their lies and paid propaganda, said he felt sorry for Kimmel because he’s not going to apologize for his lies.
Dore went on to highlight a new narrative among liberals and Democrats, claiming they had never stated that vaccines would stop the virus. He pointed out instances where prominent figures, from Anthony Fauci to Joe Biden, had indeed made such claims.
Kimmel, in a seemingly Pfizer-sponsored monologue, expressed worry about people rejecting vaccines in favor of Ivermectin, deeming it “crazy.” Dore’s response emphasized skepticism towards pharmaceutical companies and their experimental treatments.
“It’s crazy that they won’t take an experimental medical treatment with no long term studies being given to us by the biggest murderous criminals in the history of the world- Big Pharma. It’s weird that people are skeptical of that, and it turns out now we know that they were all rightfully so,” said Dore.
Seth Meyers joined the chorus, referring to Ivermectin as a “horse dewormer.” Dore questioned whether Meyers and other pro-vaccine comedians had done their research, highlighting the drug’s extensive use in various countries worldwide.
Dore was wondering if Meyers and his fellow Covidians and pro-vaccine comedians ever looked into the fact that Ivermectin is a human medicine. “It’s safer than Tylenol. Remember when Trump said shit-hole countries? This is them— they’re version of shit-hole countries. Because it’s been prescribed billions of times in countries in Africa, in India, in Asia, South America… Billons of times. Saved billions of lives. But not here in this country. So this is their version of shit-hole countries. All those billions who have taken Ivermectin are dumb red-neck shit-hole people. And that’s just lazy, arrogant smugness.”
The common thread in this montage of corporate liberal comedians is their consistent portrayal of Ivermectin as a “horse dewormer,” often insinuating that those who use it are misguided.
Dore lamented that what Colbert, Kimmel, Fallon, and Meyers have been doing is the “exact opposite of what comedians are supposed to do.” The role of comedians is to debunk propaganda through jokes and skits, especially when people are being deceived by billion-dollar corporations “in order to make more money.”
“Of course, they’re paid by the same corporations. They can’t make those jokes. They became the thing they used to make fun of,” Dore said.
He particularly singled out Colbert for his perceived smugness and willingness to distort facts for financial gain. Dore concluded that these comedians had become what they once mocked—mouthpieces for corporate interests.
“These assholes make James Corden look like a nice guy,” he added.