Joe Rogan threatens to sue CNN for ripping ivermectin use
Joe Rogan threatened to sue CNN on Tuesday over its ridiculing his use of ivermectin after he tested positive for the novel coronavirus.
On Tuesdayâs podcast, Mr. Rogan said âBro, do I have to sue CNN?â after guest Tom Segura called him âold âHorse Wormâ Rogan.â
âTheyâre making s*** up,â Mr. Rogan said. âThey keep saying Iâm taking horse dewormer. I literally got it from a doctor. Itâs an American company. They won the Nobel Prize in 2015 for use in human beings and CNN is saying Iâm taking horse dewormer. They must know thatâs a lie.â
âIf the internet says it, who cares. But CNN is saying it. Jim Acosta!â
The quarrel with the liberal network grew out of Mr. Roganâs saying last week that he had tested positive for the virus that causes COVID-19 but had engineered a quick recovery.
He said that he âthrew the kitchen sinkâ at the disease, including âmonoclonal antibodies, ivermectin, Z-Pak, prednisone, everything. And I also got an NAD drip and a vitamin drip and I did that three days in a row. And so, here we are on Wednesday, and I feel great.â
Ivermectin has become a focal point for liberal criticism of people who resist being vaccinated against COVID-19.
The drug has been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for human use, albeit not against COVID-19 or anything adjacent like flu â" specifically, for fighting off parasitic worms and head lice.
However, there are some anecdotal accounts and dissident doctors who say ivermectin has had promising results against COVID-19 and some people have turned to it. But another form of the drug is available without a prescription, as the human form requires because itâs also used to treat worms in large animals, primarily cows and horses.
That form, however, is intended for animals that weigh many times what people do and accordingly is far more powerful than humans should take, effective or not. There are anecdotal accounts of people self-medicating and suffering severe side effects, including digestive woes.
Ridicule of ivermectin users on that basis, such as Mr. Segura, a stand-up comedian, made against Mr. Rogan, has become a staple of liberal discourse in recent weeks.
CNN contributed to that when among other occasions, a guest on âDon Lemon Tonightâ said Mr. Rogan was âpromoting kind of a crazy jumble of, you know, sort of folk remedies and internet-prescribed drugs. Itâs, again, dangerous now.â
CNN medical analyst Dr. Jonathan Reiner added that Mr. Rogan âshould have more sense after encountering the disease ⦠Heâs not helping matters when he promotes this sort of nonsense therapeutic mix.â
Mr. Rogan said on Tuesdayâs podcast that what he did is not nonsense.
âMultiple doctors told me to take it,â he said, citing specifically a medical expert who appeared on his show and said the drug has some promising results.
âCNN was saying Iâm a âdistributor of misinformation,ââ he said, adding that Japanese doctors have recommended the drug to treat COVID-19.
The famed podcaster also noted that CNN had ignored one very important detail about his regimen. That it had worked.
âWhat they didnât highlight is that I got better,â he said. âThey tried to make it seem as if, like, Iâm doing some wacky s*** thatâs completely ineffective.â
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