J'ai trouvé cet article intéressant, sans forcément retenir l'ivermectine :
https://covidcandy.net/coronav(...)very/
Ce sera vu forcément comme du """complotisme""", j'en ai rien a foutre ;
"It is ironic that this mutation is highly likely, although by no means proven, to have resulted from hyper-evolutionary pressures applied by vaccines. The presently available vaccines, to their credit, appear to be mostly effective in the prevention of severe disease and mortality – for now. These vaccines work by providing IgG and IgM, but not IgA antibodies[51]. This is a crucial shortcoming; IgA antibodies reside in epithelial tissues and prevent initial infection[52], whereas IgG and IgM antibodies patrol the blood[53] and attack free virions, reducing the innate inflammatory immune response and inhibiting further spread of the virus throughout nearby tissues. However, without destroying infected cells, this simply means that the virus is remaining in place, replicating and mutating. Eventually, a random mutation occurs which allows the virus to evade those IgG and IgM antibodies, and by virtue of then becoming able to spread, that virus is quickly selected by evolution and becomes the dominant strain[27]. As CD8 has been the primary mechanism by which infected cells are destroyed, the virus’ evasion of MHC-I and CD8 immunity is likely an evolutionary response to being trapped in a cell and eventually destroyed; now, the host cells will no longer be destroyed.
This is not a unique scenario. Marek’s disease, a lymphoma virus disease in chickens, is the best known example of leaky vaccines causing evolutionary escape[54]. Long story short, the original virus was relatively mild, until flocks of chickens were vaccinated with leaky vaccines that, while preventing the chickens from dying, did not prevent infection. The virus engaged in an evolutionary arms race against the vaccines, which required frequent updates, and became more infectious and lethal over time. Eventually, the virus became so lethal that any unvaccinated chicken was certain to die if infected; the vaccine became the only means by which a flock of chickens could expect to survive an outbreak."
Intéressant sur les vaccins, cependant Le passage sur les poulets m'a fait froid dans le dos...