You poor automatons are fixating on the amount of ivermectin and throwing the baby out with the bathwater. You leave Oklahoma and go to Oregon, where the truth resides.
Indians called Willamette Valley in Oregon “Valley of Sickness.” This valley was once inundated by 400-foot-deep Montana flood waters, called the “Missoula Floods.” Endemic to this valley is the Camas Pocket Gopher, Thomomys bulbivorus, which is parasitized by Heligmosomoides polygyrus (formerly Nematospiroides dubius, Trichostrongylidae). This is the true link to ivermectin, because the discoverer, Satoshi Omura, used it against Nematospiroides dubius. Before seeing the movie, Caddy Shack, again, one notes that ivermectin’s origin is from a golf course near Ito City, Shizuoka Prefecture, Japan, where Omura first found the organism that produces it. It is found nowhere else. The SARS-CoV-2-mink link (Mustelidae) is because the long-tailed weasel interacts with the Willamette Camas gopher and is also a weasel-wildcat Japanese link for the nematode, Molineus mustelae:
Molineus / Japanese Wildcats
Inundation of Willamette Valley did not extirpate the gopher, though it is the freshwater crayfish, that moved into gopher dens, that will link to Wuhan lab’s “bat lady” Zheng-Li Shi, for studies on white-spot syndrome of shrimp.
Mexico: Leaf-Nosed Bat, Macrotus waterhousii (Trichostrongylidae)
A new species of nematode, Torrestrongylus tetradorsalis n. sp., is described herein, based on specimens recovered from the small intestine of the leaf-nosed bat, Macrotus waterhousii, from the Biosphere Reserve "Sierra de Huautla" in the state of Morelos, Mexico. The new species is included in...
pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov