from the Los Angeles fires to the cure for cancer

Mel Gibson will probably go down in history as an actor and film director, but also as a loudmouth. The 69-year-old Hollywood star has been speaking his mind for a long time now. It doesn’t have a filter. Now, he has dared to launch a theory about the Los Angeles fires. The actor points out that the devastating fires that are ravaging California could have to do with government conspiracy.

In an interview with Fox News, Gibson got to the point: “I know they’ve been playing with the water, emptying the reserves for one reason or another, and they’ve been doing it for a while. When these things happen, you wonder: is it intentional?” The protagonist of the saga lethal weapon He lost his mansion in Malibu.


Mel Gibson has lost his house in the fires

JONATHAN ALCORN/ZUMA PRESS WIRE/DPA/CONTACT / Europa Press

Gibson’s is one more of the conspiracy theories that flood the networks these days: from attacks with laser weapons to plans to build a sustainable city on the ashes of Los Angeles.

Fortunately, not everyone who has a public profile contributes to misinformation. Another actor, Antonio Banderas, has raised his voice against these hoaxes that do so much damage: “We are living in times in which we no longer know what is true and what is a lie. “People speculate about anything, from radiation from new weapons launched by mysterious enemies to extraterrestrial interventions, through everything imaginable,” said the actor at the annual gala of the Academy of Performing Arts at the Calderón Theater in Valladolid on the night of Monday.

Days before Gibson’s statements to Fox, the actor attended comedian Joe Rogan’s controversial podcast. There he did not hesitate to point out the governor of California, Gavin Newsom: “In 2019, I think Newsom said: ‘I’m going to take care of the forest and maintain it’ and do all those kinds of things. I think all of our tax dollars probably went to Gavin’s hair gel. It’s sad. “The place is on fire.”

As if these speculations were not enough, Gibson went into another garden. In the same podcast, he claimed that several of his friends had been cured of cancer by taking antiparasitic drugs. The actor began by saying that he has total distrust in the pharmaceutical industry because three of his friends with cancer in the most advanced stage had managed to be cured with, according to him, alternative therapies. “I don’t believe there is anything that affects humanity that doesn’t have a natural cure. “I can’t prove it but I believe it,” he said. And he dared to affirm that “alternative therapies could cure cancer.”

The actor has also assured that three of his friends have been cured of cancer by taking antiparasitic drugs.

Specifically, the drugs that Gibson claims his friends used are two antiparasitics for veterinary use: Ivermectin and Fenbedazol. To stop such nonsense, the Canadian Society of Oncology issued a statement to warn of the danger involved in using these substances as alternative medicines to treat cancer. “Misinformation about cancer treatment is dangerous, cruel and irresponsible, and gives false hope to cancer patients and their loved ones,” the scientific institution said on its social networks. The director and star of Braveheart He did not specify what type of cancer his friends suffered from, only that they had it “in stage four and now they no longer have cancer, at all.”

In a few days, this episode of the podcast already exceeded 5 million views. The wave of criticism did not take long to arrive. With an unfiltered interview style, Joe Rigan addresses controversial topics that earn him both loyal followers and fierce detractors.

Source: www.lavanguardia.com