Source: Miami Herald Author: MARTIN VASSOLO

Even as a local Democratic Party official threatens to call for his removal from public office, Miami Beach Commissioner Ricky Arriola said he will not delete his Twitter account or stop sharing articles promoting the use of hydroxychloroquine to treat COVID-19.

Arriola, a Democrat serving on a nonpartisan city commission, was criticized on social media last Friday for using his public Twitter page to share an opinion article, which called for jailing of White House adviser Dr. Anthony Fauci for calling the antimalarial medication ineffective against the virus.

Miami-Dade Democratic Party Chair Steve Simeonidis told the Miami Herald that he would support recalling the commissioner from office if he continues to promote “dangerous disinformation.”

“The man needs to be disavowed publicly,” Simeonidis said. “He is an elected official that people seemingly trust based on his position. He’s feeding them extremely dangerous disinformation.”

He asked Arriola to delete his Twitter account, which Arriola called an attempt to censor him. Arriola, whom former President Barack Obama appointed to his Committee on the Arts and Humanities in 2009, said Simeonidis was not a “relevant” voice in the party. He called him a “Bernie Bro,” a disparaging label for supporters of Sen. Bernie Sanders.

“I have been involved in Democratic politics since he was in diapers,” Arriola wrote in a text Wednesday. “He’s never crossed my path. He wanted me to take down my post and to delete my Twitter account. That’s endorsing censorship. For a Democrat, that’s against party values.”

Arriola said he has not personally promoted the use of the politically divisive drug, but he sees “merit” in discussing its possible efficacy.

“Last time I checked, this is America and we are allowed to speak our mind. If we fear censorship from party leadership, then maybe we need new leadership.”

Ricky Arriola

Arriola has been critical of restrictive COVID-19 countermeasures, like restaurant closures, which he said have led to “incalculable human suffering and financial loss.”

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has come out against taking the drug outside a hospital setting or clinical trial, citing possible health risks. The FDA revoked the drug’s “emergency use authorization” in June, meaning hospitalized COVID-19 patients would no longer receive doses of the drug from the Strategic National Stockpile.

Doctors can still prescribe the drug. Arriola said some of his friends who contracted COVID-19 took hydroxychloroquine and reported positive results, he said.

“I have no idea whether hydroxychloroquine works or not,” he said in an interview Thursday. “I am questioning the censorship at a national level. I think it has merits to be put in the national discourse.”


Related: Big Tech Silencing Physicians: A Very Dangerous Road for American Medicine

Henry Ford Health Defends Study, Shows Hydroxychloroquine Does Reduce Death Rates

Michigan Democratic lawmaker Karen Whitsett – ‘hydroxychloroquine saved my life’.

Dr. Fauci’s Double Standards: Polarizing the Nation on Hydroxychloroquine, by Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.

Share on facebook
Share on twitter
Share on whatsapp
On Trend

Latest Stories

Dr. Harvey Risch: Hydroxychloroquine, Ivermectin, and Other Therapeutics Highly Effective in Early COVID Treatment

I’ve railed against this in the media that we are a part of, and the way that the propaganda reacts to this is, “Ignore it. Ignore all of this.” I’m saying this now because the general public has to be the one that gets angry. The general public should be furious at the way people have been treated in the country by suppression of these drugs, by that kind of website that suppresses the ability of doctors to practice medicine.

Read More »

A Judge Stands up to a Hospital: “Step Aside” and Give a Dying Man Ivermectin

The judge’s finest moment may have been when he dashed the most glaring myth about ivermectin—that it is not safe, despite decades of use that shows otherwise. Noting that all drugs have side effects, Judge Fullerton listed ivermectin’s effects from a government website.
“(N)umber one, generally well tolerated; number two, dizziness; number three, pruritus; number four, nausea/diarrhea. These are the side effects for the dosage that’s being asked to be administered,” he said. “The risks of these side effects are so minimal that Mr. Ng’s current situation outweighs that risk by one-hundredfold.”

Read More »