

In a 2013 sermon, Immanuel claimed that demonic creatures “Are responsible for serious gynecological problems, we call them all kinds of names-endometriosis, we call them molar pregnancies, we call them fibroids, we call them cysts, but most of them are evil deposits from the spirit husband.” In sermons posted by Fire Power Ministries, a church she founded in Katy, Texas, Immanuel asserts that many diseases result from witches and demons. Immanuel’s religious convictions extend beyond invoking the power of God against the removal of her video content. If my page is not back up face book will be down in Jesus name.” This message was followed up by “You are not bigger that God. If my page is not back up face book will be down in Jesus name.- Stella Immanuel MD July 28, 2020 Hello Facebook put back my profile page and videos up or your computers with start crashing till you do. Threatening the social media giant, she Tweeted “Hello Facebook put back my profile page and videos up or your computers with start crashing till you do”. In reaction to the removal of her video from Facebook, Immanuel lashed out with a set of viral tweets demanding that the video posts be restored. It was at this point that Immanuel brought her religious views and beliefs into play. Twitter and Facebook quickly removed the video from their social media platforms, arguing that it violated their COVID-19 disinformation policies. The video was published to Breitbart News and YouTube, and was retweeted by both the President and his eldest son Donald Trump, Jr., the latter declaring it a “must watch”. Immanuel claims that under her guidance, her Houston-based practice has cured more than 350 patients suffering COVID-19 by administering a combination of the drugs Hydroxychloroquine and Zithromax, as well as the mineral zinc. Across the following several decades, Immanuel joined the General Pediatric Care Clinic as a pediatrician and owned medical care facilities in Louisiana and Texas. Soon after immigrating, Immanuel completed a pediatric residency at the Bronx-Lebanon Hospital Center in New York City. A 1990 graduate of the Nigerian Medical School at the University of Calabar, she moved to the U.S.

“They found the gene in somebody’s mind that makes you religious, so they can vaccinate against it,” Immanuel claimed, one of several statements that caused critics to question her medical expertise.

In a 2015 sermon, she claimed that scientists have plans to insert microchips into people that could result in the eradication of religion. The group, “America’s Frontline Doctors”, maintains that masks are unnecessary in the prevention of COVID-19 and that quarantine does not need to occur.Ī self-proclaimed conspiracy theorist, Immanuel has suggested that vaccines are government plots to control people. Supreme Court at the “White Coat Summit”, a gathering of doctors who claim that false information is being spread in regards to treatments of the Coronavirus. “You don’t need a mask, there is a cure,” Immanuel proclaimed in a June 27 speech from the steps of the U.S. In a recent BET interview, Fauci expressed that “Multiple trials that were well conducted have shown that Hydroxycholoquine is not effective in Coronavirus disease”. Anthony Fauci, long-time Director of National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. Her claim that the drug is a miracle cure to the global pandemic was not supported by Dr. Stella Immanuel claimed that anti-Malaria drug Hydroxychloroquine is the cure to the Coronavirus. In a video that went viral earlier this week, Dr. A skeptic of Centers for Disease Control (CDC) guidance on the handling of Coronavirus and treatment for COVID-19 has recently had her own unconventional treatments and unorthodox religious beliefs brought to light.
