The point is.... Crickets.
You proved your point, and everybody that criticized you are weaseling out of saying they were wrong.
HQC does not cure Covid19. However, along with zinc, it slows replication of the virus, giving the immune system a chance to ramp up its defenses and generate antibodies to fight the virus before the immune system gets overwhelmed and produces an inflammatory response that destroys the lungs.
It was found that zinc prevents replication of viruses in cells. HCQ acts as an Ionophore, which is a substance that allows zinc to enter the cell; zinc cannot enter a cell by itself. HCT and zinc are most effective at the onset of the disease, when symptoms are first detected. By the time a patient is on a ventilator, it is too late to administer, as at that time, it's not the virus that kills, but an overwhelmed immune system that overreact by producing a cytokine storm in the lungs that fills the alveoli with pus (pneumonia), preventing the passing of oxygen from the lungs to the bloodstream. At that time, a ventilator can open up these alveoli, but destroys the lungs at the same time. Up to 80% of Covid19 patients on a ventilator do not survive.
Most studies that claimed that HCQ had no effect never mentioned the concurrent use of zinc, in which case administering it was useless. What made those studies worse was the fact that it was given too late to desperate patients, most of whom were doomed anyway. And in the Brazil study that claimed that it caused patients to die, they used Chloroquine in toxic doses, generating cardiac problems on desperately ill patients. The reason Hydroxycholoquine replaced Chloroquine 40 years ago was because HCQ did not have the same toxic effects. HCT prolongs the QT interval on ECG's, but only after years of continuous use.
India approved the use of HCQ with zinc way back in March. But usually, authorities and countries here are too smug to admit that a developing country might be on to something. India was right, and it might explain why India is not doing that badly.