A three-minute sketch by renowned Egyptian comedian Bassem Youssef has been making the rounds again after Fusion comedy resurfaced the video in an effort to combat Trump's Muslim-targeted ban

The video, released in May, mocks the rise of Islamophobia by introducing a new technological device dubbed "Breathe Easy," which aims to measure the number of radical enzymes present in any human being's saliva.

It has garnered over half a million views since Fusion re-shared it.

It was part of his new show titled, "Democracy Handbook."

Meet "Jihad Solutions"

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Everything about the promo is hilarious. From naming the technological company "Jihad Solutions" to making up an enzyme called "radical enzyme" -- the sketch perfectly combats the ridiculousness of Islamophobia.

"To be given a chance, as a Middle Eastern to satirize certain aspects of American political life is quite challenging. I am doing this in a language that is foreign to me and in a country that is not mine," Youssef said in a Facebook post .

Maybe Trump should invest in his own "Breathe Easy" device?

"Xenophobia and discrimination against others because of their skin, religion, gender, views, orientation and ethnicity is a plague that the whole world has. Satire is a great remedy for this and I hope we keep using it to bring people together," Youssef said.

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The side-effects include but are not limited to:

"Headaches, tunnel vision, unexplained friend loss, supporting Trump, depression, isolation, paranoia, mild irritation of the eyes, severe irritation of your friends and neighbors, open-mouth shower crying, loss of a job, sudden urge to fly a Confederate flag on the back of your pick-up truck, diarrhea of the mouth, and anal leakage."

"The readings are precise, more accurate than a drone strike"