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The Medical Profession Implodes


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2021 Dec 16, 12:51pm   1,098 views  19 comments

by RWSGFY   ➕follow (4)   💰tip   ignore  


...
I’m often in attendance at medical meetings where the fine points of immunotherapy and monoclonal antibodies are discussed as part of the treatment for cancer patients. For physicians, it is their version of science in regard to a drug’s indications, mechanisms of action, dosing, management of side effects, and the studies justifying one drug or combination over another, the latter often supported by questionable statistical analysis.

After the science-lite discussion ends, the personal chitchat begins regarding COVID and vaccines, and the point is reached where any remaining rationality becomes akin to that heard among nursery school attendees.

The tone becomes one of acceptance of the government line, all medical knowledge and cognitive abilities having vaporized. There is no talk about the fine points of the various PCR tests, the science of personal isolation or masking, the appropriate use of indoor ventilation systems and their management, the changing of standard and long-extant medical definitions, the introduction of gene therapy used as vaccines.

Expecting any discussion regarding electron microscopy’s effect on clinical medicine, techniques of viral isolation and culturing, or the number of Nobel Prize-winning ideas now scientifically abused is not within anyone’s ken. Instead, the conversation becomes who got their booster, when they are next due, how they interact, or not, with those around them so as to stay safe, how they worry about their child being exposed, and much other utterly time and life-sucking conversational trivia.

...


https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2021/12/the_medical_profession_implodes.html?source=patrick.net

Comments 1 - 19 of 19        Search these comments

1   Ceffer   2021 Dec 16, 1:09pm  

I do find it puzzling that many so called medical professionals display this inability to think. How can you spend that much time in school successfully competing and still not have an analytic capability that you have confidence in, but wait for the blaring bullhorns emitting from the fog of authority from some undesignated but monied source emanating down to the firmament?

I suppose I shouldn't be that surprised. As part of education, I used to attend tumor conferences. Different specialty departments were there, and each group simply tore at the 'patient' under consideration like junk yard dogs defending their turf. There did not seem to be a collegial benefit to the analysis of the patient's condition. The radiologist always wanted to fry, the surgeons always wanted to cut, and the internists always wanted to try out exotic cocktails of various meds, each irregardless of cooperative containment.

I once watched a debate between so called eminent medical authors descend into an insane and childish fight, with one of the correspondents declaring that he knew "how the cells think". It was bizarre.

I have also watched doctors with grants continue to torture patients with fruitless 'therapies' because they got money to 'prove' for Pharma the medicine's efficacy. As long as the torture continued, the grant money continued. Fauci is pretty standard in this regard.
2   Bd6r   2021 Dec 16, 2:26pm  

Ceffer says
How can you spend that much time in school successfully competing and still not have an analytic capability

Med school is mainly memorization.
3   Ceffer   2021 Dec 16, 2:59pm  

Narcissistic personality disorder is disproportionate in the medical profession. A lot of the competition is for the prestige handles and income. Doctors have spent most of their young lives competing in isolation for solipsistic goals. They are like puppies on the freeway when it comes to dedicated con artists and political machines. Deer in the headlights, all they can think of is their hard earned professional ticket (an easily removed, governmentally conferred privilege, not a right), money and status.

That political organizations can force them so easily to abandon their ethics and hard earned public trust to keep up their nominal status and lifestyle shows what a tidal wave of corruption our societies are up against.
4   B.A.C.A.H.   2021 Dec 16, 5:15pm  

Ceffer says
That political organizations can force them so easily to abandon their ethics and hard earned public trust to keep up their nominal status and lifestyle shows what a tidal wave of corruption our societies are up against.


And then there's the massive student loan debts
5   Patrick   2021 Dec 17, 4:34am  

Ceffer says
I do find it puzzling that many so called medical professionals display this inability to think. How can you spend that much time in school successfully competing and still not have an analytic capability that you have confidence in, but wait for the blaring bullhorns emitting from the fog of authority from some undesignated but monied source emanating down to the firmament?


It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends upon his not understanding it.
6   PeopleUnited   2021 Dec 17, 5:44am  

Patrick says
It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends upon his not understanding it.





I believe the better doctors do understand what is going on. They also know that if they attempt to expose the lies they will be ostracized and perhaps even unable to work again. This is when their true nature as snake oil salesman and high priests of medical propaganda is revealed. They are willing collaborators with the fascists, putting their own interests for temporary comfort ahead of the needs of the people to know the safe and effective methods for preventing and treating infections.
9   Shaman   2022 Jan 6, 6:44pm  

Looks like I finally got the Covid. Wife was sick a few days before me and just got her test results back: +
First day and a half was rough, didn’t feel like doing anything even looking at my phone or watching tv. Today I woke up feeling better so I went and got a PCR test running (work reasons). Feeling shitty again, muscle aches, fever, headache, loss of appetite, sore throat and starting to feel some congestion. I’m gonna break the seal on my horse paste. It would be stupid not to throw everything against this that I have to keep it from getting established in my lungs.
10   stereotomy   2022 Jan 6, 6:53pm  

Shaman says
Looks like I finally got the Covid. Wife was sick a few days before me and just got her test results back: +
First day and a half was rough, didn’t feel like doing anything even looking at my phone or watching tv. Today I woke up feeling better so I went and got a PCR test running (work reasons). Feeling shitty again, muscle aches, fever, headache, loss of appetite, sore throat and starting to feel some congestion. I’m gonna break the seal on my horse paste. It would be stupid not to throw everything against this that I have to keep it from getting established in my lungs.


I used the 'mectin in addition to the Rin cocktail, dosing at 0.4 mg/Kg every day for 5 days. In my case, I'm pretty sure it suppressed the majority of my symptoms (sore throat, fever, joint pain, fatigue). Be careful with the dosage, or you'll end up peeing out your butt (high dosages disrupt the GI). Still, the GI effect is not as bad as antibiotics or colchicine.
11   GNL   2022 Jan 6, 7:44pm  

Shaman says
I’m gonna break the seal on my horse paste. It would be stupid not to throw everything against this that I have to keep it from getting established in my lungs.

Report back when you can.
12   Shaman   2022 Jan 6, 7:58pm  

Horse paste is greasy and slightly bitter. Definitely not an easy swallow. I dosed myself for a 250lb horse even though that’s about fifty more than I weigh. Anyone know how many days to do this?
13   Patrick   2022 Jan 6, 8:21pm  

I think the dose is typically one-time, or maybe two days in a row.
14   Eman   2022 Jan 6, 8:55pm  

Shaman says
Horse paste is greasy and slightly bitter. Definitely not an easy swallow. I dosed myself for a 250lb horse even though that’s about fifty more than I weigh. Anyone know how many days to do this?


My friend said take it 3 days in a row, twice a day. You should feel much better.

If you’re taking an overdose, maybe once a day is adequate. Take it with food though.
15   AmericanKulak   2022 Jan 6, 9:22pm  

Shaman says
Horse paste is greasy and slightly bitter. Definitely not an easy swallow. I dosed myself for a 250lb horse even though that’s about fifty more than I weigh. Anyone know how many days to do this?



I think the preventative dose is bodyweight of the horse every other day for a week.

The curative dose is twice the bodyweight of the horse every day for 2-3 days, then regular bodyweight for another day or two.

Going by memory here.
16   Shaman   2022 Jan 6, 9:30pm  

Thanks, fellers!
17   AmericanKulak   2022 Jan 6, 10:24pm  

Great post, thanks FuckCCP89
18   WookieMan   2022 Jan 7, 8:07am  

Shaman says
Horse paste is greasy and slightly bitter. Definitely not an easy swallow

Throw it on toasted peanut butter. I haven't done it with the paste, but when I did mushrooms (tripping kind) the taste was awful eating the shrooms straight. Peanut butter is great at masking bad/off flavors. Do it for breakfast. A little protein and carbs for energy with your horse paste. lol. How the fuck did we get here?

Not making fun, this is all so fucked up that we have to treat ourselves and our government promotes something that doesn't even work.

And Shaman, if I recall what your employment is, be careful with the fatigue. Case by case differences, but I fall asleep at random times now a month later. Smell is approaching 25% of normal. Fatigue is now overtaking the loss of smell as I can generally taste things now. I might be unique though in that I cannot sleep more than 4 hours straight before covid, but i could always function on 4 hours. Not so much now. 38 and have to take a nap almost every day, sometimes twice for 1-2 hours after Thanksgiving. Probably going to try the gummy route again for sleep and see if I can get 6-8 hours in one session.
19   Patrick   2022 May 17, 10:28pm  

https://www.cnbc.com/2018/02/22/medical-errors-third-leading-cause-of-death-in-america.html


A recent Johns Hopkins study claims more than 250,000 people in the U.S. die every year from medical errors. Other reports claim the numbers to be as high as 440,000.
Medical errors are the third-leading cause of death after heart disease and cancer.

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