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Thursday, March 2, 2023

JAMA and NEJM Carry Water for the Globalists -- Destroying People Through Injections and Misinformation, Now The Meme Is "It Is Only About Greed" and Not De-population

 stock here: I like to call out the Meme's as soon as Identified. 

Cabal generated Meme's are generally either distraction or to cover another set of lies, or both.

Here is the new meme.....

"We didn't really try to kill and maim you" it was really "Just Systemic Greed"

Here is JAMA, but lots of other places have picked up on the story

Let there be no doubt that the best lies contain an element of the truth.

Any doubt that John Hopkins is hopelessly compromised?

https://twitter.com/bermaninstitute/status/1620909688215977994

 

https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/2801097?guestAccessKey=9a2c2762-dace-4804-8da4-9989cbf81513


 Naked Capitalism has been in the cross hairs of suspicion a while

https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2023/03/salve-lucrum-the-existential-threat-of-greed-in-us-health-care.html

That said, many in the comment section are quite well written and thought out

----

So, not only is healthcare riddled by greed, it is also rife with incompetence.

From today’s links: The Profession Formerly Known As Medicine American Mind (Dr. Kevin)

Way back in the days of yore (1950s to 90s) my father was a general practitioner in Canada, most of that time in its single-payer medicare system. Although he certainly ordered tests, he also took a detailed history and did a thorough physical if the patient was new to him. A visit could sometimes last half-an-hour. His waiting room was packed, often way past closing, to the consternation of some patients. I know, I worked as his receptionist for a few weeks.

Today? I rarely visit doctors but when I do, no matter my issue, the first thing they’re likely to do is slap the blood-pressure cuff on my arm. I guess that qualifies as “care” and it certainly doesn’t consume much of the physician’s time. Then the inevitable sheets of tests are printed out on the computer as he barely looks at or listens to me (see the link for a similar tale). If he suggests a prescription drug just to be rid of me, I politely accept the “script” and then, as often as not, ignore it. I have a healthy respect for the possibility of iatrogenic blunders. (See: medical incompetence)

Back to my father. When was the last time a doctor examined your skin, looked at your hands, and even—yes—smelled your breath? My father did all those things if he was doing a physical. He developed a reputation as an excellent diagnostician. I wonder why?

He died in 1997 after many years of practice, leaving an estate of approximately $400,000.

 


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