6
0

How Hospitals Became Murder Factories


 invite response                
2023 Apr 30, 3:05pm   1,532 views  33 comments

by Patrick   ➕follow (60)   💰tip   ignore  

https://12ft.io/proxy?ref=&q=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.americanthinker.com%2Farticles%2F2023%2F04%2Fwhat_happened_in_hospitals_during_covid.html


Hospitals should be places you can trust to provide comfort and healing when you’re most vulnerable. But that trust may have been shattered by brutal Covid protocols that critics claim turned many hospitals into hellscapes of systematic medical murder.

The victims’ stories have been muffled by the mainstream media, but they’re starting to break through. For one thing, lawsuits against three hospitals have been filed in California by 14 bereaved families who claim their loved ones were killed by a deadly protocol. Meanwhile, activist organizations like Protocol Kills, the FormerFedsGroup Freedom Foundation, and American Frontline Nurses are collecting and documenting stories from bereaved families about what happened to their loved ones when they entered a hospital hoping for healing and, instead, were led to bizarre and tortured deaths.

I find it heartbreaking to read their stories, which share a haunting similarity, a feeling of being trapped in a highly organized nightmare. The ritual progresses in predictable stages: first, the patient is isolated from family, who are unable to advocate for their loved one or monitor what’s happening. Next, the patient is diagnosed with Covid-19 or Covid pneumonia, even if they came to the hospital because of a broken arm. Then, they’re bullied into getting remdesivir, a highly toxic drug which killed 53 percent of Ebola patients who had the misfortune to take it. Next, according to the California lawsuit, “They are placed on a BiPap machine at a high rate, making it difficult for them to breathe. Their hands are often tied down so they can’t take the BiPap machine off their face.”

I know this is getting unbearably painful to read, but stay with me to the bitter end to memorialize the victims’ suffering. As the patients writhe in agony, psychiatrists are brought in to diagnose them with agitation and sedate them. Now, shot up with remdesivir, sedated with drugs that make it tough to breathe against the BiPap ventilator, and strapped down in restraints, the victims are denied food and sometimes even water. Should they try to summon help, they may find the hospital played a vicious trick on them, placing their phone and call button for the nurse out of reach. In the final stages, they are intubated and slowly die alone, left to rot into a skeletal corpse with bed sores. Is this America?

It’s almost impossible to comprehend the magnitude of this moral collapse. How did doctors and nurses who spent years studying so they could help people all of a sudden turn into ruthless sadists, presiding over enforced deaths? How did hospitals metastasize from places of healing into chambers of horror? According to the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons (AAPS), the answer is quite simple: money. The federal government incentivized this protocol with massive payouts to the hospitals. AAPS writes, “Our formerly trusted medical community of hospitals and hospital-employed medical staff have effectively become “bounty hunters” for your life.”

AAPS explains that two Covid emergency acts from the government created this catastrophic loss of life. The CARES Act, a $2 trillion stimulus package, was passed in 2020, purportedly to ease the financial impact of Covid on American families. It provided gigantic bonuses to hospitals to institute federal protocols on Covid, ensuring that Covid would be massively diagnosed and treated with deadly combinations of remdesivir, ventilators, and other lethal methods.

Now that this top-down death protocol was bought and paid for, the government made sure that patients and their families were helpless to fight against it. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) granted waivers to hospitals allowing them to remove critical patient rights. Your ability to give informed consent, receive visitors, and be free from solitary confinement – gone! Vanished, obliterated with a single magical government “waiver.”

These actions destroyed the ability of doctors to make independent judgements based on their patients’ needs and turned highly trained medical staff into killer robots obeying the federal government’s commands. If you want to understand the enormity of the government money gusher, here’s AAPS on what the hospital payments included:

A “free” required PCR test in the Emergency Room or upon admission for every patient, with government-paid fee to hospital.
Added bonus payment for each positive COVID-19 diagnosis.
Another bonus for a COVID-19 admission to the hospital.
A 20 percent “boost” bonus payment from Medicare on the entire hospital bill for use of remdesivir instead of medicines such as Ivermectin.
Another and larger bonus payment to the hospital if a COVID-19 patient is mechanically ventilated.
More money to the hospital if cause of death is listed as COVID-19, even if patient did not die directly of COVID-19.
A COVID-19 diagnosis also provides extra payments to coroners.

Hundreds of thousands of Americans may have died due to these protocols, and we urgently need an investigation into this butchery. Who designed this protocol, which forbade safe drugs like ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine, and incentivized known toxins like remdesivir? Who enforced it? Were hospital administrators personally rewarded for their participation in this scheme? Were patients illegally deprived of their constitutional rights and defrauded with phony medical information? Why were patients denied nutrition and water? How was hospital staff forced to comply? Where’s the money trail? Who signed off on it? ...

Comments 1 - 33 of 33        Search these comments

1   WookieMan   2023 Apr 30, 4:56pm  

Patrick says

Hospitals should be places you can trust to provide comfort and healing when you’re most vulnerable. But that trust may have been shattered by brutal Covid protocols that critics claim turned many hospitals into hellscapes of systematic medical murder.

This happened well before Covid. Waaaaaaaaaaaaay before Covid. The medical industry has been shit forever. My personal experience has been 30 years of shit treatment.

I had high blood pressure. They told me NOT to walk or move. Message ignored. I'm down to slightly elevated BP by just being more active. They thought I was going to blow my brain or heart up if I move and tossed pills at me.

You don't need to run marathons. Humans survived being on their feet 6-12 hours a day moving. Women included. Sleep is good, but you shouldn't be off your feet much more that 6 or so hours (sleep not included). If you walk 15-20 miles a day there's no chance you'll be fat. That may require desk treadmills for the corporate types, but never sit if you can.

You might not even know if you have covid doing this along with basic supplements. It's not asymptomatic, it's being healthy.
2   Ceffer   2023 Apr 30, 6:34pm  

What the Globalists will do is probably the same as they did with 9/11, where they did not want a single or class action lawsuit to enter anything resembling a discovery phase. The Bar and the legal profession all knew it and were cowed into settlements by Globalist law firms.

It's hard to say with Covid atrocities, however, because they seem to believe they are sheltered by multiple explicable causalities, in spite of the ultimately murderous protocols imposed by the government. Their goal has always been untraceable combo poisons (many agents combining for a toxic effect) as with foods and ingested chemicals, or walk away poisons with multifactorial blame foci, so no clear cut etiology can be determined.

However, the juries (if it come to that) will focus on hospitals and those who were bribed and took the silver, and not the Rockefeller or Globalist origins. They will target the monies that can be had from the street corner dealers, without addressing the Globalist menace and intent. Shifting blame and liability to invented phantoms or useful idiots is part of the magic act.
3   PeopleUnited   2023 Apr 30, 7:42pm  

Doctors love disease, it keeps them in business. Furthermore they see to it that the supply of doctors is limited to artificially shift the supply/demand curve in their favor. Doctors are amazingly selfish, arrogant and entitled. And I’m convinced that most of them don’t care for their patients, they are just good actors.
4   richwicks   2023 Apr 30, 9:38pm  

PeopleUnited says


Doctors love disease, it keeps them in business. Furthermore they see to it that the supply of doctors is limited to artificially shift the supply/demand curve in their favor. Doctors are amazingly selfish, arrogant and entitled. And I’m convinced that most of them don’t care for their patients, they are just good actors.


I'd make my vet my doctor, if it was legal. He found some pretty unique problems in my dogs more than once. I couldn't have given them a long life without him. I am grateful to him. Maybe I should visit him.
5   WookieMan   2023 May 1, 7:09am  

PeopleUnited says

Doctors love disease, it keeps them in business. Furthermore they see to it that the supply of doctors is limited to artificially shift the supply/demand curve in their favor. Doctors are amazingly selfish, arrogant and entitled. And I’m convinced that most of them don’t care for their patients, they are just good actors.

This is true. It's true with any profession or trade though. The problem with doctors is the sales. Pills and equipment to justify charging a shit ton of money or getting wined and dined with corporate money. It's has nothing to do with the patient. In many cases they give them things where the side effects are worse than their actual ailment.

Pain is the worst area docs fail in. They hook people on pills for life because of a broken ankle. Some people are weak for sure, but you suck it up for 48 hours and the pain goes away or at least is minimal. Nah, toss some high powered pain killers at it. You're destroying you liver and all while getting addicted to a substance.
6   gabbar   2023 May 1, 7:26am  

PeopleUnited says


Doctors love disease, it keeps them in business. Furthermore they see to it that the supply of doctors is limited to artificially shift the supply/demand curve in their favor. Doctors are amazingly selfish, arrogant and entitled. And I’m convinced that most of them don’t care for their patients, they are just good actors.

NO. No. Doctors are no different than you and I. Doctors are almost slavish to the administrators and management of the nonprofit (for tax purposes only) hospital monopolies. They have no power. (often they are chained by non-compete employment contracts)

Its the insurance companies that love diseases. Its the hospital administrators/head honchos that love diseases. Its the big pharma that loves diseases. Its the food industry that loves shitty food that causes diseases. Its corporations that love diseases.

And...............its your elected officials that facilitate this. Its probably your elected officials who own shares of insurance and pharma companies.

Can this be fixed? Yes, just give visas a bunch of terroristic immigrants, that will fix it. Just kidding because hospitals do go woke too.
7   WookieMan   2023 May 1, 8:16am  

gabbar says

Its the insurance companies that love diseases

This is true. But, doctors are paid off by medical sales reps and big Pharma. This is fact. Even if you're close friends, doctors are not going to tell you they flew on a private jet, ate a $300 steak dinner, had their kids private school tuition covered to sell a $500 pill to people that don't need it.

My wife does this in road infrastructure without getting into details. There's a reason I don't pay for flights. We spend on our own cards about $150K for her to host parties and events and we get reimbursed. I think she's paid $5k for a dinner before. Guess what, that results in $500k in sales and $10k of income for us. Medical industry is no different. If anything more corrupt because margins on sales are insane. That $500 pill costs them $5. Most the research was done by college students.

The game is so shady that most don't realize it. You think a doc is paying for their car? No. It's likely leased by Pfizer and they get to use it to sell their pills. All sorts of gifts and dinners are given out to keep you selling the pills. And you're still making $300k to do 10-20 minutes of work in an hour while the nurses do all the work. And you make people take off work and sit there waiting for 30-60 minutes before you're even seen. No other industry can get away with that. Doctors are ass holes and scumbags.
8   gabbar   2023 May 1, 8:28am  

One-third of US nurses plan to quit profession. Why does this happen? Because they are treated like slaver labor. By who? Hospital/clinic management. Why? Management wants to pay them less. They want to exploit them. And these are the exploited who work very hard for patients. Most of these nurses are good people with good hearts.

I hope they all quite enmasse.
9   gabbar   2023 May 1, 8:31am  

WookieMan says

You think a doc is paying for their car? No. It's likely leased by Pfizer and they get to use it to sell their pills.

Yep and the car is made of 24 carat gold too.
10   zzyzzx   2023 May 1, 9:45am  

Have you ever come across a doctor that wasn't in the business because of the money? I think I have come across only one my life so far, and I'm on my last 50's.

The one I speak of was a Kaiser doctor. I suspect that is because they are employees instead of business people.
11   PeopleUnited   2023 May 1, 10:35am  

gabbar says


They have no power.

Doctors spread the pandemic fear and forced and continue to prescribe needless risky injections with no benefit. They do surgery and procedures with no need just because they can. It is not medicine it is a racket. Most pills people take are making them sicker, or at the very least should only be taken for a limited time. But no, the docs just keep playing the game, riding the gravy train and making the world a sicker place. There are exceptions but by and large the docs are either too stupid to know how wrong they are, or to selfish to care.
12   PeopleUnited   2023 May 1, 10:38am  

gabbar says


Its corporations that love diseases.

This is true, but medical doctors are in a position to help people. Most don’t care, and what little help they provide is overshadowed by the damage that they perpetuate. Corporations don’t write prescriptions.
13   gabbar   2023 May 1, 12:19pm  

PeopleUnited says

This is true, but medical doctors are in a position to help people. Most don’t care, and what little help they provide is overshadowed by the damage that they perpetuate. Corporations don’t write prescriptions.

I am just referencing the doctors I know that do help people. If you are referring to narcotic prescriptions, this is often done by doctors who own their own private practices/corporations.

Nations should be about doing greater good for their people not about money and power.
14   PeopleUnited   2023 May 1, 7:30pm  

It’s not just narcotics though. Take statins for instance. They have a long list of side effects, some quite severe and debilitating. Have you heard of NNT? Number needed to treat? It’s an estimate number of people who need to take a medication every day for one year to prevent one event per year. So in the case of statins the number needed to treat is over 2,000. That means over 2,000 people need to take the drug for one year to prevent one stroke or heart attack.

That means the other 2,000+ people wasted their money and suffered all those side effects for no benefit.

And don’t even get me started on SSRI’s!

Drugs are the worst. And doctors push them endlessly. It’s practically all they do. Unless they are surgeons, and then all they want to do is cut. Granted many avoid unnecessary surgeries, but many don’t. But the drugs, are killing, stupefying and impoverishing innocent people.
15   WookieMan   2023 May 2, 4:47am  

PeopleUnited says

But the drugs, are killing, stupefying and impoverishing innocent people.

Yup. People are just led to believe doctors because they have lots of school/education. So do attorneys and they're some of the dumbest people on the planet. My sister and dad were/are attorneys and I know dozens more.

I assume many here have bought houses. What does an attorney actually do? Really think about it. They do nothing. A real estate closing is the most trivial thing. I've corrected attorneys dozens maybe 100+ times. Half the time the attorneys don't even show for a closing. It's a boilerplate contract with blanks. You don't need 6 extra years of school to figure it out. You need to know how to read.

Doctors are no different. They get an input from a blood test, scan or X-ray and look at the list of drugs they're supposed to give you or treatment options. They don't actually look into what's best. Once you clear the hurdle to get in you don't have to do anything.

My BIL builds dialysis systems. You'd freak out if you had a family member on dialysis if you met him. He's dumb as shit. Doctors are dumb too. Many are likely drugged up too. Nurses are notorious for being pill poppers. A friends wife got caught stealing pills from the hospital. She can't practice nursing anymore so does therapy for knee injuries out in Montana for skiers that blow their knees out. The medical field is entrenched with big pharma down to the lowest person on the totem pole.
16   AmericanKulak   2023 May 2, 9:16am  

In the 70s and early 80s, there was a campaign of regulation and outrageous compliance by Insurance Companies and Government to put 100s of Small Charity Hospitals out of business with redtape.

Now there is nothing but massive Corporate Hospitals with multiple annexes and offices, often with "religious" sounding names but aren't.
17   PeopleUnited   2023 May 2, 8:24pm  

AmericanKulak says

In the 70s and early 80s, there was a campaign of regulation and outrageous compliance by Insurance Companies and Government to put 100s of Small Charity Hospitals out of business with redtape.

I believe that did happen. But how does insurance benefit from less competition in healthcare?

Wouldn’t closing hospitals drive up costs?
18   AmericanKulak   2023 May 2, 10:14pm  

PeopleUnited says


I believe that did happen. But how does insurance benefit from less competition in healthcare?

It's cheaper to handle fewer payees, and a few large hospitals can more easily be funnelled into a reimbursement and compliance scheme than many small hospitals.

And getting rid of small charity hospitals means everything gets billed, no volunteer surgeons doing a free hour or two. I wonder how many Health Insurance Companies own stakes in Corporate Hospitals, Laboratory Franchises, etc - they make money on the ever-increasing costs of the procedure (inc. new rules and regulations) and raising the Insurance premium when their investment Corporate Hospital raises the cost of the procedure.

More $$$ on both ends.
19   Patrick   2023 May 5, 12:36pm  

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12047023/Hospital-nurse-admits-killing-20-Covid-patients-didnt-want-suffer.html


Hospital nurse admits killing at least TWENTY coronavirus patients because he didn't want to see them suffer
A nurse in the Netherlands told clinic staff he had killed Coronavirus patients
An investigation will look at patient deaths between March 2020 and May 2022
20   gabbar   2023 May 6, 4:29am  

AmericanKulak says

In the 70s and early 80s, there was a campaign of regulation and outrageous compliance by Insurance Companies and Government to put 100s of Small Charity Hospitals out of business with redtape.

Now there is nothing but massive Corporate Hospitals with multiple annexes and offices, often with "religious" sounding names but aren't.

Don't care about which side of the uniparty facilitated this but this is evil. I knew a few catholic sisters who managed a charity hospitals. Respected these folks.
21   Patrick   2023 May 9, 7:33pm  

https://merylnass.substack.com/p/the-us-government-paid-the-college


The US Government paid the College of Ob-Gyns over $11 million to force COVID vaccines on unsuspecting pregnant women

What do you call such a heinous crime? How can the conspirators be brought to justice?
23   Ceffer   2023 May 14, 7:04pm  

Latest from the Woo there are whistle blowers who claim that people came into hospitals who were not doctors or nurses to organize and oversee the killing wards. Guess they weren't confident enough the doctors could be merely bribed.

Somehow, I tend to believe this.
24   Patrick   2023 May 15, 1:06pm  

https://slaynews.com/news/most-covid-patients-died-hospital-killed-ventilators-study-finds/


A bombshell new study has revealed that most Covid patients who died after being admitted to hospital were killed by ventilators and not the virus.

The analysis, published in the Journal of Clinical Investigation, studied patients who died in the hospital during the early phase of the pandemic.

Since the pandemic first emerged, the use of ventilators was often seen as the end of the road as patients rarely recovered after being placed on one.

However, evidence now suggests that ventilators caused patients’ conditions to rapidly deteriorate, ultimately resulting in them becoming fatally ill.

The study found that the majority of Covid patients who were put on a ventilator had also developed secondary bacterial pneumonia.

The explosive study was led by Benjamin Singer, a pulmonologist at Northwestern University in Illinois.

“Our study highlights the importance of preventing, looking for, and aggressively treating secondary bacterial pneumonia in critically ill patients with severe pneumonia, including those with COVID-19,” says Singer.

From Science Alert:

The team looked at records for 585 people admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) at Northwestern Memorial Hospital, also in Illinois.

They all had severe pneumonia and/or respiratory failure, and 190 had COVID-19.

Using a machine learning approach to crunch through the data, the researchers grouped patients based on their condition and the amount of time they spent in intensive care.

The findings refute the idea that a cytokine storm following COVID-19 – an overwhelming inflammation response causing organ failure – was responsible for a significant number of deaths.

There was no evidence of multi-organ failure in the patients studied.

In other words, although the patients had been hospitalized with COVID-19, the ventilator-induced secondary infection of bacterial pneumonia was responsible for the higher mortality rate.

The condition is called Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia (VAP).
25   Patrick   2023 May 15, 9:25pm  

https://www.coffeeandcovid.com/p/vices-monday-may-15-2023-c-and-c?publication_id=463409&post_id=121555029&isFreemail=true


💉 We’ve known what happened for a long time, but not conclusively HOW. The Journal of Clinical Investigation quietly published a shocking study last month. It was titled, “Machine Learning Links Unresolving Secondary Pneumonia to Mortality in Patients With Severe Pneumonia, Including COVID-19.”

That bland-sounding headline conceals some pretty incriminating evidence.

The researchers used AI tools to help them crunch a vast amount of data related to about 550 deceased covid patients, looking at things like time from initial infection until various treatments and other symptoms and ultimate death. In this way, they could rule out death from the covid cytokine storm, for example, because the cytokine storm occurs at a predictable interval from the initial infection.

For example, if a patient dies weeks after the time when a cytokine storm normally happens, that strongly suggests the death was caused by something else. The AI uncovered the fact that hospital-acquired infections — expressed as pneumonia — were more likely to kill people than covid. ...

“We’re so sorry you’re struggling with that covid virus. How about we shove this unsanitary, bacteria-laden tube down your throat and leave right it there, just over your lungs, till we see what happens? Hmm?”

As if that weren’t bad enough, at least half of the patients who got Ventilator-Acquired Pneumonia later died, if not from the first infection, then from the next, or the next. ...

So, the hospitals could see that people were catching pneumonia from the vents, but just kept on letting it happen. Until the person either died or got discharged. Flip a coin.

In other words, the researchers essentially said that it was the hospitals — and not covid — that people should have been more afraid of:

“Our data suggested that the mortality related to the virus itself is relatively low, but other things that happen during the ICU stay, like secondary bacterial pneumonia, offset that.” ...

The study, while carefully neutral in its language, and despite assiduously avoiding pointing the finger of blame at anybody, obviously highlighted the dreadful cost we paid for hospitalizing covid patients. Instead of sending people home with safe and effective treatments like hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin, as third-world countries were forced to do, so that patients could recover in sanitary conditions, the U.S. jammed everyone right onto a dirty, disgusting ventilator without any real treatment. (I’m not counting remdesivir, which only increased iatrogenic mortality in covid patients.)

This study explains the mechanism of how the United States had the highest covid mortality of any country. Despite all our “wealth” and our massive hospital infrastructure system. Or maybe because of it.

Never forget that the majority of people put on ventilators was for PATIENT CONTROL and not for any beneficial treatment.


And profit!

Don't forget that hospitals were very well paid to murder their patients.
26   Patrick   2023 May 16, 2:54pm  

https://alexberenson.substack.com/p/breathe-deep/comment/16195120


SimulationCommander
2 min ago
Just look at this graphic and tell me otherwise:



And we knew the vents were killing people basically immediately:

https://www.businessinsider.com/coronavirus-ventilators-some-doctors-try-reduce-use-new-york-death-rate-2020-4

80% of NYC's coronavirus patients who are put on ventilators ultimately die, and some doctors are trying to stop using them


27   Patrick   2023 May 19, 8:48pm  

https://vigilantfox.substack.com/p/killing-floor-firsthand-witness-attests


Killing Floor: Firsthand Witness Attests Hospital Deliberately Hastened the Deaths of COVID Patients

“They [patients] put the phone on speaker; the doctors didn't know it. And they were in there screaming at [the patients], you're going to die if you don't do what we tell you.” ...

“How did you know that there were people hastening death?” asked Attorney Renz.

“I know that because I spoke to one of the nurses one morning when I was opening on the floor,” Adrienne answered. “I work on the unit. And he [the nurse] was totally upset because the night nurse ‘didn’t do her job.’ And I questioned him. I said, ‘Why are you so mad? What do you mean she didn’t do her job.’ And he basically said that she didn’t go up on the morphine drip and take care of business. Now he has to do it. And he has to take care of it.”

Attorney Renz unfolded more details to listeners. “My client [Adrienne] asked for a religious accommodation that would basically exempt her from having to deal with blanket orders to murder people. That’s my words, not hers. The hospital ignored her but then said no.”

“Let’s think about that,” he proposed. “Now, we’ve been hearing rumors and all sorts of stuff for quite some time that the hospitals were denying ivermectin, denying hydroxychloroquine, denying early treatment, denying this, denying that. But we now have a firsthand witness who was ignored and ostracized for requesting that hospitals take steps to not hasten death. Or at least that she not be directly required to do that in a blanket way.”

“Folks, I’m going to tell you that it’s my belief that this was coordinated on a very high level from a lot of places,” expressed Mr. Renz. “And I think we have some real questions to ask ourselves when we have a doctor of pharmacy with the clinical experience that Adrienne has who’s saying to them, hey, what you’re doing is hastening death — and they basically blow it off. There’s an issue here.” ...

Now, why would hospitals do this?

It seems almost unthinkable that hospitals would deliberately harm patients — at least under normal conditions. But as Mr. Renz detailed, there were financial incentives that paid hospitals more money for bad outcomes, not good outcomes.

“So if your patient is diagnosed and called a COVID patient, [you get more money]. Then, if your patient goes through certain treatment protocols, remdesivir, ventilator, et cetera, et cetera, each one of those, you’re going to get an additional amount of money,” shared Mr. Renz.

Dr. Paul Marik, one of the world's most published critical care doctors, has testified that hospitals received a 20% bonus on the entire hospital bill from the Federal government just for administering remdesivir to a COVID patient.

Attorney Renz continued. “Then, on top of that, we throw in this immunity thing. We say, well, and not only do you get a big incentive if the patient dies, but we’re also going to make it so that you can’t be sued for killing them even if it looks like you did. You have to actually show willfulness — [a] willfulness kind of intent. It has to be intentional.”

“So they made the bar so high that it’s nearly impossible,” he lamented. “And you throw in the [financial incentive] — we incentivized murder, to my mind.”

If you or a loved one experienced a similar situation, please leave a comment and share this post. A few anecdotes are one thing, but when hundreds or thousands of people share the same story, that is no longer anecdotal evidence — that is a troubling signal for atrocities against humanity.
28   Patrick   2023 May 20, 3:11pm  

https://transcriberb.dreamwidth.org/85090.html


Covid 19: A Second Opinion
Discussion Panel Hosted by Senator Ron Johnson
Livestreamed January 24, 2022
https://rumble.com/vt62y6-covid-19-a-second-opinion.html
Clip of Nicole Sirotek's testimony:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A1aodcjjE5c

TRANSCRIPT

5:24:40
NICOLE SIROTEK: Thank you, Senator, for giving me an uninterrupted opportunity to represent the harm that is coming to the patients in the American hospitals and the lack of early intervention.

My name is Nicole Sirotek. I'm a registered nurse. I've been a registered nurse for over a decade. My specialty is critical care trauma and flight. Since the start of the covid pandemic I've actually been rebranded, I guess you can say, as a leading expert in early intervention strategies executed on a large mass scale using the FLCCC* protocol as well as ventilator or covid patient ventilator protective strategies to optimize covid patients on the ventilators.

My story actually begins back in May of 2020. I was one of the original nurses that went to NYC to help with the covid pandemic because as we remember, they needed nurses, and most importantly they needed ventilators. Well, I was the whole package, a flight nurse that can manage ventilators.

And when I arrived there, the gross negligence and the medical, you know, malfeasance that happened in there and the complete medical mismanagement of these patients is what has led us to the situation that we're in right now. The pandemic and the hysteria that was created from poor public health measures and poor execution of appropriate early intervention strategies and the handicapping of medical professionals doing their job has led to where we are right now and into the crisis situation that we are in.

I will use several key case studies that will represent larger descriptive statistical information heard I'm going to speak of. But when I was in New York, and what continues to happen today, is that many of them are not dying from covid.

Now many people don't know about me is that I'm actually a master's prepared biochemist and I have worked extensively with the HIV virus tracking genetic mutations, so I feel very comfortable going toe-to-toe with some of these doctors here, although I am not a doctor, I'm just a nurse.

But what we saw on these front lines we knew what was happening, and when we asked for the ibuprofen they said, no, it was contraindicated. When we asked, like, why aren't we giving them steroids? Oh, well it's not. We're just following orders.

Following orders has led to the sheer number of deaths that has occurred in these hospitals.

I didn't see a single patient died of covid. I've seen a substantial number of patients die of negligence and medical malfeasance.

[audience members around her all nod their heads, yes, vigorously]

When I was on the front lines of New York I'm unfortunately known, globally viral, as the nurse that was in the break room sobbing, saying that they were murdering my patients. The pharmaceutical companies had gone into those hospitals and decided to, um, practice, I guess you can say, on on the minorities, on the disadvantaged, on the marginalized populations that we know that we had no advocates for. Because the very agencies that should have been protecting them were closed because we were [makes air quotes with fingers] sheltering in place.

Now while I was there and I saw that the pharmaceutical companies were rolling out remdesivir onto the patients, I tried to get a hold of the IRBS* I try to get a hold of my appropriate chain of commands, I tried CMS [Centers for Medicare and Medicaid], I tried Department of Health. And they rolled out remdesivir onto a substantial number of patients for which we all saw it was killing the patients. And now its the FDA approved drug that is continuing to kill patients in the United States.

As nurses we've collected a statistical or descriptive amount of information that you may not get from the doctors because for more they do quantitative data, we do qualitative data with a humanistic phenomenological approach in nursing research. And so we've collected the data from all of these patients across the country from which we have been helping patients, because I formed the organization American Frontline Nurses and the Advocacy Network so nurses could advocate for these patients. And all of this data pool shows that as these patients get remdesivir, they have a less than 25 percent chance of survival if they get more than two doses.

Now they're rolling it out on children as well, and into the nursing homes or school nursing facilities as early intervention, when as Dr. Pierre Kory and Dr. Merrick* have already demonstrated that there are cost-effective medications out there. And we are going to see the amplification of death across our country.

And we haven't even touched on the vaccines, for which all of our expert panels have already very well described that situation, so I won't touch on that since many of them are by far superior to me than than even I could ever hope to be.

But I can tell you that two days ago I I flew out my first 10 year-old with a heart attack and I had to fight the doctor in the ER because he's like, 10 year olds don't have heart attacks. And I argued back and forth for 30 minutes to force his hand to get an EKG to find out that he was, had almost a complete STEMI, which is ST-elevation myocardial infarction** for which you could see it lit up on the 12-Lead EKG. And he's like, well that's not possible. And I'm like, well, he was just vaccinated yesterday. It is very much possible.

At any given time people are getting a hold of me and the nurse advocates at American Frontline Nurses to help advocate because, as you've seen, there is victim shaming that it, oh, it's anxiety, oh, it's this. But in actuality, if they put down that it was a vaccine injury, the physician, the corporation, the hospital, the clinic, they actually won't get reimbursed, so it gets labeled as anxiety or neuropathy or Guillain Barré syndrome, when in actuality it's very realistically a vaccine injury.

Now I'm not, even though I founded American Frontline Nurses, I've traveled extensively to South America, India, and South Africa working in hot zones stopping the spread of the virus and working with early intervention, and nowhere in those countries and developing nations do I see these issues that we see here in the United States. It's actually, I'm a very proud American citizen, I come from a family of immigrants and my mother told me that the United States is the best country in the world, though granted, I am biased being an American, and our level of health care has been deteriorated to substandard, third world nation health care, whereas I tell people, you are better off in South America in a field hospital than you are in level one trauma designer hospitals in the United States.

As nurses we are getting reports across the country from our American Frontline Nurses about patients not getting food. Patients not getting water. How come a patient hasn't been fed in nine days? Why do I need to get a court order to force a hospital to feed a person who isn't intubated, and who's literally telling you they would like food? Oh, well you can't take your BiPAP map mask off. Well that's what US nurses are for, we're going to help you take that off, we're going to help you eat, but we're not allowed to.

If, you know, if they're on a ventilator they're not getting basic standards of care. I've had patients that haven't been bathed, haven't been fed, haven't been given water, haven't been turned. And if you ask me, this isn't a hospital this is a concentration camp!

[audience clapping]

Absolutely it is. Nowhere in the United States do we isolate people for hundreds of hours at a time with no human contact. It's not even allowed in the prisons. You are not allowed to isolate a prisoner for beyond a certain extensive amount of time because it is, again, it is horrible for their mental health, and is considered inhumane. However, in these hospitals now, we're allowed to isolate patients from their families for days, and you have to say goodbye to them over an iPhone, as Jennifer Bridges has just demonstrated to us, or she has to shuttle people in to see. And personally, I was fired for sneaking a Hispanic family in to say the last rights to their family.

And so thank you, Senator Johnson, for giving nurses the opportunity to come and represent our patients because, as you can see, we're not often thought of as leading professionals, though we are the missing link between the doctors and the patients. So thank you so much for this time.

[audience clapping]

SENATOR RON JOHNSON: We're good.

[audience clapping]

Thank you for being a nurse.

5:33:03
[END]

# # #

TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES:

Nicole Sirotek is founder of American Frontline Nurses.
https://www.americanfrontlinenurses.org/

US Senator Ron Johnson (R - Wisconsin) https://www.ronjohnson.senate.gov/
32   Patrick   2023 Aug 4, 1:37pm  

https://alexberenson.substack.com/p/covid-was-very-profitable-for-hospitals


American hospitals made more money than ever during Covid, thanks to special government subsidies, a new study shows.

Hospital profit margins in 2020 and 2021 more than doubled compared to 2019, researchers reported in JAMA Health Forum last month. In all, hospitals made at least $16 billion more in profits during the two Covid years than they did in 2019, the researchers found.

Hospitals delayed profitable elective procedures early in the pandemic and had extra costs for traveling nurses and protective gear. But the 20 percent bonus they received for Covid patients and other special funding more than made up the difference for most hospitals.


They just had to agree to classify absolutely every disease and death as from "covid" and to murder patients with Remdesivir etc.

And they did.

Hospitals will kill you for money.
33   gabbar   2023 Aug 4, 1:45pm  

Things are deteriorating in hospitals. Doctors, nurses and medical assistants are quitting jobs because they are being overworked and underpaid. Seems like more errors are being committed. Its not sustainable.

Please register to comment:

api   best comments   contact   latest images   memes   one year ago   random   suggestions   gaiste