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Doctors WILL kill you if it's profitable for them


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2022 Nov 2, 9:32am   15,848 views  172 comments

by Patrick   ➕follow (60)   ignore  

https://sukwan.substack.com/p/covid-quarantine-care-in-thailand


I found this first hand account from BangkokTruthSeeker compelling. How are the hospitals now in Thailand or elsewhere? I’m curious about everyone’s experiences.

“MY TALE OF FLEEING VIETNAM TO AVOID BEING VACCINATED,

AND CATCHING AND RECOVERING FROM COVID IN THAILAND

First a bit of background: I lived in Bangkok from 1995-2015. In 2015, I moved to Vietnam for a wonderful job opportunity – the best job of my life – by far. I was enjoying my life in Vietnam – until late in the second year of COVID. At one point in late 2021, the lockdowns there were so strict that we were not even allowed to go out to buy food. That was manageable for the Vietnamese, who were able to get food through their personal connections. But for me as a foreigner, it was a traumatic experience that I hope I never have to go through again.

One day during the total lockdown, in a conversation with my boss, he mentioned to me that he was not satisfied with the performance of one of my junior colleagues. I told my boss that I would go to the office when the lockdown ended and train this colleague myself. My boss replied that “Unless you have been vaccinated since we last spoke, you’re going to have to find another solution, as you won’t be allowed to enter the office building without being vaccinated.” (I realized very early in the “pandemic” that the people pushing these “vaccines” had ulterior motives – motives that had nothing to do with public health – so I refuse(d) to get “vaccinated” for COVID, and to this day I remain unvaccinated. Surprisingly though, I was the only person in my company of around 200 employees who refused to get “vaccinated”.)

When my boss told me that I could not go to the office again without being vaccinated, I realized that I had no choice but to leave Vietnam. The obvious destination for me was Thailand, which was not far away, and where I knew my way around based on having lived there for 20 years prior to relocating to Vietnam. But there were many obstacles to getting myself back to Thailand. For one, I am a citizen of a country that does not have visa-free entry to Thailand, so I needed a visa to enter the country. But the Thai consulate in Ho Chi Minh City, where I was living, was closed – for weeks – without any indication of when it would open again. So there was no way for me to get a visa. I was feeling really trapped.

Eventually I retained the services of an “agent” – who was able to get me a Thai tourist visa (and arrange my Thailand Pass), despite the consulate being closed. It was the best $200 I ever spent.

After essentially abandoning all my life’s possessions that I could not carry with me on the plane, I flew to Thailand on 1 December 2021. (My employer had paid to ship all my belongings to Vietnam when I moved there from Bangkok, but they would not pay to ship my things back to Thailand – since it was my decision to leave Vietnam.) And when somebody else is paying to ship your things, it makes sense to ship EVERYTHING – whether it makes economic sense or not. But when you have to pay for the shipping yourself, you have to ask yourself if it makes sense to pay $5,000 to ship $3,000 worth of stuff. Obviously, it doesn’t. So I made some of my dear Vietnamese friends and colleagues happy by leaving many of my things with them. I also lost the $1,600 deposit on my apartment due to breaking my 3-year lease after 2½ years.

Two days before flying, I did a PCR test, which was negative, and upon arrival in Bangkok I did another PCR test, which was also negative. I was looking forward to spending the next 10 nights in my lovely quarantine hotel. (At the time, as you might recall, unvaccinated people were required to quarantine for 10 nights, at an approved quarantine hotel, paid for in full in advance.) On the fifth night of my quarantine, I developed a fever right before going to bed. I was at first reluctant to think that I might have COVID because of all the testing I had already done, not to mention the wrench that it would throw into my plans. I also couldn’t imagine how I could have caught COVID in a place where everyone was supposed to be COVID-free. I sweated and froze all that night, but by morning I was feeling a little better. At first, I wasn’t going to say anything to the hotel about this, but then I realized that if I had COVID, it would be better to deal with it as soon as possible, so I took the self-test that I had brought with me from Ho Chi Minh City. It was VERY positive.

At this point I started my self-treatment regimen with the arsenal of medicines that I had brought with me from Vietnam, all of which are available over the counter for very cheap. (Ivermectin, fluvoxamine, vitamins D and C, zinc, colchicine, aspirin, etc.) I notified the hotel of my situation and the next day they arranged another PCR test for me. That test was also positive. Within two hours of getting that positive test result, I was whisked away in an ambulance to the hotel’s partner hospital. They threw me out of the hotel as if I were a leper, but not without keeping the remaining $300 of my payment for services not rendered. (There were no refunds from quarantine hotels if you test positive during your stay.) And as if that wasn’t bad enough, they even charged me $1.25 extra for some bread I had eaten one day beyond my normal daily allotment - and despite the fact that they kept $300 of my paid-for-but-not-used services. (I suggested to them that they could deduct that $1.25 from the $300 of my money they had kept, but they said that that was a different department. Ha.) I thought that was very small minded of them.

One very good thing about the quarantine hotel was that the other long-stayers there, like me, were all anti-vaxxers, by definition. And I met some very interesting people who are on the same page as I am on all of this, one in particular, a lovely, decent and brilliant 72-year-old American guy. People like that gave me the strength to stick to what I knew was the truth about the “vaccines”.

In the end I spent a total of 12 nights (and $14,000 – all covered by my wonderful company insurance, thankfully), in the hospital recovering. Strangely, I never had any actual symptoms: none of the usual coughing, difficulty breathing, etc. All of my issues were detectable only by (mostly expensive) testing: COVID pneumonia, blood clotting and low blood oxygen level.

During my first few days in the hospital, my condition was going downhill pretty fast (at least according to the tests – again, I never felt ANYTHING). I eventually realized what was going on when I asked the doctor what the solution to my deterioration was: “REMDESIVIR”, she said! I thought that everybody in the world knew by then that Remdesivir is a poison, and my greatest fear was being forced to take it. So you can imagine my shock when this was the FIRST AND ONLY “solution” that my doctor proposed!

Here is a good video describing the lethality of Remdesivir:


original link


I spent the next three days fending off their attempts to “save” me with Remdesivir – while they neglected all other treatments! It was really my low point, as I felt that they were quite willing to kill me – for the additional income Remdesivir would generate for the hospital. But I knew enough about it to refuse it. Every day the nurses would come into my room and tell me, “Just take the Remdesivir. It will help you. We give it to all the farangs.” And one of the only two times the doctor actually visited me in person in my hospital room was to try to convince me to take Remdesivir. I showed her an article by even the corrupt WHO, sent to me by a friend, which said that Remdesivir is NOT a helpful treatment for COVID:

https://www.who.int/news-room/feature-stories/detail/who-recommends-against-the-use-of-remdesivir-in-covid-19-patients

The doctor replied, “The reason the WHO does not recommend Remdesivir is not because it doesn’t work. They don’t recommend it because it doesn’t reduce mortality.” Can you believe she said that? Actually, not only does Remdesivir not REDUCE mortality, it practically GUARANTEES it!

On her final attempt to convince me to accept this poison, I mentioned to the nurse that in addition to not working and being dangerous, it’s also expensive. She replied, “Don’t worry. Your insurance will cover the cost.” Aha, so the hospital had already checked! I knew that my insurance would cover it, but they had checked on it – because it’s so lucrative for hospitals to use it. (I have since learned that in the US, the government adds a 20% bonus to the TOTAL bill of COVID patients who are “treated” with Remdesivir instead of ivermectin, etc.) Now what could be the point of that – other than to steer “treatment” in a certain (fatal) direction – to make COVID appear to be more deadly than it really was?

Anyway, after three days of my steadfast refusal to take Remdesivir, they finally more or less gave up on trying to force it on me. But not before they made me sign a form saying that I refused the "proper" treatment and that they could therefore not take responsibility for the outcome of my stay in the hospital. Is that any way to treat a patient? To try to kill him with a known poison – and then to tell him that if he doesn’t take the poison, the hospital will not be responsible for his survival? What a scary thing for a patient to have to go through!

So, after all that, when they saw that I would not accept the Remdesivir, they FINALLY started treating me with an acceptable anti-viral – favipiravir – and steroids (dexamethasone). This seemed to stabilize my condition a bit, if not improve it. This continued for about three days – with constant monitoring of my blood clotting and blood oxygen level – with no discernible improvement.

Then a miracle happened: I got my daily health newsletter by email from Dr. Mercola, in which he conducted an interview with Dr. Robert Malone. In this interview, Dr. Malone had mentioned some trials using a cheap, over-the-counter heartburn medication that seemed to work very well in the treatment of COVID: Famotidine. By sheer coincidence, I had briefly read about this medicine while I was still in Vietnam, so I bought a box of it before coming to Thailand. (I am a bit of a prepper, and I would rather have ten medicines that I don’t need than not have the one that I do need. I also had a few other medicines that I never used, but I had them just in case - because they were so cheap - and readily available over the counter in Vietnam.)

Anyway, I tried to convince the doctor to let me at least try this medicine Famotidine, as I didn’t see much downside in it. Actually, the medicine is meant to be taken with another medicine, but the doctor talked me out of taking that other medicine with it because I was already on blood thinners for my blood clots. In the end I think that was the right call by the doctor, and I think it was the ONLY useful thing she did for me. During my discussions with the doctor, she told me that this study by Dr. Malone was just a small one and it was not peer reviewed. But actually, that was the point of the article by Dr. Mercola: Dr. Malone’s paper about his study had passed peer review THREE TIMES, but the medical journals STILL refused to publish it, as they didn’t want to spread any information about cheap treatments that might reduce the willingness of people to take the killer vaccines.

Perhaps you can guess what happened next: Just TWO HOURS after my very first dose of this Famotidine, my condition started improving. My blood oxygen level finally started rising a bit – for the first time. And within 48 hours, my blood clotting had largely resolved itself, as did my COVID pneumonia. (A CAT scan was done the next day, and there was already no longer any sign of blood clotting.) Of course, the doctors assumed that it was their “treatment” that helped/saved me, but I know what I experienced – and this Famotidone is what saved me. And fast! From that point my condition improved so rapidly that I was able to be released from the hospital just a couple of days after starting that medication. Make of that what you will.

I left that hospital shortly before Christmas of 2021. It took another month or so for my health to return to normal. I have no long-term effects from COVID. This I attribute to my vitamin D level having been very high (I tested it just before I caught COVID and it was 91ng/ml, a VERY healthy level), as well as all of the good medications that I treated myself with while in the hospital, as well as the fact that I managed to avoid the Remdesivir.

This experience has caused me to lose all trust in not only the Thai but the worldwide medical system. I would have never imagined that a hospital would be so willing to risk my life for a few thousand extra dollars. (At one point I thought of offering the doctor the $3,000 cash that I happened to have with me to start my new life in Thailand – if she would cure me without Remdesivir. But that would have made my knowledge of her plan too obvious to her.)

I don’t want to say that my quarantine hotel somehow deliberately infected me with COVID (although I don’t know how I was able to catch it while in quarantine), and I don’t want to say that the hospital that I was forced into just tried to extract as much money from me as possible while not caring about my health. But I will say that both the hotel and the hospital benefited greatly from my misfortune.

Anyway, I am happy to have this ordeal behind me – and I am happy to be living in Thailand, where I have at least some freedom – as much as exists anywhere in the world these days, I suppose. Meanwhile, sad to say, tens, if not hundreds, of thousands of people have already died from these “vaccines” – and many more will die from them in the coming years. I just hope that the criminals who foisted these vaccines on the world will someday be held to account.

Finally, I would be very interested to know if anybody else managed to catch COVID during their stay in a quarantine hotel in Thailand. As I said, the quarantine hotels and the hospitals had every incentive to see to it that their guests/patients caught COVID during their forced quarantine.

Thanks for reading, and stay un”vaccinated”!”

« First        Comments 133 - 172 of 172        Search these comments

133   beershrine   2024 Aug 18, 3:42pm  

Doctors are in the protected class category. Use the emergency room if you have to otherwise stay the hell far away from that system. Give them as little money as possible as it's the worlds largest inefficient industry.
135   Patrick   2024 Aug 22, 1:10pm  

https://tobyrogers.substack.com/p/the-1980-bayh-dole-act-the-1986-ncvia


What have we learned about American science and medicine over the last several years?

1. American science does not do much actual science. They do marketing, regulatory capture, and mass poisonings but not much actual “science” as that word is usually understood.

2. American medicine creates sickness rather than healing. I know, I know, #notalldoctors. But the profession is deeply sick. #physicianhealthyself

3. American science and medicine abuse their unique epistemic position to increase their own power and wealth at the expense of the well-being of humanity.

4. The proper way to understand American science and medicine today is to see them as criminal cartels. They aren’t making mistakes, these aren’t innocent misunderstandings, the white coat class is engaged in organized crime. Every time you step into a doctor’s office, clinic, or hospital you are likely dealing with an agent of a criminal syndicate.

5. American science and medicine have merged with the state, Big Finance, the pharmaceutical industry, the military, and the intelligence agencies to create a new form of fascism.

6. For decades the business model of American science and medicine was to take vulnerable people (the sick and injured, infants, pregnant women, and seniors) and make them dependent on the medical industrial complex for life via toxic pills, injections, implants, surgeries, and therapies. Apparently there were still too many healthy people remaining (‘money left on the table’). So American science and medicine now create and release weaponized viruses together with billions of dollars in propaganda to generate fear that drives people into cattle chutes of toxic treatments and deadly vaccines.

7. The CDC Child and Adolescent Vaccine Schedule, the CDC Adult Vaccine Schedule, and the Covid response are acts of genocide.

8. From everything we can see, American science and medicine are incapable of reforming themselves.

9. American science and medicine as currently constituted pose an existential threat to the future of the United States, the world, and humanity.

10. Big Food, the pesticide industry, the mobile phone industry, other polluters, and bad personal decisions also contribute to making people sick. All of the industries that I named are owned by the same wealth management funds that are investing our own retirement money into our profitable enslavement and genocide.

We all wish that this wasn’t true. But we can either stare reality in the face and do something about it or perish as a result of normalcy bias.
136   GNL   2024 Aug 22, 8:20pm  

beershrine says

Doctors are in the protected class category. Use the emergency room if you have to otherwise stay the hell far away from that system. Give them as little money as possible as it's the worlds largest inefficient industry.

This is my plan for the rest of my life.
139   stereotomy   2024 Sep 23, 2:25pm  

"Proper hamburgers" = 100% grass fed beef. That shit does wonders. It is among the few foods that provide 100% nutrition to anyone who eats thereof.

Fuck that feedlot grain-finished shit.
141   Patrick   2024 Oct 17, 9:03am  

https://brownstone.org/articles/prostate-cancer-over-testing-and-over-treatment/


The excessive medical response to the Covid pandemic made one thing abundantly clear: Medical consumers really ought to do their own research into the health issues that impact them. Furthermore, it is no longer enough simply to seek out a “second opinion” or even a “third opinion” from doctors. They may well all be misinformed or biased. Furthermore, this problem appears to predate the Covid phenomenon.

A striking example of that can be found in the recent history of prostate cancer testing and treatment, which, for personal reasons, has become a subject of interest to me. In many ways, it strongly resembles the Covid calamity, where misuse of the PCR test resulted in harming the supposedly Covid-infected with destructive treatments. ...

Mandatory yearly PSA testing at many institutions opened up a gold mine for urologists, who were able to perform lucrative biopsies and prostatectomies on patients who had PSA test numbers above a certain level. However, Ablin has insisted that “routine PSA screening does far more harm to men than good.” Moreover, he maintains that the medical people involved in prostate screening and treatment represent “a self-perpetuating industry that has maimed millions of American men.”

Even during approval hearings for the PSA test, the FDA was well aware of the problems and dangers. For one thing, the test has a 78% false positive rate. An elevated PSA level can be caused by various factors besides cancer, so it is not really a test for prostate cancer. Moreover, a PSA test score can spur frightened men into getting unnecessary biopsies and harmful surgical procedures. ...

Nevertheless, the PSA test became celebrated as the route to salvation from prostate cancer. The Postal Service even circulated a stamp promoting yearly PSA tests in 1999. Quite a few people became wealthy and well-known at the Hybritech company, thanks to the Tandem-R PSA test, their most lucrative product.

In those days, the corrupting influence of the pharmaceutical companies on the medical device and drug approval process was already apparent. In an editorial for the Journal of the American Medical Association (quoted in Albin and Piana’s book), Dr. Marcia Angell wrote, “The pharmaceutical industry has gained unprecedented control over the evaluation of its products…there’s mounting evidence that they skew the research they sponsor to make their drugs look better and safer.” She also authored the book The Truth About the Drug Companies: How They Deceive Us and What to Do About It.

A cancer diagnosis often causes great anxiety, but in actuality, prostate cancer develops very slowly compared to other cancers and does not often pose an imminent threat to life. A chart featured in Scholz and Blum’s book compares the average length of life of people whose cancer returns after surgery. In the case of colon cancer, they live on average two more years, but prostate cancer patients live another 18.5 years.

In the overwhelming majority of cases, prostate cancer patients do not die from it but rather from something else, whether they are treated for it or not. In a 2023 article about this issue titled “To Treat or Not to Treat,” the author reports the results of a 15-year study of prostate cancer patients in the New England Journal of Medicine. Only 3% of the men in the study died of prostate cancer, and getting radiation or surgery for it did not seem to offer much statistical benefit over “active surveillance.”

Dr. Scholz confirms this, writing that “studies indicate that these treatments [radiation and surgery] reduce mortality in men with Low and Intermediate-Risk disease by only 1% to 2% and by less than 10% in men with High-Risk disease.” ...

Weighing against prostate surgery are various risks, including death and long-term impairment, since it is a very difficult procedure, even with newer robotic technology. According to Dr. Scholz, about 1 in 600 prostate surgeries result in the death of the patient. Much higher percentages suffer from incontinence (15% to 20%) and impotence after surgery. The psychological impact of these side effects is not a minor problem for many men.

In light of the significant risks and little proven benefit of treatment, Dr. Scholz censures “the urology world’s persistent overtreatment mindset.” Clearly, excessive PSA screening led to inflicting unnecessary suffering on many men. More recently, the Covid phenomenon has been an even more dramatic case of medical overkill.
147   stereotomy   2024 Nov 30, 9:17pm  

I've gone full Costanza on doctors - whatever they tell me, I do the opposite, Since the scamdemic it works very well.
148   Patrick   2024 Dec 1, 1:38pm  

https://unbekoming.substack.com/p/how-to-stop-your-doctor-from-killing


1. Doctor-induced illness (iatrogenic disease) has become one of the three leading causes of death and illness in developed countries, alongside cancer and heart disease. One in six hospital patients are there because of doctor-induced illness, with hundreds of thousands dying yearly from medical errors, drug reactions, and mismanagement.

2. The pharmaceutical industry effectively controls modern medicine through its influence on medical education, research funding, and ongoing physician training. This has transformed doctors from independent professionals into marketing agents for drug companies, prioritizing prescriptions over prevention and natural healing approaches.
149   Patrick   2024 Dec 8, 6:25pm  

https://slaynews.com/news/canadian-doctor-forced-pay-back-600k-earned-vaccinating-public-covid-shots/


Canadian Doctor Forced to Pay Back $600K She ‘Earned’ from Vaccinating Public with Covid Shots

A Canadian doctor has been forced to pay back $600,000 that she was paid for mass vaccinating members of the public with Covid shots.

The ruling was issued against Dr. Elaine Ma by the Ontario Health Services Board.

The province of Ontario paid doctors for every Covid “vaccine” they administered.

However, Dr. Ma was accused of abusing the system by deploying unpaid undergraduate medical students to mass-vaccinate people on her behalf.

The scheme saw Ma “earn” $600,962.16 from sending volunteers out to vaccinate people.


It is not enough to revoke the money paid for murder.

Trials and hangings are appropriate for everyone who took money to murder random innocent people with the deadly and ineffective mRNA jabs.
150   Ceffer   2024 Dec 8, 6:29pm  

Patrick says

It is not enough to revoke the money paid for murder.

Exactly.
153   WookieMan   2024 Dec 22, 4:46am  

stereotomy says


I've gone full Costanza on doctors - whatever they tell me, I do the opposite, Since the scamdemic it works very well.

Given my recent health issues I'm in the same boat. Nothing major on my end. I just don't trust them. Gave docs a chance again and they failed again. Since I've been 18 they've fucked up every time I go to them and they make me feel worse. ER docs being the only ones that do a good job.

Fact is most docs just walk in the room after the nurses did everything. Haven't talked in decades, but a friend is a surgical nurse. She does 90% of the work and the doctor watches. She's smart, but the medical field is f'd up. Go see your doctor. THEY DON'T DO ANYTHING.
156   WookieMan   2024 Dec 22, 6:37am  

Al_Sharpton_for_President says





Why be a doctor? Wife makes more for less work and paid off student debt over a decade ago by 30. I get to do the stay at home dad thing, work part time to help out while the kids are in school. Wife is a unicorn, but there are better less intensive jobs than a doctor that pay more.

Supposed to hit $450k this year. A doctor would see what she does and say WTF am I doing this for? Hence my mistrust for the medical field. They're miserable and in debt.
157   GNL   2024 Dec 22, 1:29pm  

WookieMan says

Al_Sharpton_for_President says






Why be a doctor? Wife makes more for less work and paid off student debt over a decade ago by 30. I get to do the stay at home dad thing, work part time to help out while the kids are in school. Wife is a unicorn, but there are better less intensive jobs than a doctor that pay more.

Supposed to hit $450k this year. A doctor would see what she does and say WTF am I doing this for? Hence my mistrust for the medical field. They're miserable and in debt.

Why is everything about money to you?
158   Al_Sharpton_for_President   2024 Dec 23, 6:44am  

You’re an average to less than average looking dork who is good a memorizing and reiterating information. You are punching way above your weight with regards to women. Nice house, flash car, expensive vacations. You are told to push an experimental transfection product to your patients. Are you going to give all that up to question whether it is safe or not?
159   WookieMan   2024 Dec 23, 9:22am  

GNL says

Why is everything about money to you?

Lol. I personally make about $5k a year right now. Wife makes the money and I support that. A doctor works 10-12 hours a day. Went to school for 7-8 years and is likely $300-400k in debt. My point is my wife with a marketing degree makes more than your average doctor with less risk and no debt by 30.

It's not about my money. It's about how you acquire it. Being a doctor is probably the dumbest thing you could do. You don't even see a net gain for 5-10 years out of med school. It's not like an attorney that can bill hourly or set a rate. Your hospital does. My wife sets her rates by what she sells and it's a lot. It actually helps people and creates jobs.

Also, I didn't bring up the money. I quoted another comment. Sorry we're having a good year and I like to brag a little. Won't lie. I don't here. My overall point is doctors don't make much compared to other fields and it's a massive time suck.
160   Patrick   2025 Jan 2, 1:40pm  

https://patrick.net/post/1326859/2019-08-28-help-patrick-find-a-lawyer-who-will


Tale of a medical script that happened across America in 2021, 2022, 2023; Suzie told doctor she needed an EXEMPTION from mRNA shot (religious, not trusting safety, allergic?), doctor said NO, if he gave her, his State board, government etc. in US, Canada would fine him $ & strip his license so it's her job versus his; he told her no, she went to work, told boss who laid her off, she hung herself
161   Patrick   2025 Jan 16, 4:26pm  

https://www.midwesterndoctor.com/p/why-arent-hospitals-incentivized


Throughout COVID-19, abysmal hospital care and the suppression of effective off-patent therapies killed approximately a million Americans. Much of this originated from Obamacare pressuring hospitals to aggressively treat patients so they could quickly leave the hospital and reduce healthcare costs. ,,,

Appallingly, the COVID-19 treatment protocols financially incentivized remdesivir (“run death is near”) and then ventilator care but penalized effective off-patent treatments. As such, hospital administrators required deadly “treatments” like Remdesivir and retaliated against the doctors who used unprofitable treatments that saved lives.

Note: the NIH continued to make remdesivir the treatment for COVID-19 and forbid alternative therapies even as a mountain of evidence piled up its protocols. This was due to Anthony Fauci appointing the NIH committee and selecting chairs that had direct financial ties to Remdesivir’s manufacturer—a recurring problem in American medicine (e.g., I showed how our grossly inaccurate cholesterol guidelines were authored by individuals taking money from statin manufacturers here).

Because of this murderous corruption, families began suing hospitals to allow the use of ivermectin for a relative who was expected to die (after being subjected to Fauci’s hospital COVID protocols). Remarkably, because there was so much money on the line, the hospitals chose to fight these lawsuits in court rather than just administer ivermectin.
162   Patrick   2025 Jan 30, 10:59am  

https://transcriberb.dreamwidth.org/195901.html


https://rumble.com/v1j0g5l-46.-plandemic-reprimando.html

-Dr. Sam Sigoloff is one of the three US military doctors who, under whistleblower protection, reported on the Defense Medical Data Base (DMED data) that showed evidence of widespread injuries sustained by US active service members following the mandated covid 19 injections. His attorney, Thomas Renz, testified about this in Senator Ron Johnson's roundtable on January 24, 2022. ...

Just remember, all you doctors out there unwilling to give medical exemptions that allow patients to have sovereignty over their body, you will have to answer for these some day. Hopefully at Nuremberg. And if you're found blameless, then good. I'm very happy. But I have many, I know many people that have been injured by these.
164   Patrick   2025 Feb 12, 10:01am  

https://ground.news/article/australian-hospital-examines-patient-records-after-nurse-claims-to-have-killed-israelis


Australian hospital examines patient records after nurse claims to have killed Israelis

Two nurses in Sydney are under criminal investigation for antisemitism after claiming they would deny treatment to Israeli patients, as reported by New South Wales police. One nurse suggested he had killed Israeli patients, sparking outrage after the video was shared by Max Veifer on TikTok.


Woah, that really is horrifying, yet on the other hand millions were also killed with ventilators, Remdesivir, and the mRNA death jabs and we don't hear about that in the press at all.
165   Patrick   2025 Feb 16, 6:58pm  

https://substack.com/home/post/p-156909785


“I’m doctor Scott Jensen and I’m not exaggerating when I tell you if you are a patient, your doctor, your insurance company, your clinic, your hospital - we can all get paid more if we make you sicker, and I think you need to understand that.”

“This patient on Medicare. His insurance company will get paid more by Medicare if this patient is seen as more sick.”

“There’s all kinds of incentive plans being dolled out by insurance companies and governments, government programs to clinics and providers and health care systems…”

“If a clinic can hit a certain threshold level of patients taking a certain kind of vaccine they get paid a chunk of money for each one of those patients that took the vaccine.”
167   GNL   2025 Mar 5, 9:17am  

WookieMan says

Also, I didn't bring up the money. I quoted another comment. Sorry we're having a good year and I like to brag a little. Won't lie. I don't here. My overall point is doctors don't make much compared to other fields and it's a massive time suck.

You constantly bring up money as if it's the only thing that matters. This is one of the huge problems in society right now. The love of money. It causes massive problems. If you can't see it, I have to call you out as blind. Sorry, but I have to.
172   Patrick   2025 Apr 15, 10:55am  

https://transcriberb.dreamwidth.org/204296.html


Kurtis Bay Talks to VSRF About His Wife's Hospital Murder

This isn't about me. Although it is complete destruction for our family. We were together for 40 years, 6 days it will be 6 months, and this year we would have celebrated 37 years of marriage.

Completely healthy, as it was outlined earlier by Lisa[2]. 59 years old, sexy, no smoking, no alcohol, just a beautiful mother, business person, professional. Gigi to the grandkids.

And we had had covid in late 2019 early 2020. Battled it. Didn't at the time know exactly what it was. Thought it was a sleeping disease, frankly, because for 30 days we kind of felt like we had heavy dose of pneumonia or bronchitis. Got through it.

Early late June, July, her mother in Washington state was fighting what appeared to be the flu. Everyone kind of thought it was probably covid. She was in her early 80s. I took her to the Vancouver Memorial or Southwest Washington Hospital because none of the other family members wanted to be around that. I took her to the hospital, stayed with her for an hour or two, and when I got up to go to the restroom, they locked the door the behind me and wouldn't let me back in to be with her. Seven days later they gave her remdesivir[3] and she passed in July.

Tammy and I and her whole family obviously dealt with that. We moved back to Arizona, Arizona had been home for us in 2021, or in 2020, I'm sorry. Late 2020 got back here. And we were living our best life. Grandkids, sporting events, all of our grown kids.

We hit the covid thing again, omicron, in late December. Got through first 4 or 5 days roughly around New Year's or so. We were up back and doing things like gone and got fitted for a new set of PXG golf clubs. She was cleaning my kids' AirBnB in Scottsdale. And things seemed to be pretty normal and then took a turn for the worse for her.

For a couple days she was fatigued, and we weren't quite sure what the next step was. The media had played it out that this was, you know, if you'd had it before, and things like that, you were, you were going to be OK and this would be sort of a heavy cold or flu. And we're smart people, I like to think so anyway, and didn't think that there was going to be any real fallout from this experience.

But after a couple days of watching her not be able to you know— we were swimming, we were in the hot tubs, we were doing all the stuff we normally would do, but then she hit a wall, like I said, and about 2 days of heavy fatigue, the next morning, I think it was around on the 5th of January, I told her that I was going to take her to the urgent care facility. At the time we were, didn't have an established primary care doctors here in Phoenix, since we'd gotten back.

But went to the urgent care, they weren't open, it was too early in the morning. I was driving around just trying to contemplate what the next step might be. We drove by the emergency room and she said, o, you're taking me to the emergency room? I said, no, no, I wasn't taking you to the emergency room. And she said, well, I think that's probably where I'm going to end up. And I said, How could that be? How could you end up there?

31:36
But she did. And— [voice breaks] after the emergency room nurse tested her, came back, said, pretty sure you've probably got pneumonia. She was on about 5 liters of oxygen, they said, we're going to give you a room and treat you for some pneumonia.

We agreed. Signed the admission papers, did the normal routine. The ER nurse came back in, she goes, just for peace of mind, I want you to know, you're negative for covid.

32:08
So I kind of figured, probably, maybe, who knows, but good, I'm glad we're going to get treatment for. She needs something. She's full of anxiety and needs some attention.

They took us up to the covid floor, which we didn't know was the covid floor at the time. The emergency room nurse helped put us into the room. We were met by 7 physicians, the most physicians I'd ever seen in my life in one room. And I was taken back by it, it was a real awkward experience. And the nurse said, you'll be OK here, they're going to treat you for pneumonia, and one of the other nurses kind of pushed her out the room, like that was the wrong thing to say. And got her back out in the hallway. They closed the two big double doors, then they immediately turned and started introducing people and saying they were going to treat her for covid.

32:58
When I asked, why they were going to treat her for covid when four floors down, they had said she was negative. They said, well, sorry, but the results haven't made it to this floor yet.

For real? You're 4 floors down and they, you told me it was negative, and on this floor you can't tell me the same?

They said, no, they needed more time, but that this was classic covid and that she was—

I said, fine, if that is covid, she is classic covid, give her monoclonals.

They said no, it's, she's, she doesn't qualify.

I said, how could you tell me she doesn't qualify? We just got here. Then you're telling me she has covid. That's the next step, right? Monoclonals.

And they said, oh, sorry, it's been rationed by the fed on the 3rd of January. This is the 5th. And now the state has to follow a certain qualification in order to distribute. And she doesn't qualify.

You might imagine, I lost my mind just a bit. And I think this is part of the protocol. If I continue down this path, it, this could go on for, it goes on for 14 days. But nothing really changes.

What's the most, what I want to try and communicate more than anything is, one, you need a plan. You need to know what you're going to do when you test positive. Or in the event. Don't go to the hospital. That's my recommendation. I'm not a doctor, but I'm going to tell you, don't go to the ho—
none of my family's going back to the hospital. Get concierge medic— somebody that can come and service you at your home or business or whatever. Line it up, make sure you have cash to be able to take care of it.

Don't listen to the media. Early treatment helps and works. They don't want to tell you that. They don't want to tell you that because it doesn't fit their protocols.

The key elements for them in terms of media— looking back— I'm a VP for all of North America, I'd like to think I've got half a brain. Looking at back at this, there were like 5 or 6 key indicators that make me think this was part of a protocol that now, having talked to other people that have experienced it, it's clear it was.

35:01
Isolation. And if they couldn't get you isolated properly, then you become combative so that you're no longer allowed in the room. I was combative. I had to have security come. Police officers had to come and escort me out. I wouldn't leave.

And all I wanted was a treatment plan. Tell me what you're going to do. Just please tell me what you're going to do! That's all I want to know. My wife is laying here in the bed. And she was, she was, as you imagine, she was heightened anxiety, she was nervous, she didn't know what to do. There were 7 nurses and the doctors all in scrubs and white coats. And she just didn't know what to do.

So after conversations with her we decided that I would go and she would be home. The pulmonologist came in and said, lied to our face, I treated 4,000 people like this and every one of them goes home in a couple days, you'll be right, you'll be home in 2,3 days, no problem.

35:50
I went home and 2 days go by. I wrote on the white board and put on the video, I tried to video the security and the cops that, no remdesivir, no high flow, and no sedation.

And 1:48 in the middle of the morning I got a text from my wife, saying, don't be mad but they gave me high-flow oxygen. And—[voice breaks]— that was the beginning of the end.

36:18
They, the next day when I was going to see her, which by the way, they treat them like a house plant. They push them in a dark room. The nurses don't know their name. She was there for 15 days and had 21 different nurses, all traveling nurses with the exception of one or two that were the floor monitors, but not the nurses that actually treated her.

You only get an hour with that person and when you come it's scheduled so that you can never be around a doctor that actually was treating the person. It's by design. And so you're left with unanswered questions and pain. And your spouse or your loved one is laying there asking the same questions, but getting no results, mostly mostly fatigued and tired and wore out. ...

It's been complete destruction. These people are held to no accountability. They don't communicate. They don't share the early treatment options that make sense. When I asked about ivermectin on her second day in there they told me they don't use it and they're banned from it.

When I got a doctor to get her transferred out of that hospital, that was the day, that was the third day, all of a sudden on the 4th day she's being ventilated.

Everything we tried that made sense, they pushed back on and complicated.

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