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The Midazolam Murders


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2024 Feb 20, 10:27am   3,065 views  69 comments

by Patrick   ➕follow (61)   💰tip   ignore  

The majority of "virus deaths" in the US during the pandemic were actually deliberate murder with Midazolam, Remdesivir, and ventilation to collect large cash bonuses from the government. These murders were committed simply by following the genocidally criminal "guidelines" from the CDC.

The CDC, being completely owned and controlled by Pfizer, wanted to increase the number of deaths in order to increase fear, and therefore "vaccine" uptake and Pfizer profits.

The 2020 election fraud planners like Soros, Zuckerberg, and Gates, also wanted these deaths as a justification for mail-in ballots, the perfect vehicle for election fraud.

Social Security planners in government were also happy with the murders as a way to decrease payouts.

Similar murders happened in the UK:

https://vicparkpetition.substack.com/p/for-the-greater-good-did-uk-mp-andrew


For the greater good: Did UK MP Andrew Bridgen just let slip the government’s motive for the midazolam murders?

Roguski: Has anyone given you a reason why they don’t want to deal with this discussion? [Ed. – excess deaths].

Bridgen: They haven’t, and apart from the fact that before I was thrown out of the conservative party for raising it I had and hour and a half meeting with a Party grandee who at this stage will remain nameless. I explained all my concerns in January ‘23 about the vaccine harms and NG163 which was…it would appear would well be the euthanasia or euthanising of elderly/vulnerable out of hospital…to make way for the first wave of expected covid patients back in 2020. And at the end of that meeting the party representative said to me ‘Andrew there is currently no political appetite for your views on the vaccines there may well be in 20 years’ time and you’re probably going to be proven right then but in the meantime you need to bear in mind that you are taking on the most powerful vested interests in the world with all the personal risks for you which that would entail’…

[End transcript]

The key phrase here from Bridgen is ‘make way’ which means that the government was anticipating the hospitals to be overrun. They had to ‘make room’ and ‘free up care in the NHS’ based on a predictive model.

Did the UK government see the covid modelling, panic, and then kill the vulnerable to ‘save the NHS’?

If so, who gave the order to kill?

How did they decide who to kill?



https://www.openaccessgovernment.org/do-not-resuscitate/93223/


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65   Patrick   2024 Aug 11, 1:29pm  

https://transcriberb.dreamwidth.org/33291.html


"Remdesivir! Interview With Nurse Michelle Gershman"
CDMedia Published October 20, 2022
https://rumble.com/v1ou4du-remdesivir-interview-with-nurse-michelle-gershman.html

RUMBLE PAGE DESCRIPTION: "American Conversations Host Christine Dolan continues the interviews about remdesivir. In late November 2021, Fresno, California nurse Michelle Gershman lost her mother after being admitted to St. Agnes hospital. Michelle tells the heart-wrenching story about how she and her mother both told the hospital not to put her on remdesivir. The doctor claimed it was "protocol" only after Michelle discovered that the family and patient's demands were intentionally ignored."

MICHELLE GERSHMAN, RN: I took her to St. Agnes, she walked in there. They put her on 2 liters of oxygen and her oxygen went from 85% to 92%. So I said, OK good. I felt like I'd put her in the right place. And I told her, you just need oxygen. I said, when I dropped her off, make sure you tell them you do not want remdesivir and you don't want to go on a ventilator. You just need oxygen and some fluids. And so she said OK. And she walked in there. And then I talked—

CHRISTINE DOLAN: At that point in time you were not allowed to accompany your mother inside the hospital, correct?

MICHELLE GERSHMAN, RN: Correct. They said there's no visitors. And thinking about it now, if they had told my mom, by admitting you to the hospital, you're going to have absolutely no visitors, we're going to throw you in a back room to suffocate and die, we're going to bombard your body with all these medications and stick needles in you all day long and wake you up while you're sleeping, my mom would have said, hell no, I'm going home. I'll take my chances. But they didn't tell her anything like that. They just brought her in.

CHRISTINE DOLAN: Did you know that that was happening in the hospitals in Fresno at that time, since you are a nurse?

MICHELLE GERSHMAN, RN: No. I didn't know they would be so evil, robotic, barbaric. No, I did not know they were going to treat my mom like that.

CHRISTINE DOLAN: So you weren't working at the hospital, you were working at, you were not in the covid unit, the ICU, or the ER at that time?

MICHELLE GERSHMAN, RN: Not at this time. Because when covid started around March of 2020, I worked on the covid floor for about 6 months, and the [?] floor. And then November, somewhere around there, of 2020, I transferred to the post-partum unit. So by November 2020 covid had not gotten that bad yet. So with the entire year that I was on post-partum with the babies I'm not really sure what was happening on the covid floor anymore because I had already transferred.

CHRISTINE DOLAN: Alright. And when this happened to your mom, this was November 2021, right?

MICHELLE GERSHMAN, RN: Correct.

CHRISTINE DOLAN: OK so. So your mom gets in there. You're talking to her by phone. Are you talking to anybody else that's on the floor at the time? The head nurse at the nursing station? The doctor?

MICHELLE GERSHMAN, RN: No, not really because she was in the emergency room and I didn't—- I knew they were probably busy. So I was talking to my mom, she was coherent, I felt like she was OK, she was just getting oxygen.

My mom was a very bold, redhead woman that, I knew she, you know, she's loud and she'll tell them. And if I tell her, make sure you don't take this medication, she'll tell them. And they, so I was just talking to her, I wasn't really talking to the doctor. And then—

CHRISTINE DOLAN: But your mother confirmed to you that she did tell them that she did not want to be put on a ventilator, did not want to be put on remdesivir?

MICHELLE GERSHMAN, RN: Yes, because I asked her later that night, on the 15th, I said, did you tell them you do not want remdesivir? She said, yes I told them and they looked at me like I'm crazy. I said, well that's OK, they can look at you like you're crazy, but don't let them give it to you.

CHRISTINE DOLAN: Right.

MICHELLE GERSHMAN, RN: She said OK. And then she went to sleep that night, I'm assuming. And then I found out when I read the medical records that on November 16th at 2 in the morning they gave her remdesivir.

CHRISTINE DOLAN: So she may have been asleep and they may have, and they have woken her up, and she's in a doze, they're just giving her shot, and she's thinking it's another IV change or something like that.

MICHELLE GERSHMAN, RN: Yes, exactly. And then the next day she said, everybody in here's wearing masks, it's really hard to know what anybody's talking about. And so they did tell her, we're giving you remdesivir and she's you know, half asleep, she probably didn't understand. And so you know that was the first dose. And so--

CHRISTINE DOLAN: Pardon me for interrupting, Michelle. When did you find out that your mom had been given remdesivir? At what point?

MICHELLE GERSHMAN, RN: On day 4. Because the first three days, my mom was responding to my calls, she was answering the phone, she was texting me back. She said, Oh, I'm feeling better. I thought she was getting better. And I thought she was getting better. I thought she was getting better. I thought, OK I put her in the right place, they're going to help her and send her home. And then on day 4, she stopped answering my calls and she wasn't texting me back. And I started panicking because I know my mom. I talk to her every day. For the entire last year, that I, you know, she'd come over every day, she was really involved with my kids. And so she didn't answer my calls.

So I started panicking. And I called at 2 pm and I got a hold of the doctor, and I said, why isn't she answering my calls? And the doctor said, oh, she has covid, she's tired. And I said, well, what are you giving her? And then she named off these medications, and she said remdesivir. And I said, why are you giving her that? She told you not to give that to her. And she said, Oh, it's covid protocol, that's what we're giving everybody with covid. And I said, do not give her another dose of that! She told you not to give it to her. And she said, well, she got her last dose today. And so I knew after that--

CHRISTINE DOLAN: So your mom had for 4 or 5 days?

MICHELLE GERSHMAN, RN: Yeah. She'd had 5 by this point.

CHRISTINE DOLAN: Is that the norm, that people are given 5 days of remdesivir?

MICHELLE GERSHMAN, RN: Right so, 5 days, and then if they aren't better, they give them another 5 days, which by that point they're dead. So. Pretty much.

And so I didn't know that much about remdesivir yet. I just know that my mom does not tolerate medications very well at all. And I had been hearing a couple of things about, you know, this antiviral that's not really helping, and so I told her, don't take it, not really realizing that it's straight poison.

And so that night when I got off the phone with the doctor, my heart sank. I felt disgusted. I felt like, I knew I'm going to lose my mom. She's going to die because they gave her that medication. They poisoned her.

And so the next 10 days was complete agony for me, because I kept calling, and I wanted to get information on my mom, and she was not really, she was declining. She would answer my calls but wouldn't able to talk very much because she was short of breath and then also sleeping more, so and not really texting me back anymore.

And so the next couple of days I kept calling to get information about her, and everybody I talked to, they would say, oh, she's getting better! You know, we're checking on her, her oxygen's fine! It was so robotic, that they would just say, she's getting better. They kept saying, oh, she'll be home in a couple days. You know, she's resting.

And then if they didn't say that, they would just not want to give me information. They just treated me like I was a burden, like they don't want me asking about my mother. And none of them, I feel like none of them have any compassion. They have no sense of put yourself in somebody else's shoes. Like, if that were your mother, you would be trying to do anything to save her life! And I would have done anything for my mother.

I was begging to come in every day, especially after day 4. I'm like, she needs me there. I can watch her oxygen. I can help her with the machines, you know, bring her things, or have my husband send me things upstairs, because I'm like, I can stay in the room, I don't have to leave so I don't expose anybody else. And every time I asked, I asked every single day, I kept bugging them, I asked to talk to the House Supervisor and they didn't want to send me to the House Sup, they said, no, you need to go through the Floor Supervisor first. And every time I asked, they said, no, I'm sorry, it's policy, we don't allow any visitors. And I kept saying, my mom could die, like, she needs me there! And they did not care.

CHRISTINE DOLAN: So eventually you were allowed to come in, but only for a short period of time.

MICHELLE GERSHMAN, RN: Correct.

CHRISTINE DOLAN: That was towards the end.

MICHELLE GERSHMAN, RN: Yes. So they have this weird thing with their visitor policy, if the patient gets to the point where there's no return, that they're going to die, they finally will let you in. So I don't know why they have to wait so long,. because if they had let me in in the beginning, I could have potentially saved her life. I would have advocated for her, and I would have been able to monitor her machines. I told them I'm an RN, I worked the covid floor, I can help her, and if I'm there, I can improve your patent outcomes. And they did not care.
66   Patrick   2024 Sep 23, 12:37pm  

https://slaynews.com/news/whistleblower-hospitals-killed-many-thousands-covid-patients/


Whistleblower: Hospitals Killed ‘Many, Many Thousands’ of Covid Patients

A medical professional has blown the whistle and warned the public that “many, many thousands” of Covid patients were killed by hospitals during the pandemic and not by the virus, as officially claimed.

The whistleblower, respiratory therapist Mark Bishofsky, has gone on the record to state that COVID-19 patients died because they were killed by hospital protocols.

Respiratory therapists diagnose, treat, and manage conditions that affect the lungs, according to the Cleveland Clinic.

Bishofsky revealed that patients didn’t die from Covid.

However, thousands of patients hospitalized for COVID-19 were killed when they were put on ventilators and denied treatment with ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine or even vitamin D, Bishofsky told CHD.TV.

Bishofsky revealed that he was aware of “many, many thousands” of people who were killed by hospitals but simply listed as “Covid deaths.” ...

“Many, many thousands of patients died because of this rush to early intubation and not allowing early treatment with medications like ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine or even vitamin D — they wouldn’t even give these patients vitamin D,” he said.

“They just wanted to intubate them and put them on remdesivir.”

Patients were being intubated “when they were needing as little as three liters of oxygen,” according to Bishofsky.

The medical expert said he’d never seen that before in his 25 years of practice.

“That’s so little oxygen to the point where if you took the patient off of it, they’re gonna be fine,” he said.

“But there was this rush to intubate these patients.”

Bishofsky tried to convince doctors that “this wasn’t the right thing to do.” ...

In the first week of the pandemic, the doctors at Bishofsky’s hospital successfully used hydroxychloroquine to treat Covid patients.

“We had extremely good outcomes,” he said.

However, the sentiment regarding hydroxychloroquine suddenly changed when it became the target of a media smear campaign after President Donald Trump touted the benefits of the drug.

Almost immediately after, an “absolutely bogus” study came out in The Lancet on hydroxychloroquine, Bishofsky said.

“The doctors would cite that,” he noted.

At the end of his tenure at the hospital, Bishofsky told its medical director:

“You know, this whole early intubation thing was completely hideous.” ...

One of the saddest aspects of the hospital protocol was how COVID-19 patients were isolated from their family members.

“These patients wanted to see family more than anything,” he said.

“Perhaps they’d been there two or three weeks.

“They’re afraid. They’re sick. They just want to see somebody they love.”
67   stereotomy   2024 Sep 23, 2:57pm  

They killed them with depraved indifference. This is a death sentence. They all need to be duly adjudicated, properly condemned, and duly executed for their crimes.

I could not, in my wildest dreams imagine that the medical profession was in fact the homicidal profession. They get off, when the J6 potitical prisoners rot and die in DC jails. As Larry Niven would say, "TANJ!"

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