From crypto to false flags, from the controlled demolition of global economies to the proposed death panels at the G20 Summit, from Canada’s new gov’t euthanasia programs to the automation of society, I cover a ridiculous amount of topics here and move fast - more episodes with deep dives on each topic are on their way.
Imagine if allopathic medicine were good enough at its job to not be spending enormous amounts of money on the last 3 months of someone's life. Imagine if it was helping people to stabilize and live healthy, strong lives till the end of their days.
Isn't it strange and conspicuous that so many people end up with so many compacted emergencies the longer they're being served by the medical system?
I and so many others watch allopathic medicine literally put people into compounding crisis situations that most of the professionals there are generally too untrained and ill equipped to solve; indeed that at a certain point in the mire of it, no one can solve — because the conditions caused are contradictory and the professional environments inflexible and unresponsive or even aggressive toward those who know what they need and can detail it clearly.
The percentage of those who benefit from allopathic care are no excuse to so gruesomely murder the rest.
Allopathic medicine is causing those radical expenses — then sheepishly admitting they feel it's better to clear the docket rather than own up and take responsibility for it?
Unless there are actually zero allopathic medical professionals who agree with giving up on the people whose bodies their establishment has destroyed over years and decades...?
I hope it was a market trawl on Gates' part, one that no actual doctor ever agreed with. I pray to be able to hope for that.
Depends a lot on the definition of "actual doctor," I guess.
This is a topic I could go down a massive rabbit hole with you on. I've seen very dark sides of allopathic medicine and the healthcare industry throughout my life. Technically, I work in it now, but not as a clinician. I'm a recruiter, among other things. What I love about it is I can contract with non-profits who provide behavioral health and substance abuse recovery services and headhunt competent providers to work there. I've been the patient in those scenarios as well as worked in those environments as a social worker in the past, so my heart is definitely tied to making sure vulnerable populations have people who will actually show up and help them, regardless of if they have money/insurance or not. Thats the good side. The dark side though, is everything you said here plus sooooo much more. I am right there with you. At the end of the day, allopathic medicine is a coal mine canary suppressor, nothing more. It's great if you break bones or have a gunshot wound, they can fix you up, whereas a naturopathic physician is not able to do so. (that i know of at least) but for everything else? it can be a nightmare where health conditions go unexplained due to incompetency and then become chrronic and result in unnecessary illness and worse, then its something else i hear from providers all the time - they are getting extremely frustrated and in some cases leaving the profession because they "aren't allowed to do their jobs" - meaning, the insurance companies have the facilities, hospitals, etc in a stronghold, and its all about the bottom lines now. its fkng insane. then of course you have the genocidal experimentation by way of pharmaceuticals and "vaccines" but if you heard the podcast then you likely know my opinion haha 😆 thank you for listening and for your thoughtful response.
I'm at a little over an hour in.
Imagine if allopathic medicine were good enough at its job to not be spending enormous amounts of money on the last 3 months of someone's life. Imagine if it was helping people to stabilize and live healthy, strong lives till the end of their days.
Isn't it strange and conspicuous that so many people end up with so many compacted emergencies the longer they're being served by the medical system?
I and so many others watch allopathic medicine literally put people into compounding crisis situations that most of the professionals there are generally too untrained and ill equipped to solve; indeed that at a certain point in the mire of it, no one can solve — because the conditions caused are contradictory and the professional environments inflexible and unresponsive or even aggressive toward those who know what they need and can detail it clearly.
The percentage of those who benefit from allopathic care are no excuse to so gruesomely murder the rest.
Allopathic medicine is causing those radical expenses — then sheepishly admitting they feel it's better to clear the docket rather than own up and take responsibility for it?
Unless there are actually zero allopathic medical professionals who agree with giving up on the people whose bodies their establishment has destroyed over years and decades...?
I hope it was a market trawl on Gates' part, one that no actual doctor ever agreed with. I pray to be able to hope for that.
Depends a lot on the definition of "actual doctor," I guess.
This is a topic I could go down a massive rabbit hole with you on. I've seen very dark sides of allopathic medicine and the healthcare industry throughout my life. Technically, I work in it now, but not as a clinician. I'm a recruiter, among other things. What I love about it is I can contract with non-profits who provide behavioral health and substance abuse recovery services and headhunt competent providers to work there. I've been the patient in those scenarios as well as worked in those environments as a social worker in the past, so my heart is definitely tied to making sure vulnerable populations have people who will actually show up and help them, regardless of if they have money/insurance or not. Thats the good side. The dark side though, is everything you said here plus sooooo much more. I am right there with you. At the end of the day, allopathic medicine is a coal mine canary suppressor, nothing more. It's great if you break bones or have a gunshot wound, they can fix you up, whereas a naturopathic physician is not able to do so. (that i know of at least) but for everything else? it can be a nightmare where health conditions go unexplained due to incompetency and then become chrronic and result in unnecessary illness and worse, then its something else i hear from providers all the time - they are getting extremely frustrated and in some cases leaving the profession because they "aren't allowed to do their jobs" - meaning, the insurance companies have the facilities, hospitals, etc in a stronghold, and its all about the bottom lines now. its fkng insane. then of course you have the genocidal experimentation by way of pharmaceuticals and "vaccines" but if you heard the podcast then you likely know my opinion haha 😆 thank you for listening and for your thoughtful response.