I watched dozens of people filming inside empty U.S. hospitals during 2020 while our Bolshevik MSM were reporting that our hospitals couldn't cope will all the holocaust.
We're now being told that India is in crisis because their population didn't get injected with New World Order poison fast enough and their hospitals are overflowing too. We're seeing fake COVID news reports about "bodies in the streets" featuring photos of Indians who died during a gas leak.
Indian pedes are also reporting that their hospitals are virtually empty.
They want us to believe India is doomed in an attempt to fool people into having their DNA rewritten by the NWO "vaccine". There's no time to think, just live in fear and become a GMO today!
This is the Bolshevik's greatest holocaust hoaxes since their last one.
It's over capacity because they set aside a certain number of beds for specific causes. So if a 1,000 bed hospital sets aside 10 covid beds and 11 patients come in, well set the world on fire it's over capacity!!!!!!!!
Was personally in the ER with a visible ICU down the hall, separated by sliding glass door. ER was me and one other guy, ICU looked sparse. This was a major hospital in the center of Phoenix during the ~April/May "hospitals are full emergency" bullshit that happened here.
And the whole "we're so overworked but hey lets make a stupid fucking tiktok video that we have to coordinate for an hour or more"
I can answer this from experience, but as I don't wish to dox myself, you'll just have to take it as purely anecdotal and not proof of anything.
Someone previously mentioned about beds being set aside for COVID. That is true. Once that reaches capacity (it's usually a very small amount) then it's a "crisis" situation.
It may be 2 beds. It may be 7 beds. It may be 1 bed. It doesn't matter because it's measured in terms of capacity % within a parameter and not true capacity.
This has happened the world over. Make no mistake - they put people in those beds who are sick, who may ALSO test positive for CV19. It's an alongside their original problem issue.
If a person is admitted for a "certain" condition, like say vascular or pneumonia, there is a certain gleam that comes in the eyes of staff, they're very eager to test that patient for Coronavirus all of a sudden. If they test positive, they admit them to the CV ward. It doesn't matter what you came IN for, you're in there for CV now.
Given that the PCR tests are running hot and incorrect with wild false positives, this is how you get over capacity.
It's a medical GME situation in many ways.
As we've seen with masks, you don't need to have people in on some big conspiracy. Heck, as we see on this board, you don't need to have people IN on a conspiracy. You just have to tell them what the parameters are for acceptable behavior in a certain situation and you let nature - social pressure, conditioning etc - take its course.
In short, there is no definitive measure for what is or isn't Coronavirus-needing-hospitalization cases. There is always underlying or comorbid issue concurrent to "coronavirus" that requires parallel treatment.
Put simply, if you have a heart attack and test positive for CV, you'll be classed henceforth as CV, the heart attack being the "symptom" of the CV and not an "and also," situation.
This is in contrast to the approach towards CV Vac symptoms, which are "absolutely not the fault of the vaccine", even if they're the sole obvious presenting factor.
We have a family member who works in a hospital here in WA. She said her hospital has never been full and most certainly not over capacity. In fact administrators shut down entire wings of the hospital for a time and reduced her work hours briefly in 2020.
In some places, there are more ICU beds available, compared to regular flu seasons. This is the case in Ontario, Canada. See plot here, and references therein:
This data was not publicly available, and leaked while our provincial government were insisting that the ICU beds were overflowing (thus "justifying" their "enhanced restrictions"), and while there were videos coming out of empty hospitals. A week or two after the leak, they didn't address the lie, rather moved onto a new lie, namely, "the ICU beds aren't overflowing because people are staying home and dying there!"
Also in Ontario, there were scare stories by the MSM about how the hospitals are "overflowing" due to the flu, just prior to COVID coming into the public consciousness (i.e., March 2020 lockdowns):
The point of these scare stories regarding the flu were likely to try to justify expansions in the health system, and thus, a more powerful government.
It's not the biggest lever of power, but, those who control health care, control life.
In the extreme case, say, a fully communist country, this could be greatly abused.
At present, in Canada, two patients with similar conditions can go visit the same doctor, and that doctor can chose not to treat one the older one, while choosing to treat the younger one. I know of this happening personally with a family member and a friend of the family. The doctor deemed the older (elderly) patient to not be worth helping, given her age. The middle-aged woman received good treatment, with the doctor slipping in a comment about how it was important because she was younger (and him not being aware that she knew how he treated her older friend).
That's the kind of power I speak of. The doctor was directly responsible, but, the government was indirectly responsible for setting up & maintaining a system which would allow that.
Back when Canada socialized its healthcare system, many decades ago, doctors raised concerns that this would effectively make them government employees (and the potential consequences of that). Those doctors obviously did not get their way.
Friend in the Netherlands stated similar age-based treatment criteria 2-3 years ago. Said something along the lines of it being ok to oust an older patient (60+ or 65+) from hospital if a younger patient were to require the bed.
Seems "honor your elders" has been thrown out the window.
I've followed the Inova ER wait time tracker since Mar 2020. It has never exceeded a 30 min wait except in rare cases in all this time. 16 emergency rooms in the NOVA (DC) region. Never overloaded.
I’m at the hospital a lot for work. At varying times. It’s always a ghost town. If anything it is LESS busy than normal because people are afraid of catching the Coof there.
Any time a hospital starts crying about how their ICU is nearing capacity, ask whoever you’re talking to for data from any given time pre-scamdemic and compare it. Hospitals are businesses at the end of the day. They charge insurance providers a lot more if someone needs intensive care. They always keep their ICU’s close to capacity.
In my area in eastern TN our only two healthcare systems merged. Wellmont Health merged with Mountain State Health Alliance to form Ballad Health. They pressured the local officials to obtain a COPA to avoid being called a monopoly. So now they get on the news and say “We have over 100 people in ICU beds!”
Okay that sounds like a lot, right? Well what they are leaving out is that Ballad is over every hospital encompassing a vast region of Tennessee and parts of Virginia
ICUs are intended to operate at high occupancy e.g. over 90% since empty beds don't earn revenue. Procedures etc. are scheduled to keep those beds filled. So ANY increase of a few people puts them at / over capacity. SHEESH!
Remember all the hospital closures and consolidations a while back? To reduce excess capacity, empty beds and improve profits.
Hospital management purposefully does not keep extra beds for any surge.
If they are at / over capacity it was designed that way. They can just postpone some of the elective procedures for a while. Or bring back HOPE and MERCY, which basically sat empty in THE covid hot spot.
The National Wealth Service in the UK is slightly different in that it's government (=tax) funded and, although you can go private, there's very little pressure to do so unless you have private health insurance (which nobody actually needs but a small percentage have as a "perk" of their job).
As I understand it, apart from the tiny allocation of ICU beds, the problem in the UK is that they lay off any nurse for two weeks if they "test positive". Not ill, just "positive". Obviously, very few nurses object to being sent home on full pay. But the hospitals can then close down whole wards since "no staff because of covid".
I'm not a medical professional. But I know that when I was working 50 hours a week at my job while helping my family with work in the house for 4-5 hours each day... the FIRST thing I did when I had spare time was to coordinate a tiktok dance video with friends.
About three months ago I went to four hospitals within 20 miles of our house, I went to the ER, and there was nobody in any of them except for one had maybe two or three people. That’s it I videotaped it off for my brother who lives in Japan and he was worried about my mom not being able to make it into a hospital. So I made the videos so he would understand that the ERs are empty. It’s all a big scam demic
Keep the masses scared & they’ll do as you say. That’s their goal. I know a couple through a friend & they tried to tell me that there are refrigerated trucks full of people who died of covid & are waiting to be buried. My husband asked them where these trucks were. The guy said “They’re all over. Just watch the news”. That’s how easy it is to keep people, who refuse to do research, scared.
Both hospitals in my city have been dead empty for a year now. Normally you cant find a parking spot,but with the super killer virus, parking was overly abundant.
Ambulances rushing around were and still are rare occurances. Pre virus,lit up ambulances all day long.
Richard Citizen Journalist started his whole thing this way, going to hospitals to show they were empty during Covid. We had to visit a couple of hospitals during the early covid panic, and even had to break my aunt out of a medical kidnapping situation in one and they were completely empty. Why do you think it became "don't come in and don't come back behind this heavily guarded security area unless we say so"...?
Hospital census fluctuates constantly. The managers try to keep as many beds full as they can staff--important point there. If there isn't staff they can't have more patients. Patient load is only roughly predictable. Anything that would suddenly increase usage by a small percentage in a hospital with a money-making amount of patients, i.e. close to full, will cause a temporary overload, which the hospital usually deals with by sending the least sick home or to a care facility. By cherrypicking the time of assessment you could make a case that a hospital was overloaded, or not.
Yes, it's all total bullshit.
I watched dozens of people filming inside empty U.S. hospitals during 2020 while our Bolshevik MSM were reporting that our hospitals couldn't cope will all the holocaust.
We're now being told that India is in crisis because their population didn't get injected with New World Order poison fast enough and their hospitals are overflowing too. We're seeing fake COVID news reports about "bodies in the streets" featuring photos of Indians who died during a gas leak.
Indian pedes are also reporting that their hospitals are virtually empty.
They want us to believe India is doomed in an attempt to fool people into having their DNA rewritten by the NWO "vaccine". There's no time to think, just live in fear and become a GMO today!
This is the Bolshevik's greatest holocaust hoaxes since their last one.
It's over capacity because they set aside a certain number of beds for specific causes. So if a 1,000 bed hospital sets aside 10 covid beds and 11 patients come in, well set the world on fire it's over capacity!!!!!!!!
In a nutshell. Since a virus is contagious those patients require more space, too.
Was personally in the ER with a visible ICU down the hall, separated by sliding glass door. ER was me and one other guy, ICU looked sparse. This was a major hospital in the center of Phoenix during the ~April/May "hospitals are full emergency" bullshit that happened here.
And the whole "we're so overworked but hey lets make a stupid fucking tiktok video that we have to coordinate for an hour or more"
I can answer this from experience, but as I don't wish to dox myself, you'll just have to take it as purely anecdotal and not proof of anything.
Someone previously mentioned about beds being set aside for COVID. That is true. Once that reaches capacity (it's usually a very small amount) then it's a "crisis" situation.
It may be 2 beds. It may be 7 beds. It may be 1 bed. It doesn't matter because it's measured in terms of capacity % within a parameter and not true capacity.
This has happened the world over. Make no mistake - they put people in those beds who are sick, who may ALSO test positive for CV19. It's an alongside their original problem issue.
If a person is admitted for a "certain" condition, like say vascular or pneumonia, there is a certain gleam that comes in the eyes of staff, they're very eager to test that patient for Coronavirus all of a sudden. If they test positive, they admit them to the CV ward. It doesn't matter what you came IN for, you're in there for CV now.
Given that the PCR tests are running hot and incorrect with wild false positives, this is how you get over capacity.
It's a medical GME situation in many ways.
As we've seen with masks, you don't need to have people in on some big conspiracy. Heck, as we see on this board, you don't need to have people IN on a conspiracy. You just have to tell them what the parameters are for acceptable behavior in a certain situation and you let nature - social pressure, conditioning etc - take its course.
In short, there is no definitive measure for what is or isn't Coronavirus-needing-hospitalization cases. There is always underlying or comorbid issue concurrent to "coronavirus" that requires parallel treatment.
Put simply, if you have a heart attack and test positive for CV, you'll be classed henceforth as CV, the heart attack being the "symptom" of the CV and not an "and also," situation.
This is in contrast to the approach towards CV Vac symptoms, which are "absolutely not the fault of the vaccine", even if they're the sole obvious presenting factor.
Thanks for the detailed explanation.
We have a family member who works in a hospital here in WA. She said her hospital has never been full and most certainly not over capacity. In fact administrators shut down entire wings of the hospital for a time and reduced her work hours briefly in 2020.
So yeah, fearmongering bullshit.
In some places, there are more ICU beds available, compared to regular flu seasons. This is the case in Ontario, Canada. See plot here, and references therein:
https://files.catbox.moe/rocsbt.pdf
This data was not publicly available, and leaked while our provincial government were insisting that the ICU beds were overflowing (thus "justifying" their "enhanced restrictions"), and while there were videos coming out of empty hospitals. A week or two after the leak, they didn't address the lie, rather moved onto a new lie, namely, "the ICU beds aren't overflowing because people are staying home and dying there!"
Also in Ontario, there were scare stories by the MSM about how the hospitals are "overflowing" due to the flu, just prior to COVID coming into the public consciousness (i.e., March 2020 lockdowns):
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/ontario-hospital-hallway-medicine-healthcare-beyond-capacity-1.5420434
https://archive.vn/wip/ipPNp
There's a similar story from TIME for the USA:
https://time.com/5107984/hospitals-handling-burden-flu-patients/
https://archive.vn/wip/GHL7I
The point of these scare stories regarding the flu were likely to try to justify expansions in the health system, and thus, a more powerful government.
It's not the biggest lever of power, but, those who control health care, control life.
In the extreme case, say, a fully communist country, this could be greatly abused.
At present, in Canada, two patients with similar conditions can go visit the same doctor, and that doctor can chose not to treat one the older one, while choosing to treat the younger one. I know of this happening personally with a family member and a friend of the family. The doctor deemed the older (elderly) patient to not be worth helping, given her age. The middle-aged woman received good treatment, with the doctor slipping in a comment about how it was important because she was younger (and him not being aware that she knew how he treated her older friend).
That's the kind of power I speak of. The doctor was directly responsible, but, the government was indirectly responsible for setting up & maintaining a system which would allow that.
Back when Canada socialized its healthcare system, many decades ago, doctors raised concerns that this would effectively make them government employees (and the potential consequences of that). Those doctors obviously did not get their way.
Friend in the Netherlands stated similar age-based treatment criteria 2-3 years ago. Said something along the lines of it being ok to oust an older patient (60+ or 65+) from hospital if a younger patient were to require the bed.
Seems "honor your elders" has been thrown out the window.
I've followed the Inova ER wait time tracker since Mar 2020. It has never exceeded a 30 min wait except in rare cases in all this time. 16 emergency rooms in the NOVA (DC) region. Never overloaded.
I’m at the hospital a lot for work. At varying times. It’s always a ghost town. If anything it is LESS busy than normal because people are afraid of catching the Coof there.
Any time a hospital starts crying about how their ICU is nearing capacity, ask whoever you’re talking to for data from any given time pre-scamdemic and compare it. Hospitals are businesses at the end of the day. They charge insurance providers a lot more if someone needs intensive care. They always keep their ICU’s close to capacity.
In my area in eastern TN our only two healthcare systems merged. Wellmont Health merged with Mountain State Health Alliance to form Ballad Health. They pressured the local officials to obtain a COPA to avoid being called a monopoly. So now they get on the news and say “We have over 100 people in ICU beds!”
Okay that sounds like a lot, right? Well what they are leaving out is that Ballad is over every hospital encompassing a vast region of Tennessee and parts of Virginia
ICUs are intended to operate at high occupancy e.g. over 90% since empty beds don't earn revenue. Procedures etc. are scheduled to keep those beds filled. So ANY increase of a few people puts them at / over capacity. SHEESH!
Remember all the hospital closures and consolidations a while back? To reduce excess capacity, empty beds and improve profits.
Hospital management purposefully does not keep extra beds for any surge.
If they are at / over capacity it was designed that way. They can just postpone some of the elective procedures for a while. Or bring back HOPE and MERCY, which basically sat empty in THE covid hot spot.
The National Wealth Service in the UK is slightly different in that it's government (=tax) funded and, although you can go private, there's very little pressure to do so unless you have private health insurance (which nobody actually needs but a small percentage have as a "perk" of their job).
As I understand it, apart from the tiny allocation of ICU beds, the problem in the UK is that they lay off any nurse for two weeks if they "test positive". Not ill, just "positive". Obviously, very few nurses object to being sent home on full pay. But the hospitals can then close down whole wards since "no staff because of covid".
Wealth Service. I like it.
I'm not a medical professional. But I know that when I was working 50 hours a week at my job while helping my family with work in the house for 4-5 hours each day... the FIRST thing I did when I had spare time was to coordinate a tiktok dance video with friends.
Totally.
About three months ago I went to four hospitals within 20 miles of our house, I went to the ER, and there was nobody in any of them except for one had maybe two or three people. That’s it I videotaped it off for my brother who lives in Japan and he was worried about my mom not being able to make it into a hospital. So I made the videos so he would understand that the ERs are empty. It’s all a big scam demic
Keep the masses scared & they’ll do as you say. That’s their goal. I know a couple through a friend & they tried to tell me that there are refrigerated trucks full of people who died of covid & are waiting to be buried. My husband asked them where these trucks were. The guy said “They’re all over. Just watch the news”. That’s how easy it is to keep people, who refuse to do research, scared.
Both hospitals in my city have been dead empty for a year now. Normally you cant find a parking spot,but with the super killer virus, parking was overly abundant.
Ambulances rushing around were and still are rare occurances. Pre virus,lit up ambulances all day long.
Richard Citizen Journalist started his whole thing this way, going to hospitals to show they were empty during Covid. We had to visit a couple of hospitals during the early covid panic, and even had to break my aunt out of a medical kidnapping situation in one and they were completely empty. Why do you think it became "don't come in and don't come back behind this heavily guarded security area unless we say so"...?
https://www.reddit.com/r/medicine/comments/mkcicp/megathread_60_sarscov2covid19_month_of_april_2021/
The "medical professionals" at Reddit medicine can't come up with enough content to replace last month's COVID megathread with a new one for May.
Reading the stale old thread should tell you all you need to know. Even that propaganda site has run out of steam...
Hospital census fluctuates constantly. The managers try to keep as many beds full as they can staff--important point there. If there isn't staff they can't have more patients. Patient load is only roughly predictable. Anything that would suddenly increase usage by a small percentage in a hospital with a money-making amount of patients, i.e. close to full, will cause a temporary overload, which the hospital usually deals with by sending the least sick home or to a care facility. By cherrypicking the time of assessment you could make a case that a hospital was overloaded, or not.