At first it felt difficult to refute, because that personal relationship with someone is hard to overcome. And I get it, we don't want to believe that people who, in some cases, have literally had our lives in their hands, could be compromised.
But I can't get over the 2020 Flu Data and the PCR testing debacle. The 2020 flu data suggests that EVERY hospital, doctor's office, pediatric office, urgent care, etc. in the COUNTRY was compromised. Even if their intentions are good, they've operated, issued diagnoses, and made decisions with BAD information and bad tools.
Maybe they really shouldn’t have.
Medical errors happen:
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28186008/
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27143499/
C = MD in medical school.
And I think the way to pass and excel in school is to do what authorities say without question. There is no class where you are responsible for someone’s long term health. I’m sure there’s a nutrition checkbox somewhere along the line that gets checked, and then they progress to surgery and prescriptions.
Maybe they should be called “short-term symptom treaters”.
You got it. Symptoms over cause. Cures cut down on repeat business. All by design.