With family and friends being prevented from being with their loved ones, because of 'covid protocol'.....who knows what's truly taking place.
Many of the deaths occurring in hospitals seem to be written off as a 'covid death', and it seems to me that no more is questioned after the cause of death is 'covid'. Seems like without loved ones being able to check on those who are in the hospital, what the doctors says caused them to die is not pushed or questioned any further once the covid is mentioned.
This is NOT good. They could very well be making erroneous mistakes and instead of making those mistakes fixable or dealt with accordingly, they are under the 'safe protection' called the covid-guise.
Stay away at all cost. Especially if you're unvaccined. I get this odd feeling that some hospitals are trying to either punish or use those who are not vaccinated, who come into the hospitals, as examples.
I could be way off........but my gut tells me different. Anyways, be safe, vigilant, and watch out for one another. Above ALL, Trust in God First and Foremost.
Good advice, and trust your gut. In addition to the points you mentioned and all the paper fraud going on, the top-down order in these hospitals is to NOT treat covid sick patients and instead send them home until they have trouble breathing. No advice, no guidance, just come back when you run low on oxygen. Most hospital staff are sheep and will just obey orders. Then, when the patient gets admitted, they "treat" them with the ineffective drug Remdesivir and then put them on a ventilator, which just ends up killing them.
This next point is really important for those that are high risk: Dr. Peter McCullough says that the ONLY way to fight covid is early treatment. This was echoed in a tweet by Dr. Pierre Kory saying that ivermectin is not as effective in later treatment against the Delta variant. You can't expect to tough it out for 2 weeks and show up to the hospital and expect them to heal you. Even if your symptoms are mild at first (symptoms are usually mild at first), things can go south quickly if this is not addressed. Doing the Zelenko protocol early on is important, and if it starts to get worse, you need harder anti-inflammatory drugs like budesonide. If a person is older than 65, Dr. McCullough recommends getting monoclonal antibodies at your local Emergency Center.
Edit: Make sure to get monoclonal antibodies in the "pre-admission" phase, meaning, DO NOT get admitted to the hospital as a patient. Once you get into the system, the doctors are NO longer allowed to give you Regeneron (monoclonal antibodies).
Which clip is this info from Dr McCullough on monoclonal antibodies? Do you just walk into an ER and ask for them? Sorry, I'm not familiar with any of this. Thank you for sharing this.
You can find the clip on his podcast here: https://www.americaoutloud.com/vaccinated-or-not-acute-covid-19-in-high-risk-patients-demands-early-treatment/ He talks about treatment by age group and goes into monoclonal antibodies starting at around 14:00, but the first half of the show is essential in my opinion. Where to get Regeneron near you: https://covid.infusioncenter.org/ I think it's Free, pre-purchased by the govt., but you may need to pay for the administering of the infusion.
Thank you!