The entire medical profession has been subjected to a form of MK Ultra mind control.
It takes between 11 and 13 years to become a doctor. During this period of time, they are forced to work 80 hour weeks.
After they have graduated, it can take another 13 to 25 years to repay their loans.
In for a penny, in for a pound. The system has them by the balls.
Imagine suffering that level of hazing for a decade or two, being in debt for another decade and then throwing it all away to do what is right, guaranteeing you'll be in debt forever.
The system is designed to churn out slaves that will do exactly what their industry tells them to do, promote all the risky pharmaceuticals they're told to promote and turn a blind eye when it becomes obvious people are getting sick and dying.
This is a great point that I had never thought of.
The torture they put the residents through isn't to make them better doctors for the patients. It is for something else.
I actually had pondered why they do that. This is the best theory I've considered so far.
Same problems with lawyers.
Two of my best friends from my childhood; one is a doctor and the other an attorney. Neither of them really speak to me much anymore because of my thought crimes. Oh and both are vaxxed and deny God. This post makes a lot of sense.
Only lawyers are even dumber. Legalese muhahahahaha.
Just wait till you see what is coming.
The issue is that the naked power grab by John Marshall in Marbury v Madison (1804) which set the groundwork for centralized banking, is taught as if it is the greatest thing ever in law school.
Con law. All con law taught by cons. Lawyers are the biggest idiots on the actual US Constitution. They worship the cult of the black robe faggots.
But it ain't paying like it used to.
Always had a problem with that.
They do it because most mistakes and problems with patient care in a hospital can come during shift changes of doctors and when they're handing over care to the next doctor. Issues can be missed, notes aren't complete, new symptoms come that the second doctor doesn't know to look for. So they try to minimize patient handover by having doctors be on a shift for 24 hours or whatever. It's a bit counter intuitive, but the longer shifts end up creating fewer mistakes and better patient care.