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.
OP is correct that doctors are enslaved by their debt, especially younger doctors. The debt burden has become so massive that most loans are over 300K+ now when a physician leaves training. And they give no help to broke students and families who try to mitigate these loans in the meantime. The moment a doc is out of training (within 6 months) they are on the hook for massive monthly payments on their loans. The interest alone (before the covid interest pause) is a mortgage payment.
I would take issue with the idea that “doctors don’t mind killing patients with vaccines” because they are in debt. More like they are trapped within a system with no recourse and they have been trained to implicitly trust the system. For the same reason even people on GAW have taken the shot to feed their families… they feel they have no other option but to toe the line.
I will say the indoctrination in training is worse than ever. Doctors are trained to practice evidence-based medicine, meaning you don’t deviate from protocols by a Tylenol. This has prepped and trained many of the medical monsters you see running around today praising the jab and all “information” given to them.
Source: married to an MD and been with him since before medical training, so I’ve seen the good, the bad, and the ugly. I’ve seen him take major grief for bucking the system and standing up for what was right, even in residency. And he is one of those rare, wonderful doctors who cares for each patient individually every day. He does miracle work, honestly, and I’m so proud of him and how he has saved lives through this nightmare.
So remember there are good guys out there fighting this fight and we will need them more than ever when the dust settles.