So sad. You can't tell me the doctors and nurses had no clue this stuff is dangerous. All it takes is one incident like this and you know something isn't right and the vaccines aren't safe.
I have a business that does advanced medical training to remote hospitals. I can tell ya docs and nurses believe the propaganda and will get hostile if challenged. We have had to be very careful with what we say and stick to the subject. We push the envelope as far as we can but its not much.
I agree they should know. The programming is strong but they are supposed to be above that.
I don't know what it is with "educated" people. I work with a bunch of engineers. Some of them want a simple flow chart for making decisions for all situations, no matter how stupid it is (i.e. "standards"). The best analogy I can come up with is, it's green, that makes it a tractor, red is a car, if it has a hitch it's a truck. If I translated a conversation, it would sound like this:
I need a hitch on the car.
If you need a hitch, you get a truck.
So I can't put a hitch on a car?
Nope, only on a truck.
But I don't need a truck. The car is perfect and all I want to do is tow is a little trailer.
You need a truck. Cars don't come with hitches.
Ok. Can I make the truck green to fit in with my other equipment?
Nope. Then you need a Tractor.
What?
I'm working on the holdouts - guys, put your engineer caps on and think about this. I'm at the point I don't care if that offends anyone. Our jobs are to provide solutions, but we have people who care more about their sacred cows (standards).
I exaggerate a little. But having dealt with complex and challenging problems for much of my career (which resulted in several patents), I get frustrated when smart people provide poor solutions because of their personal preferences.
So sad. You can't tell me the doctors and nurses had no clue this stuff is dangerous. All it takes is one incident like this and you know something isn't right and the vaccines aren't safe.
I have a business that does advanced medical training to remote hospitals. I can tell ya docs and nurses believe the propaganda and will get hostile if challenged. We have had to be very careful with what we say and stick to the subject. We push the envelope as far as we can but its not much.
I agree they should know. The programming is strong but they are supposed to be above that.
I don't know what it is with "educated" people. I work with a bunch of engineers. Some of them want a simple flow chart for making decisions for all situations, no matter how stupid it is (i.e. "standards"). The best analogy I can come up with is, it's green, that makes it a tractor, red is a car, if it has a hitch it's a truck. If I translated a conversation, it would sound like this:
I need a hitch on the car.
If you need a hitch, you get a truck.
So I can't put a hitch on a car?
Nope, only on a truck.
But I don't need a truck. The car is perfect and all I want to do is tow is a little trailer.
You need a truck. Cars don't come with hitches.
Ok. Can I make the truck green to fit in with my other equipment?
Nope. Then you need a Tractor.
What?
I'm working on the holdouts - guys, put your engineer caps on and think about this. I'm at the point I don't care if that offends anyone. Our jobs are to provide solutions, but we have people who care more about their sacred cows (standards).
Wow sounds a lot like what we get. Like anyone is surprised.
I exaggerate a little. But having dealt with complex and challenging problems for much of my career (which resulted in several patents), I get frustrated when smart people provide poor solutions because of their personal preferences.
I would call that linear thinking. There's no deviation.