Treat Medicine as a Business where the objective is to make a profit. As has been the Western Standard for the last 100-150 years. We unsurprisingly find ourselves sicker and what medications are developed are focused on managing symptoms rather than curing people.
There’s no money long term in cures. There is however vast quantities of money in repeat customers and managing symptoms. That fundamental financial incentive structure doesn’t change. Regardless of how we dress it up. Or the rhetoric we use to justify it.
I have been on metformin for a couple years, no side effects so far. I boost it with berberine and both have lowered my A1C to acceptable levels. I am pretty active for a 69 year old as i live on a farm, no formal exercise or workouts, just farm stuff. I hate taking any medicine but this seems to work for me. Best of luck, frens!
It's true that medications that can be sold to a patient for decades are more profitable than a cure that works.
But if there were true competition in the medical marketplace, there would be money in cures for the companies that could come up with those cures. A startup that had come up with a cure would be happy to grab the business from the major pharmaceutical companies selling ongoing treatments that only help manage a disease.
The medical cartel keeps out the competition by making it basically impossible for small players to get promising cures tested and approved. Individuals and small companies who come up with promising cures can't afford the very long and expensive testing and approval process required to bring their products to market.
They sell their work to a big pharmaceutical company that can afford it. The big pharmaceutical company then buries the promising cure in the back of the file cabinet so it can go on selling its long-term medications.
would be money in cures for the companies that could come up with those cures. A startup that had come up with a cure would be happy to grab the business from the major pharmaceutical companies selling ongoing treatments that only help manage a disease.
True in this hypothetical. However the startup will also rapidly reach the same conclusion as the pharmaceutical giants. There’s more money in managing long term rather than curing. As the simple fact of the matter is. Most people are going into a Business. Whether it be Medical or otherwise with the intention of making piles of money. Any benefit they bring to their fellow man is a side effect rather than the goal behind it. All you’d really be accomplishing is changing the names of the players. Rather than fundamentally altering the rules of the game.
You can’t keep a Business going long term if you eliminate your clientele’s need for your services. The clientele in this case being the patients.
There would presumably be new people developing the disease they'd found a cure for, so there would still be ongoing business there. It's true it probably wouldn't be as lucrative as providing medication you can never stop taking, but it could still be quite profitable.
If the startup went out of the "providing a cure" business, in a free market, another hungrier startup would take its place.
There are quite a few businesses that don't have regular, ongoing customers. Home builders, colleges, funeral homes, boat sellers, etc. often provide a product or service once per customer and move on to selling to other customers.
I am old enough to remember when all the old folks used to swear that eating out of aluminum pots, and drinking out of aluminum cans was gonna cause Alzheimer's Disease. That was long before there was an Alzheimer's epidemic though.
I've heard it being called Type 3 diabetes. So the cure, imo, is to cut way back on the carbs and eat more protein / meat and fat. Highly processed foods probably are a factor as well.
If I knew 10 yrs ago what I know now, I might've been able to help my great aunt and great uncle. My aunt had dementia and my uncle, Alzheimer's. Watching them decline was something I don't ever want to see again.
I don't know if you have any answers for this, but I have a question.
My father has had many strokes over the course of his life, as well as TIAs. He had his first stroke when he was 12 years old. He is partially paralyzed in his right side. However, his mind used to be in decent enough condition.
However, over the past decade, and especially the past five years, his mind has gotten a lot worse, as has his speech. To be fair, some of it is that he also has some hearing loss, so sometimes the reason he doesn't understand something is he didn't hear it well. But his mind has definitely gotten significantly worse.
He hasn't been diagnosed with dementia or Alzheimer's, and I don't know whether his decline is the result of stroke damage or something different. His decline did start after he had a particularly bad stroke nearly a decade ago, but it seems like he's gotten progressively worse since then rather than stabilizing. After his recovery from the stroke, he was not the same as before but he also was not as bad as now.
I think part of it might be due to the fact that he is very sedentary now. Before that bad stroke, even with his partial paralysis, he was able to do things like vegetable gardening and keeping active helped him. But now all he does is watch television all day, and he doesn't even want to sit in a chair. He prefers to stay in his hospital bed because he finds it more comfortable. He has a hard time walking and sometimes falls down. Whenever he gets physical therapy, he starts getting better in terms of walking and standing, but because of our insurance rules, he only ever gets a few visits from a physical therapist, and he always eventually gives up on doing the exercises once there is no therapist coming anymore.
He's on various medications to prevent strokes. Could these medications be causing his brain to decline? And if so, what would be the best solution considering that he needs them to avoid having more strokes?
Alzheimers and dementia cures should be up there with cancer cures. As the lies are exposed, may the cures be made known! RFK Jr and team have a lot of unpacking to do in this tangled web. Praying for all of them.
Treat Medicine as a Business where the objective is to make a profit. As has been the Western Standard for the last 100-150 years. We unsurprisingly find ourselves sicker and what medications are developed are focused on managing symptoms rather than curing people.
There’s no money long term in cures. There is however vast quantities of money in repeat customers and managing symptoms. That fundamental financial incentive structure doesn’t change. Regardless of how we dress it up. Or the rhetoric we use to justify it.
I have been on metformin for a couple years, no side effects so far. I boost it with berberine and both have lowered my A1C to acceptable levels. I am pretty active for a 69 year old as i live on a farm, no formal exercise or workouts, just farm stuff. I hate taking any medicine but this seems to work for me. Best of luck, frens!
I cured my type 2 just by changing my diet. You can too. Best of luck, fren!
Cholesterol may not be the demon we've been l(i)ed to believe - (various posts) - https://greatawakening.win/search?params=cholesterol&community=GreatAwakening
It's true that medications that can be sold to a patient for decades are more profitable than a cure that works.
But if there were true competition in the medical marketplace, there would be money in cures for the companies that could come up with those cures. A startup that had come up with a cure would be happy to grab the business from the major pharmaceutical companies selling ongoing treatments that only help manage a disease.
The medical cartel keeps out the competition by making it basically impossible for small players to get promising cures tested and approved. Individuals and small companies who come up with promising cures can't afford the very long and expensive testing and approval process required to bring their products to market.
They sell their work to a big pharmaceutical company that can afford it. The big pharmaceutical company then buries the promising cure in the back of the file cabinet so it can go on selling its long-term medications.
True in this hypothetical. However the startup will also rapidly reach the same conclusion as the pharmaceutical giants. There’s more money in managing long term rather than curing. As the simple fact of the matter is. Most people are going into a Business. Whether it be Medical or otherwise with the intention of making piles of money. Any benefit they bring to their fellow man is a side effect rather than the goal behind it. All you’d really be accomplishing is changing the names of the players. Rather than fundamentally altering the rules of the game.
You can’t keep a Business going long term if you eliminate your clientele’s need for your services. The clientele in this case being the patients.
There would presumably be new people developing the disease they'd found a cure for, so there would still be ongoing business there. It's true it probably wouldn't be as lucrative as providing medication you can never stop taking, but it could still be quite profitable.
If the startup went out of the "providing a cure" business, in a free market, another hungrier startup would take its place.
There are quite a few businesses that don't have regular, ongoing customers. Home builders, colleges, funeral homes, boat sellers, etc. often provide a product or service once per customer and move on to selling to other customers.
I am old enough to remember when all the old folks used to swear that eating out of aluminum pots, and drinking out of aluminum cans was gonna cause Alzheimer's Disease. That was long before there was an Alzheimer's epidemic though.
My cure for forgetfulness: Take your socks off before entering the shower.
Brilliant!
So what is the alzheimers cure? I clicked that link and it seemed to only reference other links, and I didn't see alzheimers as one of the links.
I've heard it being called Type 3 diabetes. So the cure, imo, is to cut way back on the carbs and eat more protein / meat and fat. Highly processed foods probably are a factor as well.
Type 3 diabetes with fructose being the driver
I was confused too.
Check out Hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT for Alzheimer’s
There's not a lot that HBOT can't help with.
If I knew 10 yrs ago what I know now, I might've been able to help my great aunt and great uncle. My aunt had dementia and my uncle, Alzheimer's. Watching them decline was something I don't ever want to see again.
It's awful, knowing that certain people knew it was all preventable and yet allowed it to happen. And even worse were those who knowingly caused this.
And so many are still brainwashed, too afraid to trust any remedy without a prescription and a copay.
There are something like 24 types of dementia, maybe I forgot the number. Alzheimer's is one of them.
This looks more like Mass Murder.
Welcome back!
🍻
Man it feels like it was only yesterday…
<wistful>
Hey I found your theme song kek
https://youtube.com/watch?v=fieIKaflU8U
Thanks.
Glad you stayed with us.
Had to create new acc just for you :) I left as well but been peaking from my corner.
Seen this today and thought of you.
https://nitter.poast.org/CaptKylePatriot/status/1982620792459604402
This. Worst thing ever thrown my way was only survivable by walking into the pain and asking God to be your guide.
👍
So glad to see you posting again !
Alzheimer is a direct result of cholesterol medication.
I realized it when there was always a small percentage of dementia when we were growing up.
Then years after cholesterol medicine was given like candy Alzheimer exploded.
He's a very smart man.
I don't know if you have any answers for this, but I have a question.
My father has had many strokes over the course of his life, as well as TIAs. He had his first stroke when he was 12 years old. He is partially paralyzed in his right side. However, his mind used to be in decent enough condition.
However, over the past decade, and especially the past five years, his mind has gotten a lot worse, as has his speech. To be fair, some of it is that he also has some hearing loss, so sometimes the reason he doesn't understand something is he didn't hear it well. But his mind has definitely gotten significantly worse.
He hasn't been diagnosed with dementia or Alzheimer's, and I don't know whether his decline is the result of stroke damage or something different. His decline did start after he had a particularly bad stroke nearly a decade ago, but it seems like he's gotten progressively worse since then rather than stabilizing. After his recovery from the stroke, he was not the same as before but he also was not as bad as now.
I think part of it might be due to the fact that he is very sedentary now. Before that bad stroke, even with his partial paralysis, he was able to do things like vegetable gardening and keeping active helped him. But now all he does is watch television all day, and he doesn't even want to sit in a chair. He prefers to stay in his hospital bed because he finds it more comfortable. He has a hard time walking and sometimes falls down. Whenever he gets physical therapy, he starts getting better in terms of walking and standing, but because of our insurance rules, he only ever gets a few visits from a physical therapist, and he always eventually gives up on doing the exercises once there is no therapist coming anymore.
He's on various medications to prevent strokes. Could these medications be causing his brain to decline? And if so, what would be the best solution considering that he needs them to avoid having more strokes?
Thank you for the links to all this information in one place! I pray you feel better!
Alzheimers and dementia cures should be up there with cancer cures. As the lies are exposed, may the cures be made known! RFK Jr and team have a lot of unpacking to do in this tangled web. Praying for all of them.