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Reason: None provided.

Well you're an honorable grandmother to have done so, despite what you now know. That's a major gift in any day and age.

Unfortunately, roughly 90% of allopathic medicine is incorrect. 90%!!! The only reason one should ever visit a "doctor" is under emergency conditions. Nobody is better at life-saving measures than an allopathic physician. They've spent trillions on doing this well.

But they're literally wrong about virtually everything else. Germs, antibiotics, blood pressure lowering medications, cancers, heart disease, auto-immune diseases, degenerative diseases, allergies, chronic conditions, etc. They've been taught a litany of deceptions and falsehoods that boggle the mind, and they just can't see their way out of it. Certainly not during a protracted discussion. You don't stand a chance. 6-8 years of allopathic indoctrination adds up to a sturdy brick wall that doesn't come down quickly.

In over 2 years, I've been able to win over 1 ER physician and I have one retired internal medicine physician on the fence as we speak. I rescued the ER physician from the leftist agenda she was brainwashed into which enabled her to develop a high degree of respect for my opinions.

I sent her down about a dozen "conspiracy theory" rabbit holes over the course of a year. When that was done, she asked me what I thought of allopathic medicine. I told her it would make her sick to consider my opinion. After about a month of doing her own research, she finally said "okay, I see there are quite a few problems, tell me more". I was able to advise her on one patient that she cared very much about that she helped during an emergency visit. She quietly shared my advice with that patient, who made a surprisingly swift recovery from his condition and was out of the hospital weeks ahead of expectations.

Anyway, I feel your pain. I know at least 3 dozen licensed physicians who can't hear a word I'm saying. I've tried every soft approach I can think of, but none have worked. The hard approach has garnered better results. I now tell them they've been PROFOUNDLY MISEDUCATED by unseen forces they know not. This has prompted two instances of basically "well okay smarty, what would you do about a patient with XXXXX disease". I've given my diagnosis for two different patients. I don't know what either physician has done with that advice. I'm still waiting on feedback.

Anyway, I've found a confrontation works best in my case. I realize that's not something a loving grandmother should do with her grand daughter. I just thought I'd share what seems to be working for me. It's not enough that they are told they might be wrong in my estimation. The only way to win them over is you need to tell them what is right/correct/accurate or no progress can be made. In your case, "viruses don't exist" (which is true), would be something that could shock her out of her medical delusions. Nothing less will do.

I highly recommend the book "Medical Nemesis" by Robert Mendehlson if you could get her to read a book. It's a harsh takedown of allopathic medicine written in clear, cogent and undeniable style.

BTW, what type of medicine is she "PRACTICING"?

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Well you're an honorable grandmother to have done so, despite what you now know. That's a major gift in any day and age.

Unfortunately, roughly 90% of allopathic medicine is incorrect. 90%!!! The only reason one should ever visit a "doctor" is under emergency conditions. Nobody is better at life-saving measures than an allopathic physician. They've spent trillions on doing this well.

But they're literally wrong about virtually everything else. Germs, antibiotics, blood pressure lowering medications, cancers, heart disease, auto-immune diseases, degenerative diseases, allergies, chronic conditions, etc. They've been taught a litany of deceptions and falsehoods that boggle the mind, and they just can't see their way out of it. Certainly not during a protracted discussion. You don't stand a chance. 6-8 years of allopathic indoctrination adds up to a sturdy brick wall that doesn't come down quickly.

In over 2 years, I've been able to win over 1 ER physician and I have one retired internal medicine physician on the fence as we speak. I rescued the ER physician from the leftist agenda she was brainwashed into which enabled her to develop a high degree of respect for my opinions.

I sent her down about a dozen "conspiracy theory" rabbit holes over the course of a year. When that was done, she asked me what I thought of allopathic medicine. I told her it would make her sick to consider my opinion. After about a month of doing her own research, she finally said "okay, I see there are quite a few problems, tell me more". I was able to advise her on one patient that she cared very much about that she helped during an emergency visit. She quietly shared my advice with that patient, who made a surprisingly swift recovery from his condition and was out of the hospital weeks ahead of expectations.

Anyway, I feel your pain. I know at least 3 dozen licensed physicians who can't hear a word I'm saying. I've tried every soft approach I can think of, but none have worked. The hard approach has garnered better results. I now tell them they've been PROFOUNDLY MISEDUCATED by unseen forces they know not. This has prompted two instances of basically "well okay smarty, what would you do about a patient with XXXXX disease". I've given my diagnosis for two different patients. I don't know what either physician has done with that advice. I'm still waiting on feedback.

Anyway, I've found a confrontation works best in my case. I realize that's not something a loving grandmother should do with her grand daughter. I just thought I'd share what seems to be working for me. It's not enough that they are told they might be wrong in my estimation. The only way to win them over is you need to tell them what is right/correct/accurate or no progress can be made.

I highly recommend the book "Medical Nemesis" by Robert Mendehlson if you could get her to read a book. It's a harsh takedown of allopathic medicine written in clear, cogent and undeniable style.

BTW, what type of medicine is she "PRACTICING"?

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: Original

Well you're an honorable grandmother to have done so, despite what you now know. That's a major gift in any day and age.

Unfortunately, roughly 90% of allopathic medicine is incorrect. 90%!!! The only reason one should ever visit a "doctor" is under emergency conditions. Nobody is better at life-saving measures than an allopathic physician. They've spent trillions on doing this well.

But they're literally wrong about virtually everything else. Germs, antibiotics, blood pressure lowering medications, cancers, heart disease, auto-immune diseases, degenerative diseases, allergies, chronic conditions, etc. They've been taught a litany of deceptions and falsehoods that boggle the mind, and they just can't see their way out of it. Certainly not during a protracted discussion. You don't stand a chance. 6-8 years of allopathic indoctrination adds up to a sturdy brick wall that doesn't come down quickly.

In over 2 years, I've been able to win over 1 ER physician and I have one retired intern on the fence as we speak. I rescued the ER physician from the leftist agenda she was brainwashed into which enabled her to develop a high degree of respect for my opinions.

I sent her down about a dozen "conspiracy theory" rabbit holes over the course of a year. When that was done, she asked me what I thought of allopathic medicine. I told her it would make her sick to consider my opinion. After about a month of doing her own research, she finally said "okay, I see there are quite a few problems, tell me more". I was able to advise her on one patient that she cared very much about that she helped during an emergency visit. She quietly shared my advice with that patient, who made a surprisingly swift recovery from his condition and was out of the hospital weeks ahead of expectations.

Anyway, I feel your pain. I know at least 3 dozen licensed physicians who can't hear a word I'm saying. I've tried every soft approach I can think of, but none have worked. The hard approach has garnered better results. I now tell them they've been PROFOUNDLY MISEDUCATED by unseen forces they know not. This has prompted two instances of basically "well okay smarty, what would you do about a patient with XXXXX disease". I've given my diagnosis for two different patients. I don't know what either physician has done with that advice. I'm still waiting on feedback.

Anyway, I've found a confrontation works best in my case. I realize that's not something a loving grandmother should do with her grand daughter. I just thought I'd share what seems to be working for me. It's not enough that they are told they might be wrong in my estimation. The only way to win them over is you need to tell them what is right/correct/accurate or no progress can be made.

I highly recommend the book "Medical Nemesis" by Robert Mendehlson if you could get her to read a book. It's a harsh takedown of allopathic medicine written in clear, cogent and undeniable style.

BTW, what type of medicine is she "PRACTICING"?

2 years ago
1 score