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Reason: None provided.

Thanks for this post. You articulated the issues very well and I am sure it was an eye opener for some of the frens lurking here. We have new people every day finding us and these red pills are not always easy to swallow but are necessary to take.

I had been in clinical practice for a couple of decades after starting out in research. Everything you stated in your OP is dead on the money - pun intended. I got out of research because I just couldn't take the politics of it all any longer. Most research is a profit driven smoke screen to lend false validity to some already predetermined outcome. The noble pursuit of finding answers to help better mankind is the idealistic rationale given for public consumption while the true nature and purpose of what is occurring in labs around the world is far from the altruistic image in the public's mind. The jockeying for funding by these labs is sickening to watch as they whore themselves and dance for the money.

Since Covid hit I've been sitting on the sidelines. Funny that this last year I finally paid off my loans - go figure. Just could not take the insanity of it all any more and I refuse to be part of the killing fields. For years I focused on nutrition and only used prescription drugs as a stop gap until lifestyle and nutritional changes could take effect. I was privileged in that I had a small patient base of individuals that lived off grid so to speak. The children were mostly home schooled. I saw first hand children that were actually healthy because they shunned vaxxines and did not take pharmaceuticals. There was not one child in this cohort that had neurodevelopmental disorders like autism, food allergies, or autoimmune disease. There was a sharp contrast between these children, many of them now young adults, with those raised according to the more widely accepted model of what is considered "healthy." Even the adults in this group were in far better health than the average person one may see as a patient. You are right in that none of the truly healthy ways of living are taught to us in our so called institutions of higher learning. If anything, these ways are marginalized and demeaned. We have to spend the time to reeducate ourselves in the truth rather than the death cult model indoctrination promoted in medical school. Healthy people do not make profit.

There had been a small collection of practitioners where I live that still maintained private practices and colored outside of the lines. But, attrition has seen those numbers dwindle. Private practice is a huge financial undertaking that is hard to justify on top of an already crushing burden just getting licensed. I saw the first huge change come with the passage of the ACA. With this digital takeover, many of my colleagues decided then that it was time to go and they retired. Most of the newer practices coming on the scene to take their place were corporate medical entities. Over the last decade or so, one by one those of us that lean more alternative have been disappearing. The landscape has completely changed from when I first started decades ago. I really don't recognize it any longer and I certainly don't fit. I keep telling myself that when this beast they have created finally collapses under its own weight that there will be room for a new way of delivering health care where people like us can actually help and not harm. Let us pray that day be sooner rather than later.

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Thanks for this post. You articulated the issues very well and I am sure it was an eye opener for some of the frens lurking here. We have new people every day finding us and these red pills are not always easy to swallow but are necessary to take.

I had been in clinical practice for a couple of decades after starting out in research. Everything you stated in your OP is dead on the money - pun intended. I got out of research because I just couldn't take the politics of it all any longer. Most research is a profit driven smoke screen to lend false validity to some already predetermined outcome. The noble pursuit of finding answers to help better mankind is the idealistic rationale given for public consumption while the true nature and purpose of what is occurring in labs around the world is far from the altruistic image in the public's mind. The jockeying for funding by these labs is sickening to watch as they whore themselves and dance for the money.

Since Covid hit I've been sitting on the sidelines. Funny that this last year I finally paid off my loans - go figure. Just could not take the insanity of it all any more and I refuse to be part of the killing fields. For years I focused on nutrition and only used prescription drugs as a stop gap until lifestyle and nutritional changes could take effect. I was privileged in that I had a small patient base of individuals that lived off grid so to speak. The children were mostly home schooled. I saw first hand children that were actually healthy because they shunned vaxxines and did not take pharmaceuticals. There was not one child in this cohort that had neurodevelopmental disorders like autism, food allergies, or autoimmune disease. There was a sharp contrast between these children, many of them now young adults, with those raised according to the more widely accepted model of what is considered "healthy." Even the adults in this group were in far better health than the average person one may see as a patient. You are right in that none of the truly healthy ways of living are taught to us in our so called institutions of higher learning. If anything, these ways are marginalized and demeaned. We have to spend the time to reeducate ourselves in the truth rather than the death cult model indoctrination promoted in medical school. Healthy people do not make profit.

There had been a small collection of practitioners where I live that still maintained private practices and colored outside of the lines. But, attrition has seen those numbers dwindle. Private practice is a huge financial undertaking that is hard to justify on top of an already crushing burden just getting licensed. I saw the first huge change come with the passage of the ACA. With this digital takeover, many of my colleagues decided then that it was time to go and they retired. Most of the newer practices coming on the scene to take their place were corporate medical entities. Over the last decade or so, one by one those of us that lean more alternative have been disappearing.

The landscape has completely changed from when I first started decades ago. I really don't recognize it any longer and I certainly don't fit. I keep telling myself that when this beast they have created finally collapses under its own weight that there will be room for a new way of delivering health care where people like us can actually help and not harm. Let us pray that day be sooner rather than later.

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Thanks for this post. You articulated the issues very well and I am sure it was an eye opener for some of the frens lurking here. We have new people every day finding us and these red pills are not always easy to swallow but are necessary to take.

I had been in clinical practice for a couple of decades after starting out in research. Everything you stated in your OP is dead on the money - pun intended. I got out of research because I just couldn't take the politics of it all any longer. Most research is a profit driven smoke screen to lend false validity to some already predetermined outcome. The noble pursuit of finding answers to help better mankind is the idealistic rationale given for public consumption while the true nature and purpose of what is occurring in labs around the world is far from the altruistic image in the public's mind. The jockeying for funding by these labs is sickening to watch as they whore themselves and dance for the money.

Since Covid hit I've been sitting on the sidelines. Funny that this last year I finally paid off my loans - go figure. Just could not take the insanity of it all any more and I refuse to be part of the killing fields. For years I focused on nutrition and only used prescription drugs as a stop gap until lifestyle and nutritional changes could take effect. I was privileged in that I had a small patient base of individuals that lived off grid so to speak. The children were mostly home schooled. I saw first hand children that were actually healthy because they shunned vaxxines and did not take pharmaceuticals. There was not one child in this cohort that had neurodevelopmental disorders like autism, food allergies, or autoimmune disease. There was a sharp contrast between these children, many of them now young adults, with those raised according to the more widely accepted model of what is considered "healthy." Even the adults in this group were in far better health than the average person one may see as a patient.

You are right in that none of the truly healthy ways of living are taught to us in our so called institutions of higher learning. If anything, these ways are marginalized and demeaned. We have to spend the time to reeducate ourselves in the truth rather than the death cult model indoctrination promoted in medical school. Healthy people do not make profit. There had been a small collection of practitioners where I live that still maintained private practices and colored outside of the lines. But, attrition has seen those numbers dwindle. Private practice is a huge financial undertaking that is hard to justify on top of an already crushing burden just getting licensed. I saw the first huge change come with the passage of the ACA. With this digital takeover, many of my colleagues decided then that it was time to go and they retired. Most of the newer practices coming on the scene to take their place were corporate medical entities. Over the last decade or so, one by one those of us that lean more alternative have been disappearing.

The landscape has completely changed from when I first started decades ago. I really don't recognize it any longer and I certainly don't fit. I keep telling myself that when this beast they have created finally collapses under its own weight that there will be room for a new way of delivering health care where people like us can actually help and not harm. Let us pray that day be sooner rather than later.

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Thanks for this post. You articulated the issues very well and I am sure it was an eye opener for some of the frens lurking here. We have new people every day finding us and these red pills are not always easy to swallow but are necessary to take.

I had been in clinical practice for a couple of decades after starting out in research. Everything you stated in your OP is dead on the money - pun intended. I got out of research because I just couldn't take the politics of it all any longer. Most research is a profit driven smoke screen to lend false validity to some already predetermined outcome. The noble pursuit of finding answers to help better mankind is the idealistic rationale given for public consumption while the true nature and purpose of what is occurring in labs around the world is far from the altruistic image in the public's mind. The jockeying for funding by these labs is sickening to watch as they whore themselves and dance for the money.

Since Covid hit I've been sitting on the sidelines. Funny that this last year I finally paid off my loans - go figure. Just could not take the insanity of it all any more and I refuse to be part of the killing fields. For years I focused on nutrition and only used prescription drugs as a stop gap until lifestyle and nutritional changes could take effect. I was privileged in that I had a small patient base of individuals that lived off grid so to speak. The children were mostly home schooled. I saw first hand children that were actually healthy because they shunned vaxxines and did not take pharmaceuticals. There was not one child in this cohort that had neurodevelopmental disorders like autism, food allergies, or autoimmune disease. There was a sharp contrast between these children, many of them now young adults, with those raised according to the more widely accepted model of what is considered "healthy." Even the adults in this group were in far better health than the average person one may see as a patient.

You are right in that none of the truly healthy ways of living are taught to us in our so called institutions of higher learning. If anything, these ways are marginalized and demeaned. We have to spend the time to reeducate ourselves in the truth rather than the death cult model promoted in medical school. Healthy people do not make profit. There had been a small collection of practitioners where I live that still maintained private practices and colored outside of the lines. But, attrition has seen those numbers dwindle. Private practice is a huge financial undertaking that is hard to justify on top of an already crushing burden just getting licensed. I saw the first huge change come with the passage of the ACA. With this digital takeover, many of my colleagues decided then that it was time to go and they retired. Most of the newer practices coming on the scene to take their place were corporate medical entities. Over the last decade or so, one by one those of us that lean more alternative have been disappearing.

The landscape has completely changed from when I first started decades ago. I really don't recognize it any longer and I certainly don't fit. I keep telling myself that when this beast they have created finally collapses under its own weight that there will be room for a new way of delivering health care where people like us can actually help and not harm. Let us pray that day be sooner rather than later.

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Thanks for this post. You articulated the issues very well and I am sure it was an eye opener for some of the frens lurking here. We have new people every day finding us and these red pills are not always easy to swallow but are necessary to take.

I had been in clinical practice for a couple of decades after starting out in research. Everything you stated in your OP is dead on the money - pun intended. I got out of research because I just couldn't take the politics of it all any longer. Most research is a profit driven smoke screen to lend false validity to some already predetermined outcome. The noble pursuit of finding answers to help better mankind is the idealistic rationale given for public consumption while the true nature and purpose of what is occurring in labs around the world is far from the altruistic image in the public's mind. The jockeying for funding by these labs is sickening to watch as they whore themselves and dance for the money.

Since Covid hit I've been sitting on the sidelines. Funny that this last year I finally paid off my loans - go figure. Just could not take the insanity of it all any more and I refuse to be part of the killing fields. For years I focused on nutrition and only used prescription drugs as a stop gap until lifestyle and nutritional changes could take effect. I was privileged in that I had a small patient base of individuals that lived off grid so to speak. The children were mostly home schooled. I saw first hand children that were actually healthy because they shunned vaxxines and did not take pharmaceuticals. There was not one child in this cohort that had neurodevelopmental disorders like autism, food allergies, or autoimmune disease. There was a sharp contrast between these children, many of them now young adults, with those raised according to the more widely accepted model of what is considered "healthy." Even the adults in this group were in far better health than the average person one may see as a patient.

You are right in that none of the truly healthy ways of living are taught to us in our so called institutions of higher learning. If anything, these ways are marginalized and demeaned. Healthy people do not make profit. There had been a small collection of practitioners where I live that still maintained private practices and colored outside of the lines. But, attrition has seen those numbers dwindle. Private practice is a huge financial undertaking that is hard to justify on top of an already crushing burden just getting licensed. I saw the first huge change come with the passage of the ACA. With this digital takeover, many of my colleagues decided then that it was time to go and they retired. Most of the newer practices coming on the scene to take their place were corporate medical entities. Over the last decade or so, one by one those of us that lean more alternative have been disappearing.

The landscape has completely changed from when I first started decades ago. I really don't recognize it any longer and I certainly don't fit. I keep telling myself that when this beast they have created finally collapses under its own weight that there will be room for a new way of delivering health care where people like us can actually help and not harm. Let us pray that day be sooner rather than later.

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Thanks for this post. You articulated the issues very well and I am sure it was an eye opener for some of the frens lurking here. We have new people every day finding us and these red pills are not always easy to swallow but are necessary to take.

I had been in clinical practice for a couple of decades after starting out in research. Everything you stated in your OP is dead on the money - pun intended. I got out of research because I just couldn't take the politics of it all any longer. Most research is a profit driven smoke screen to lend false validity to some already predetermined outcome. The noble pursuit of finding answers to help better mankind is the idealistic rationale given for public consumption while the true nature and purpose of what is occurring in labs around the world is far from the altruistic image in the public's mind. The jockeying for funding by these labs is sickening to watch as they whore themselves and dance for the money.

Since Covid hit I've been sitting on the sidelines. Funny that this last year I finally paid off my loans - go figure. Just could not take the insanity of it all any more and I refuse to be part of the killing fields. For years I focused on nutrition and only used prescription drugs as a stop gap until lifestyle and nutritional changes could take effect. I was privileged in that I had a small patient base of individuals that lived off grid so to speak. The children were mostly home schooled. I saw first hand children that were actually healthy because they shunned vaxxines and did not take pharmaceuticals. There was not one child in this cohort that had neurodevelopmental disorders like autism, food allergies, or autoimmune disease. There was a sharp contrast between these children, many of them now young adults, with those raised according to the more widely accepted model of what is considered "healthy." Even the adults in this group were in far better health than the average person one may see as a patient.

You are right in that none of the truly healthy ways of living are taught to us in our so called institutions of higher learning. If anything, these ways are marginalized and demeaned. Healthy people do not make profit. There had been a small collection of practitioners where I live that still maintained private practices and colored outside of the lines. But, attrition has seen those numbers dwindle. Private practice is a huge financial undertaking that is hard to justify on top of an already crushing burden just getting licensed. I saw the first huge change come with the passage of the ACA. With this digital takeover, many of my colleagues decided then that it was time to go and they retired. Most of the newer practices coming on the scene to take their place were corporate medical entities.

The landscape has completely changed from when I first started decades ago. I really don't recognize it any longer and I certainly don't fit. I keep telling myself that when this beast they have created finally collapses under its own weight that there will be room for a new way of delivering health care where people like us can actually help and not harm. Let us pray that day be sooner rather than later.

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: Original

Thanks for this post. You articulated the issues very well and I am sure it was an eye opener for some of the frens lurking here. We have new people every day finding us and these red pills are not always easy to swallow but are necessary to take.

I had been in clinical practice for a couple of decades after starting out in research. Everything you stated in your OP is dead on the money - pun intended. I got out of research because I just couldn't take the politics of it all any longer. Most research is a profit driven smoke screen to lend false validity to some already predetermined outcome. The noble pursuit of finding answers to help better mankind is the idealistic rationale given for public consumption while the true nature and purpose of what is occurring in labs around the world is far from the altruistic image in the public's mind. The jockeying for funding by these labs is sickening to watch as they whore themselves and dance for the money.

Since Covid hit I've been sitting on the sidelines. Funny that this last year I finally paid off my loans - go figure. Just could not take the insanity of it all any more and I refuse to be part of the killing fields. For years I focused on nutrition and only used prescription drugs as a stop gap until lifestyle and nutritional changes could take effect. I was privileged in that I had a small patient base of individuals that lived off grid so to speak. The children were mostly home schooled. I saw first hand children that were actually healthy because they shunned vaxxines and did not take pharmaceuticals. There was not one child in this cohort that had neurodevelopmental disorders like autism, food allergies, or autoimmune disease. There was a sharp contrast between these children, many of them now young adults, with those raised according to the more widely accepted model of what is considered "healthy." Even the adults in this group were in far better health than the average person one may see as a patient.

You are right in that none of the truly healthy ways of living are taught to us in our so called institutions of higher learning. If anything these ways are marginalized and demeaned. Healthy people do not make profit. There had been a small collection of practitioners where I live that still maintained private practices and colored outside of the lines. But, attrition has seen those numbers dwindle. Private practice is a huge financial undertaking that is hard to justify on top of an already crushing burden just getting licensed. I saw the first huge change come with the passage of the ACA. With this digital takeover, many of my colleagues decided then that it was time to go and they retired. Most of the newer practices coming on the scene to take their place were corporate medical entities.

The landscape has completely changed from when I first started decades ago. I really don't recognize it any longer and I certainly don't fit. I keep telling myself that when this beast they have created finally collapses under its own weight that there will be room for a new way of delivering health care where people like us can actually help and not harm. Let us pray that day be sooner rather than later.

2 years ago
1 score