11 Comments

I’m terrified of going to hospital now last time i was in hospital having urgent surgery was Feb 2020 they hated the fact i was on zero medication especially big pharma

im a believer in natural immunity and natural medicine so i haven’t been near a hospital doctor or specialist since and not going to now

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I agree willow I never go to the DR’s, and I work in the health care system, also was a patient in 2019 never been on medication, very rare these days. The past 4-5 years I have become even more aware of what’s happening. Natural immunity is and was always superior to vaccines/ injections that are toxic the more you inject the quicker you weaken/ kill your immune system. Whole foods , water , sleep, happiness & minerals have always strengthened our immune systems, w need to educate the younger generations of how people lived 100+ years ago and the natural remedies and food / herbs they used to treat ailments and sickness.

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Yes i feel lucky i think god saved me because if i had gone in the year after they would have told me i had covid when i didn’t and murder me for money with remdesivir/veklury and a ventilator just like the Nuremberg trials i was just doing my job and following orders is zero excuse for murder did you hear about all the fake nurses who got illegal diplomas funny that was right around the same time they were using their killer remdesivir protocols

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And theyre still tracking all these illegal nurses down who are still practicing

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No money paid to the practitioner until the patient reports satisfactory results from the treatment.

Money penalties if patient reports worsening condition.

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The modern medical system has indeed become a target for criticism, particularly when addressing the concerns of those who turn to complementary and alternative medicine (CAM). It is often said that up to 80% of patients visiting general practitioners present with psychological or psychosomatic issues, yet doctors are afforded a mere five to ten minutes per consultation. This approach, resembling a conveyor belt system, reflects what some describe as the "McDonaldization" of general practice. The focus on efficiency and profit over patient care has become a pervasive influence in countries like Australia and likely the United Kingdom as well.

Medical practice today leans heavily on algorithmic diagnosis, prioritizing standardized protocols over individualized care and failing to account for the "big picture" of a patient’s overall health. Medical students receive only a few hours of instruction in nutritional medicine, leaving them ill-equipped to address the foundational factors contributing to health and disease, such as oxidation, inflammation, or the processes that initiate and perpetuate illness. While doctors meticulously study pathology files, they rarely delve into the basic causes, triggers, mediators, or antecedents that underlie chronic and complex conditions.

The medical profession, under the heavy hand of government regulation and oversight by medical boards, often operates in a climate of fear. This, compounded by widespread issues such as workplace abuse in hospitals, erodes the foundation of care and compassion that should be central to medicine. Doctors are increasingly detached from the interconnectedness of mind, body, and spirit—key elements in understanding health and healing in its truest sense.

Moreover, the system’s reliance on vaccines, antibiotics, and pharmaceuticals for nearly every conceivable issue underscores a fundamental problem. Modern medicine has degenerated into a mechanical process driven by the pharmaceutical industry, prioritizing profits over patients. It fails to embrace a holistic view of health, sidelining approaches that address the root causes of disease and promote genuine healing. These gaps in mainstream medicine provide fertile ground for the appeal of alternative and complementary therapies, which aim to fill the void left by an overly industrialized and depersonalized healthcare system.

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The conveyor belt approach to medicine will only be gravely amplified when put into the "hands" of AI diagnostics:

> https://bra.in/3pDPXn

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The rise of artificial intelligence (AI) in medicine is rapidly transforming the field, with conventional practices increasingly becoming secondary to the interests of Big Pharma. AI’s ability to diagnose conditions with precision—often outperforming doctors relying solely on classical diagnostic methods—is undeniably reshaping healthcare. However, this trend disregards the art of medicine: the intuition, wisdom, and deeper understanding of root causes that only human practitioners can provide.

Pharmaceutical-driven medicine, deeply entrenched in conventional healthcare, stands to benefit most from this shift. AI can efficiently pair diagnoses with pharmaceutical treatments, even when such treatments carry significant side effects. This synergy between AI and Big Pharma creates a system where the human element in medicine—the nuanced care, empathy, and holistic understanding—is marginalized in favor of algorithmic efficiency.

More troubling is the broader ambition of AI to infiltrate the human brain itself. Proponents of transhumanism, like Elon Musk, advocate for the integration of non-invasive or invasive neural interfaces that would connect human brains directly to AI systems. This integration promises to enhance intelligence, decision-making, and comprehension by granting individuals access to vast computational power. However, such augmentation risks the very essence of human understanding.

True comprehension is an organic process rooted in the interplay of consciousness, intuition, and the body’s innate wisdom. AI-enhanced cognition bypasses these essential human faculties, effectively hijacking the brain. While some see transhumanism as an evolutionary leap, it represents a profound departure from humanity as we know it. By merging human and machine, we risk creating beings that are neither fully human nor entirely robotic—cyborgs caught between biology and technology.

This trajectory heralds a troubling future where the human race, in its pursuit of intelligence and efficiency, may lose touch with the deeper aspects of existence. A species reduced to a blend of algorithms and flesh would mark not progress, but a tragic derailment of human evolution.

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‘Medicine’, ‘Science’, ‘Media’. Why should we trust any of these institutions……..it’s all about money.

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Hippocrates, the Father of Medicine 2500 years ago knew more about health than the majority of doctors know today. Health Care is about providing information that will keep people well. Medical Care today is about providing prescription drugs, treatments, operations that will provide repeat customers for the Medical Industry. If people followed Hippocrates advice, they would rarely need any other help. Hippocrates promoted the truth...put the right natural unprocessed foods in your mouth...anything else will make you sick! the last thing he would have told the doctors he taught or his patients...would be to put a toxic drug in the mouth. The other part of the equation...follow a healthy lifestyle...getting enough sunshine, fresh air, rest, exercise and positive thinking. This is what Hippocrates would have prescribed...and people experienced CURES!

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Well said! I totally agree.

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