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Meddling Kid's avatar

Shamed and shunned is not enough. Fauci caused millions of premature deaths because of his belief that genetic experimentation was for a greater good. It was not, it was for power. And he should pay for that with his life as a mass murderer.

Those participating in any such form of genetic alteration to force public behavior change are guilty of no less. Protein is needed in our diet and the substitutes are wholly insufficient. People will starve, the intended genetic effect will go sideways and have horrible unintended effects.

Outlaw it now. Disappear Gates and Soros and all of the other maniacal oligarchs before it’s too late.

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Patricia's avatar

Gates is the “threat to society”! He is very evil, & I feel should be investigated.

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Isaiah Antares's avatar

He deserved the death penalty for Internet Explorer 6 alone. How many web developer's heads exploded because of that horrible browser?

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Tamenund's avatar

🤣

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JollyLittlePerson's avatar

I know people with Alpha Gal syndrome. It makes them very ill. They also mostly went through months of suffering before they got a diagnosis.

Forcing it on people is insane and evil.

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Gerald Hanweck's avatar

Infecting someone with disease without their consent is inherently immoral.

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Micheal Nash, Ph. D.'s avatar

And should be illegal.

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Dianne Stoess's avatar

Should be, but it isn't. Neither is killing people with toxic injections.

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D D's avatar

Like the smallpox infected blankets?

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Dianne Stoess's avatar

Same here. I have it and almost died from one anaphylactic attack before I was diagnosed.

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Aegean's avatar

I have to say I didn't see this coming. Never in a million years would I have expected family and friends across the world to vilify me and others who declined to take an experimental injection. Never did I think that my PhD and MD colleagues would almost universally jump on the Pfizer Moderna bandwagon and post Facebook profile pics bragging that they got their vaccine. Bravo to the drug companies who brainwashed and/or coerced the majority into sacrificing any semblance of informed consent or critical thinking. They must have the key to psychological manipulation. When I questioned the Pfizer clinical trial result, my PhD faculty statistician colleague assured me the data were sound and demonstrated vaccine efficacy. She traveled 75 miles to get vaccinated early (I declined to accompany her). I was also dismayed and blindsided by the behavior of most democrats to censor and mandate. This has been an eye-opening and highly distressing five years. The points in your essay remind me of all we have gone through and are still confronting.

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Big E's avatar

Sadly, none of this is new — just new to us, as it is to every generation that faces the same issues.

A Midwestern Doctor has done a great job documenting “The Forgotten Side of Medicine.” You can start with AMD’s article index and search the page for the word “history” to see just how pervasive and long-standing these medical hoaxes have been plaguing us: https://www.midwesterndoctor.com/p/an-index-of-the-forgotten-side-of?utm_source=post-banner&utm_medium=web&utm_campaign=posts-open-in-app&triedRedirect=true

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Marianne Mccaffrey's avatar

I was fired from a Primary Care practice owned by NYU Langone for refusing the Covid injection. I had Covid antibodies! I lost all respect for Big Business medicine and their puppets who follow along (the doctors).

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Gerald Hanweck's avatar

A major flaw in Crutchfield's and Hereth's arguments is that they start with an untrue premise: eating meat is immoral. First, the vast majority (studies show 80+%) of the world eats meat and does not consider it immoral. Which raises the second flaw: who is to judge what is immoral? Various activities throughout history viewed as moral today have been viewed as immoral in the past, and vice versa.

Here's a thought experiment to highlight Crutchfield's and Hereth's flawed reasoning. Suppose a certain Eurasian country declares homosexuality to be immoral. The government covertly (for the greater good and sake of humanity) engineers a virus, spread by mosquitoes, that makes gay sex unpalatable to the participants. The virus ultimately spreads to people who do not share that moral viewpoint, in nations where such relations are legal, moral, and indeed celebrated.

If you believe in individual rights, then imposing any disease or disorder on someone without their consent is immoral. Making one violently ill when they eat meat takes away their rights to life and liberty, and could very well lead to malnourishment, starvation and death.

Crutchfield and Hereth reach a contradiction because they start with an untrue premise.

P.S. I thought "A Clockwork Orange" put a lot of this nonsensical thinking to bed a long time ago. "I was cured alright!" I guess not.

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Micheal Nash, Ph. D.'s avatar

I have hinted around this before but what I find disturbing about medicine today is the disconnect between patient and physician that seems to coincide with the increased reliance on specialists for family care that once was handled quite competently by the family G.P.

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Micheal Nash, Ph. D.'s avatar

Let me expand (had honey-dos and meow-dos earlier). The family GP. I saw not only knew my medical history (he had me from crib on, never saw a pediatrician) but also my parent's and my sister's. He knew our medical and social history and that knowledge guided his diagnosis and proscribed treatment. The pediatrician seeing a kid today for his assigned 15 minutes has little to none of that information that could have impact on both diagnosis and treatment

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Dr. Robert W. Malone's avatar

I completely agree. I have worked closely with an Italian non-profit organization that has a program/school to de-specialize medical specialists and to train them in GP-like skills with a functional/integrative edge. It has been very successful and popular. Many physicians know that what is happening is wrong - they just don't know how to fix a broken system.

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Micheal Nash, Ph. D.'s avatar

Interesting!! A big fix might start in US med school where general practice now relegated to family medicine and is at the bottom of preferred "specialties".

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DrV's avatar

I whole heartedly agree with you. Medicine is more of an “industry “ these days where doctors have little autonomy and are in many cases slaves to administrators and handcuffed to EMRs that are ponderous but sophisticated billing programs. The physical exam in many instances is becoming a lost art. And when a treatment approach is decided on the physician often has to spend (waste) 20-30 minutes on the phone to get a prior authorization (PA) for insurance to cover that treatment.

As one of my colleagues likes to say, the doctor -patient relationship is very crowded now. It includes administrators, insurance PA agents, the government, professional organizations, pharmacy benefit managers and opinionated medical boards. It’s not the intimate one on one relationship of old.

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Jean's avatar

Yes! Current setup

Primary care -

refers you to experts

In case of substantial issue - call 991

Hospitalists/experts take over

Today's HHS is pursuing vast med record access to bridge patient hx pieces gap

??? Empathy and advocacy along with patient trust lost in the evolution.

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Thomas A Braun RPh's avatar

Medical Derangement abounds in medicine. AAP should be dissolved . Years ago their national headquarters were in elk Grove Village, Illinois because they wanted to neutralize the work of Dr. Eisenstein who delivered 15,000 babies and never injected them with vaccines and few acquired autism. He believed in birth’s at home.

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Brandy's avatar

Medicine no longer 'cures' anything. It masks systems and creates new problems. It amazes me that anyone thinks they have the 'right' to manipulate nature that affects the entire global population, land, air, or water: geo engineering, forced medical treatments, injecting food sources with synthetic additives, etc. With all of this is 'organic' really organic? There isn't any soil, air, or water that has not been compromised. I am in my 60's and can't begin to imagine what my children and grandchildren will have left of this world.

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Thomas A Braun RPh's avatar

Agree! That is why we spend about $5 trillion a year on medical care in the USA when it should be at about half that amount or less so we have two or $3 trillion that will be taken out of the pockets of the money people if RFK fixes the system.! So they will do anything in their power to stop his progress!

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Big E's avatar
Aug 4Edited

Every parent should fire their AAP Physician. We offer a list of Independent Medical Resources, when you can look for alternatives, here: https://eolson47.substack.com/p/resources (search for Independent Medical Resources in the page; sorry, the book mark share isn’t working well on iPAD)

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Thomas A Braun RPh's avatar

Not enough to go around! Sad

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Someone else's avatar

Another important part of the argument is that the AAP has never provided data to support the position that opting out of the vaccines undermines public health. In fact, such data doesn’t exist. Thus, not only is their position unethical, it’s also based on a false -or at least unsubstantiated - premise. (They refuse to do the studies, so they clearly know that the data will not substantiate their claims.)

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Someone else's avatar

Actually, their unsubstantiated premise makes their position arrogant, which is an indisputable indicator that position is unethical.

The unvaccinated are not dying in large numbers from infectious diseases. If vaccinations actually provide protection for the infectious diseases, then there is no public health threat from the unvaccinated.

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Carolyn Singer's avatar

The AAP showed its true colors to many of us during Covid. There are a couple of alternative organizations that appear to be on the right path. One is the American College of Pediatrics (ACPeds), which is against vaccine mandates, and against “gender affirming care”, based on my understanding. If I had young children today, I would be very cautious about following the advice of an AAP member.

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James Goodrich's avatar

Hoping an injection will work is not science. This premature “vaccine” and the premature mandates which forced people like my wife to participate in their experiment, she wanted no part of, is evil at its best. Who is Fauci or this medical establishment to arrogantly force anyone to take an injection? They knew the adverse reactions although they tried to hide the side them as best they could. It would be like Nancy Pelosi and her push for Obamacare, we have to take the shot to find out what’s in the shot. Makes total sense doesn’t it? People should be put in prison and this should never again happen.

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Travis Ogle's avatar

The morality of taking the jab or refusing to take It, is not based upon its efficacy. They might argue that it is very helpful and would prevent future disease so you should be compelled to take it. That might be true and it might be false, however, that’s not the crux of the issue.

The issue is one of the human sovereignty that everyone of us possess. As sovereign individuals, we alone have the right to decide what we allow to be placed inside our bodies. This is one of those inconvenient truths for drug producers, but it is an attribute of being human that must not be abridged.

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James Goodrich's avatar

I agree with you Travis! They didn’t argue with my wife that it was safe and effective, they said take it or you’re fired. It had nothing to do with efficacy more about tyranny.

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Les Power's avatar

Sad mate, SAD. Is you Lady OK as a result?

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James Goodrich's avatar

Luckily she seems ok. The hospital she works st mandated a 4th shot, I think the only major hospital in Boston to do this and she got a religious exemption. They knew the problems with the shots one of the surgeons I know had a stroke right after the 2nd shot!

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Patricia's avatar

I also agree with you. My Daughter & Son-in-Law decided to Opt Out of any vaccines this year. My oldest Grand daughter did have the first set of vaccines in 2019, & 2020 I believe (the “required infant vaccines). After researching the pros/cons for continuing vaccines for my grand daughters, they will no longer get them! The fact parents are now making a stand against vaccines, & a good, & sound moral decision to stop putting chemicals into their children, baffles me that here in Colorado, parents have to go through mounds of paperwork to Opt Out , & yet, agencies such as the CDC, & CPS, are notified of parent’s decisions! Parents have their rights, & some states continue to track the decisions made by parents!

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PutativePathogen's avatar

Any medical mandate is assault.

Prosecute it as assault.

Full Stop.

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James Schwartz's avatar

I don’t have much hope for community medicine. What I mean by that is any “group” or “organization” that doctors become affiliated with. Once that happens doctors lose their singular focus. It is very difficult to find any doctor not affiliated with one. I know independent medical alliance is doing all it can to change what is out there right now and it’s forging ahead which is fantastic. RFK jr. has the fight of his life attempting to change the behemoth of medicine in the US. Godspeed

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Barbara Charis's avatar

The AAP's Greed has overcome any ethics the group may have had. It receives millions yearly from Moderna, Pfizer and Sanofi to promote 'vaxxes.' In addition, pediatricians can make up to $1M yearly from having a high percentage of their practice vaccinated. It is really disturbing to think that pediatricians who supposedly are in this profession, because they care for children are harming them immensely...in order to make higher incomes.

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Thomas Wedge's avatar

How do you get in touch with Crutchfield? I know hundreds of cattle producers who gladly brand him with a red hot W.

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53rd Chapter's avatar

Giving a new meaning to, 'reach out and touch someone...'

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Philip Stone's avatar

The medical and scientific fields have completely lost any ethical boundaries. The people in charge are literally insane.

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Micheal Nash, Ph. D.'s avatar

Comes of moving science out of academia and into biomedicine. When an undergrad at the U. of Okla. the med school disinclined pre-meds from overloading on science courses telling them they would get all the science they needed in med school (which was not much). Back then physicians did not think of themselves or act as scientists....they were doctors...period.

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Philip Stone's avatar

Unfortunately the medical profession was co-opted by the pharmaceutical industry a hundred years ago and has progressively become less about curing disease and more about profiting from treating it.

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American Citizen's avatar

They’re actually demented… they have a mental illness.

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53rd Chapter's avatar

The 'will to power' is alive and well. No wonder, since Nietzsche is the leading light in so-called higher education today. And we are constantly faced with the 'reason' for something, what will play in Peoria, and the real reason, what we, the stupid public, won't be able to understand. Donald Trump and RFK, Jr. have turned the 'experts' on their heads, and they don't like it. And won't like it. We haven't even begun to see the vitriol that will be coming against these two brave warriors. Let us be as wise as serpents as we endeavor to discern the multitude of coming lies from the truth. Joseph Goebbels redux.

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LoverOfHills's avatar

Don't be fooled. Trump is NOT on the same page as RFKjr. His pride is what stands in the way. He's let us all down. He could have a fireside chat, reveal the mistakes, stop the covid jabs today - if he doesn't do this soon, it's all over for his precious Legacy. Tariffs, borders.. nothing compares to atrocities done to people by the hands of Evils, via Medical Harms. By neglecting to Stop it, he's put himself in the group of Evils - I hate admitting this, as I was a 110% supporter of his, since 2016.

Sen. Ron Johnson, just confirmed this again too, in a interview after his Vaccine Injury panel in June - he disappointedly said, Trump will NEVER change on believing his covid jabs were/are a miracle.

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53rd Chapter's avatar

I do agree that pride is his Achilles' heel. And yet, he is the one who appointed RFK, Jr. I pray for wisdom and discernment for President Trump, as well as knowledge and understanding. But most of all, for a bent knee of humility before the Creator on a daily basis, and that he receives regular, Godly counsel, privately, from a man unafraid to speak the truth to one who might not want to hear it.

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LoverOfHills's avatar

My suggestion to Pres. Trump is to read, CS Lewis's books:

*book - The Weight of Glory, chapter, "The Inner Ring", pg 154, "Of all passions, the passion for the Inner Ring is most skillful in making a man who is not yet a very bad man, do very bad things."

*book, - The Four Loves, particularly chapter 6 but I won't name it, as the entire book, is a sorting out of our faith. pg 113, "They are taller when they bow."

Weight of Glory and other address - Lewis compiled several of his addresses he gave during and after WWII.

Four Loves - based on his 1958 radio talks.

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53rd Chapter's avatar

Looking at my CS Lewis shelf, next to Tozer, I don't find those nor do I remember reading them. Thank you! Are your hills in Texas?

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LoverOfHills's avatar

PA, but my favs are in CO, I lived there for 10yrs prior to covid. Hills to climb, ride, ski down, ... but The biggie for us all, is THE "hill", the Mountains of Corruptions we have been challenged with these past 5 yrs. All hills call to us to ACT, are there to sharpen us.

I'm new to these 2 CSLewis books too, btw, I'm no intellectual. Tozer, I will find too, thanks.

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53rd Chapter's avatar

My freshman year in college was in Ft. Collins. My roommate, who had been skiing since he was 3, took me up to the expert slope at Breckenridge and said, “Adios.” My first time on skis. No lessons. Was lucky to get off the lift. The only way I could stop was to fall down. But that was a mountain…

Texas Hill Country is beautiful. Porfirio Salinas captured its essence beyond measure in a myriad of examples. We have one of his prints on the wall with a wooden gate, the semblance of a road, live oaks and bluebonnets with a limestone outcropping. Perfectly done.

I had meant to comment on your earlier quote, "They are taller when they bow." For some reason, that reminds me of President Lincoln. I had heard, but never was able to confirm, that he was planning to be baptized on that Easter Sunday, I can’t read the Gettysburg Address without tears. Same problem with John 9, “Whether He is a sinner or not I do not know. One thing I know: that though I was blind, now I see.”

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Travis Ogle's avatar

What an excellent prayer! Thank you for your Godly wisdom. I believe LoverOfHills is also correct in wanting the injuries and death to stop. God listens to our prayers and if He chooses to do so, President Trump’s mind will be more closely aligned with the truth.

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53rd Chapter's avatar

Thank you, Travis. Yes, LOH is a truthteller. But the ball is in the President's court; the Lord will not force Himself. Just look at the contrast in the OT kings of Israel and Judah. Those with their hearts in the wrong place were allowed, in some cases for a long time, to go their own way. Sometimes not too long at all, and permanently removed. And many of the good ones died too young due to foolish decisions that might have seemed inconsequential at the time.

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American Citizen's avatar

Well stated. The battle is just beginning. We are on the right side of history and truth continues its slow tough march forward.

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Garry Blankenship's avatar

It is clear the AAP has gone off the rails. The absurdity of mandatory injections alone demonstrates their moral and ethical failure. I wish AAP leadership an mRNA injection a week only because more of such a wonderful injection can only be better. Gender affirming care, prior to reaching adulthood, is a colossal mistake. I have known a number of Tom Boys who grew up to be beautiful women. Allowing tattoos on our young is a very similar comparison. The bombardment of hormones, simultaneous with growing and maturing, is already more than challenging without entertaining the idea one was born into the wrong body. Once adult age is reached we can cut and ink to our hearts content, but not before.

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Garry Blankenship's avatar

I was recently told there is a big financial bonus for Pediatricians, if they achieve a minimum of 80% vaccination of our kids. Could that be construed as a conflict of interest ?

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