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Brandy's avatar

This is very thought provoking. Excellent.

The problem in my mind with Kennedy (or anyone else) smashing the system and burning it down, would be that a. he would be fired immediately b. every single death in the US would be labeled by the media (which is controlled by pharma) as being directly caused by Kennedy c. the people, especially all the parents who think he wants children to die slow horrible deaths because he is selfish and ignorant would have their deeply held beliefs confirmed in their mind d. Even more tyrannical medical corruption would be installed and supported by the general population, which might happen anyway by the feel of the current media response.

Anything that is easily undone by Kennedy, can probably be easily re-installed and quickly. This is why I think he is choosing to go after one of the roots of the problem, which is the bastardization of "the science".

I could tell from the beginning of the "pandemic" response that the officials were lying and trying to scare people but I kept thinking that the charade was up every time one of the lies was exposed as, in fact, a lie. In my mind, we were just a week or two away from the gig being up. I was so naive! haha

What really astounded me was that lie after lie was exposed but the public and the medical community was just pivoting to the new narrative of the "new truth". To be honest, this has felt very traumatic for me to witness. My idea of a sane, logical, rational, critical thinking world has evaporated. (And I thought segregation was a thing of the past too but wow.)

While I support what Kennedy is trying to do, (because I support anyone who is trying to change the system),which in my mind is to root out all the conflicts of interest in research, I do not see how it can work. You mention this same doubt in your piece. The actual truth is already kind of out there and people aren't looking for it. I'm observing that most people want to hold on to their beliefs and world view (and perhaps their income) more than they are open to new information.

And I get that. It's traumatic to have your world view challenged like that. Kind of wished I didn't know sometimes.

The story that these scary invisible germs are the enemy of good health and 'if we just battle them hard enough, we will win and live in utopia' is not only so exciting from a fear and triumph standpoint, but it provides endless opportunities for wars and battles and throwing money at all the institutions to fight the scary things. And also, this war on germs and chronic disease with the use of medical interventions often takes away personal responsibility for one's own health, which is significant and it's why I think our current dilemma a two way street. It's not just corruption in the medical field. It's a partnership of sorts with the public who is willing and eager to find the quick fix.

Good health is boring. It's inconvenient. It's hard work. It means sacrificing pleasure for a better tomorrow. It's not sexy like gene therapies, or scary like invisible pathogenic invasions. And it doesn't really generate massive profits for anyone or any industry. No one is getting rich from regenerative farming or truly organic wholesome food. It's very hard work, it costs more to do, and easy to go bankrupt trying to do it. And Oreos taste better.

And that's why I don't think we will ever solve this growing world wide dilemma.

How I came to this conclusion is that I actually have tried to teach people (free) nutrition, cooking, and gardening classes for over ten years. And while people are excited for a short time at the thought of making changes to live a better life, after the excitement wears off (or the fear from a new diagnosis wears off), most people (not all) give in to the convenience foods because it just doesn't remain a priority high enough for them to continually sacrifice for.

And I'm not saying that in a judgmental way. It's just a very real human problem. And the reason it's a problem is because if people don't choose healthy lifestyle choices as a large percentage of the population, they levels of chronic illness are always going to be high. When levels of chronic illness are high in a population, there will always be a large market for industries that "address" the chronic diseases to profit from. There are real emergencies that governments can justifiably throw money at. So if we get rid of the current bad actors, (big pharma, DOD, hospital systems, insurance companies, public health agencies) and people don't actually make significant lifestyle habit changes, someone/thing else will fill the void to treat the ongoing chronic illness epidemic.

Put another way- people don't want the fraudulent medical interventions that lead to iatrogenic deaths. I'm with them on that. Neither do I. But, the problem is, most people still want the "good" magical cures that solve the chronic health problems. They want the "good" injections, the "good" pills, the "good" surgeries. But if the reason a person is chronically ill is because they drink alcohol or soda for instance, or they smoke cigarettes or take other drugs, or they eat processed or non-nutritious food, or they are sedentary, or they have stressful relationships/jobs, etc. their issues can't be solved with anything but making the necessary changes. And from my experience, that seems unlikely to ever happen at scale as a whole society.

One major part of the problem that people don't talk about when it comes to the broken medical/health system is that governments have been inflating (stealing) the money from the middle and lower class and this leaves people to have to work harder, longer hours just to buy basics. We went from a one-income-per-family system to a two-incomes-per-family situation and several generations have lost touch with things like growing their own food, cooking meals from scratch, and so on. And there was the feminist movement that depreciated domesticity. Radical Homemaking: Taking Back our Domesticity is one of the bests books on this subject.

There are other societal problems that contribute to our situation, like food scientists that intentionally make addicting food. The list is long. Suffice it to say that I think the problems are deep and complicated and getting rid of vaccines seems unlikely to happen and sadly, wouldn't solve everything even if it did happen. Of course I hope it does happen but a lot of things need to change to significantly change our health trajectory.

And obviously I failed the assignment. Sincere apologies if you had to read all of my comment. I think about this a lot.

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Gary Flomenhoft, PhD, MPP, ME's avatar

If immanent critique was going to work it would have worked during the Covid tyranny. All the critiques appealed to standard medical practice critiquing it on its own terms:

1. “Do no harm.

2. Free, prior, and informed consent

3. Don’t vaccinate in the middle of a pandemic.

4. Lockdowns, masks, and spacing went against prior practice.

5. Giving experimental injections to pregnant women

6. Using PCR for diagnostics.

Etc.

All these violated standard medical practice and all were thrown out the window.

I showed 2 PhDs the Pfizer 3 month marketing report with 1200 deaths, 40,000 plus injuries, and 9 pages of side effects. It made no impact whatsoever. Most people’s values are very shallow. They are only concerned about their paycheck.

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