This sound like a stupid as fuck idea. Surgery is extremely long, boring, obviously gory and exceedingly meaningless to laymen. Should they be recorded to catch all the nonWhites who fuck up and kill people, yes. Should they be broadcast to the general public, no that sounds jewish as fuck.
Give patients the option to be subject to the public. Probably a lot of paperwork there, but privacy and dignity of patients is of utmost importance.
Until the viewing is (((accidentally))) switched on for someone who said no.
This would be an excellent educational opportunity...
No it wouldn't. There are already videos of surgeries available to view. Not every single surgery, type of surgery or method, but far more than you've tried to search for and viewed due to your alleged curious want for education. You're lying about the want for this but you don't go watch surgeries that are available now.
... I myself received pictures of my guts from the inside after having an organ removed. That's not too far off at all from what I'm describing, I don't think.
Except, you know, everyone can get your surgery sensitive biomedical information etc. Rather than you the patient. You do know as you alluded to early in your post how protected this information is, you do not seem to understand why. The nature of wanting to know other people's business in such specific detail is malicious - jewishly malicious - at best.
I recognize there's many ways the idea can go wrong...especially the privacy aspect, as that gets violated by the medical community to a ridiculous extent already. And I know people are sick and twisted, two seconds on the internet can pull up endless hours of gore, violence, and malicious intent.
I'm not going to pretend this was a good idea...just contemplating possibilities. I have an overwhelming disgust for our current medical system. It's expensive, it's restrictive of patients, and the people from the top down are misguided and unaccountable at best. So the initial idea was enticing in the way that there could be some accountability, and people who need care wouldn't be left in a detrimental amount of debt or at risk of losing their homes.
That being said, thanks for ripping my post to pieces lol. Knew I could count on you ;)
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