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(post is archived)

[–] 2 pts

Seems about 5 min of music before the guy starts talking. I skipped forward. It looked like he had some valid material on the enclosed video. If he simply played the video without stopping to talk it would have been ok. It looks like he is taking an hour to show a five minute video. Horrid waste of time.

Thanks for checking it out and chiming in.

I believe it was a podcast and he started it ~5min mark. It's the only place left to find the video unfortunately as it has been deleted from Youtube. I do agree it was drawn out, but thought the premise of compelled medicine was something worth discussion. Also, I found it sad that the guy seemed so in despair that he felt he had to call an ambulance to get someone to talk to regarding his mothers issue.

What did you think of those issues?

[–] 1 pt (edited )

I'd think if they deleted the original video, they will likely delete the derivatives, ergo, this should be archived, if one can archive a video.

You mean the guy in the inner video from he needed to call.about his mother? I skipped past the initial pause, and was curious, hut gave up watching after about 10 min of watching (about 15 min timestamp I think) when the commentator was chatting instead of playing the video.

There is a compelling argument for forcing medication on people and/or quarantining in certain circumstances. However, and slightly more generally, there are (at least) problems with the medical industry in general:

1) It is the nature of people in authority, of any form, to abuse the authority, like the Stanford Prison Experiment.

2) There is a fantastic amount not money in medical industries, which leads to corruption.

3) There is a strong dogma society that science is incorruptible and that medical professionals are noble. This prevents perception of corruption and other problems.

4) regulatory capture.

a. For a compound to become a prescription medication, the compound must be FDA approved. Herbals and many misc and potentially life-saving compounds such as BHT are never studied for FDA approval, as that money could not be recouped because they are already commonly available and would not be profitable as drugs.

b. The expense of the approval process is very limiting.

5) MSM is too controlled to report on any of the above.

[–] 0 pt

OP U WANNA GIT WERID WIT MEH?