I was never particularly against inoculations, but as I matured and learned, I stopped trusting big pharma more than a decade ago. Stopped going to any kind of physician except my dentist 8 years ago. Like you, if I’m bleeding out or unconscious from a head injury, go ahead and transport me to the hospital but beyond that, no. So it wasn’t a large leap of faith to get to be HIGHLY against the cabal injecting anything into me or my family ever again. So I guess for me it was pharmaceutical hesitancy then injection hesitancy.
The newest medications are not tested for relative effectiveness compared to older off-patent drugs. Here's a credible sounding podcast on this:
https://www.econtalk.org/angell-on-big-pharma/
Check out the $4 formulary at Wal-Mart next time you want to fill a prescription.
hesitancy
No. That is cuckoldry. I'm not hesitant at all. Not even remotely. It is a straight nope from me.
Think about this for a moment -
5 Years ago you'd get the flu, and start running a fever. What would you do? Most people would take Tylenol to stop the fever so they stop feeling sick.
But the flu didn't give you the fever. Your immune system upped your body's temperature in order to kill the flu virus. Your immune system gave you the fever, not the flu.
By stopping the fever, you're preventing your immune system from making you better, which results in you staying sick.
Another example - If you get food poisoning, you end up puking and have diarrhoea. Which is the body trying to flush the bad stuff out of the stomach and guts. Taking Pepto Bismol stops the body from flushing the bad stuff out, and keeps it all inside the stomach and guts.
When you feel sick, the vast VAST majority of the time, the symptoms you feel are caused by your immune system fighting something. And most of the time when you take things to stop the symptoms, you're taking things that stop your immune system from doing its job.
5 years ago if you asked, How does the flu kill people? (scientificamerican.com) (First article to pop up, it's from 2017) - The answer was that the flu doesn't kill, it isn't capable of killing anyone. If someone dies it's because their own immune system kills them. - It's the same thing with SARS type Corona Viruses. The virus burrows into your throat cells, replicates, and bursts out. That's it. That's all it does. It doesn't give you a fever, it doesn't make you sick, it can't kill you.
Right now, people breath in some dust or pollen, get a stuffed up nose, and instantly start taking medication that attacks their immune system. Which causes their immune system to fight back and results in all types of symptoms.
Yes there are medications that help our immune systems and make us better. But if you stop and think about it, many of the medications people take fight against their immune system, and keep them sick by preventing their immune system from making them better.
Oy vey! You sound very antisemitic. Why do you hate jews? /s
I used to take antihistamines against my allergies, but now I just let it happen with snots and all. If I suppress my inflammatory response, then I won't be able to feel other things attacking my body.
Allergies are a result of an overactive immune system, children and youths who had significant allergies died in their youth in every era before the Victorian period. The unnecessary inflammation is very bad for your long term health daily antihistamine use can be too. You need to remove the allergens from your environment first then use the antihistamines as needed.
Allergies are largely a product of over 300 years of escape from natural selection just like the need for eyeglasses.
I stay far away. I don’t even take aspirin or any over the counter stuff.
When I realized that toxicity of a single Advil was putting more toll on the body than the illegal psychedelics that have basically cured my depression, I no longer wanted anything to do with pharmaceutical drugs. And this was long before this vaccine fiasco from covid.
A lot of unnecessary human suffering has also stemmed from binging on alcohol or prescribed medications. But all I ever got from the drugs that the DEA deemed to have no medical benefits seemed to have benefitted me beyond my imaginations. Go figure.
It is our assumption that doctors know what they're doing. It's fucking bullshit a lot of the times. The best they can do is make reasonable assumptions based on their speciality. I personally have gone to several dentists and got several different diagnoses, but only one of them actually pointed out the root problem. They're no better than used car salesman who is trying to hustle you to cough up money.
YOU know your body the best. It's imperative that you listen to your body and do less of what gives you more pain. You've lived with your body your whole life. The doctor has only seen you for the 20 minutes it takes to diagnose you.
And last of all, I'm not hesitant about anything. THINK before you regurgitate the media speak like a sheep. I'm just flat out refusing to put anything inside my body unless it has been thoroughly tested for their effects.
It is our assumption that doctors know what they're doing.
Most doctors are trained technicians. Assuming doctors understand what they are doing is reasonable and the result of the system protecting itself. You are correct: doctors only do what they are told, they don't actually think. I've had conversations with many. As a result, I seldom take their advice anymore.
Consider the whole medical field considers curing patients is bad business (startpage.com). Not to mention the Rockefeller medical foundation (startpage.com) connection. We're fucked.
My dad always said, if you go to the doctor they can and will find something wrong with you. It supports them and their buddies at pharma!! I stay away, unless dying also!! I don't trust them!
I have a White athletic doctor. I go for physicals once per year. His advice for everything else is drink more water, exercise more, stop eating crap.
He tries to talk every patient he has out of taking medication whenever possible. I love that man.
Those kind of doctors are far and few in between. He is a keeper!!
A doctor asked me for my list of meds, so I rattled off two. He was surprised. He asked, "that's all?" I replied, should I be on more? I was curious what other meds I'm supposed to be on. In fact, I think the meds I'm on may not even be necessary. The level of high blood pressure keeps being reduced, presumably so big pharma can sell more high blood pressure pills. Great industry. I can just imagine board meetings. "Sales are stagnant." "No problem, Jack, donate to The Big Guy and have them recommend a lower blood pressure. We can increase sales another 30%."
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