I’ve been a lawyer for almost 40 years and have often agreed with the criticisms of my profession but Geez the medical profession has imploded itself for $$$ the last 3+ years
I’ve been a lawyer for almost 40 years and have often agreed with the criticisms of my profession but Geez the medical profession has imploded itself for $$$ the last 3+ years
I could but what would be of interest to you? As to lawyers, the corruption I’m talking about (and have experienced) are things like ambulance chasers, forum shopping, high contingent fees, ineptitude, lobbying legislatures. But where to begin on the medical side: no resistance to lockdowns, fake PCR, masking, does the virus even exist, dying with vs of covid, no autopsies, no cheap early treatments, no resistance to mandates...then on top of it all, taking $ from the Feds to do these protocols. My last trip to the doctor was in Aug ‘21 for regular check-up. They wanted me vaxxed. By then, I had plenty of info that the jabs were clotshots but they were still pushing them. I shortly thereafter learned that the whole statin drug regime was a ruse. Like I say, it’s a big topic. Not to mention that there’s no malpractice liability because of the PREP act and DoD involement.
We needed the lawyers, too, Kemper. They didn't step up. There have been some precious, brave voices coming from the doctor corps right from the start, but unfortunately almost nothing from the legal ranks. What happened? I think that the money imperative is more entrenched there than even among the health professionals. We really needed legal people of conscience and moral fibre to help us. They should have been everywhere, chiming in, but so far, not much. Not just as paid professionals, but speaking out as individuals with personal conviction. Jeff Childers is one of the few - and his is a combination of both religious and legal conviction. Aaron Siri with Dr Kheriaty's case is another. A few other cases, which of course get relegated to the fringe by the media. But not much to have given people hope or sustained them emotionally during that terrible time. And it's ongoing. The liberty-crushing juggernaut is clearly not done yet.
I work at a university and the legal fraternity there have been uniformly silent. It is both terrifying and reprehensible. Disgusting in the extreme.
Not to denigrate you personally, and clearly you are critical of it yourself, but I think that your profession has failed, abysmally.
I forgot the brave work of Reiner Fuellmich. So there's that, too. Here in South Africa, we have a great human rights advocate, Sabelo Sibanda, who was very outspoken during the lockdowns and mandates. He gave much succour to those of us who were fighting it.
I’ve been a physician for 33 years and I would have to agree. Which is why I’m get5ing out of this racket (which is what it’s become). If I can get around this no-compete clause in my contract, I’m starting my own fee-for-service, cash only (will barter for dark chocolate 😁) practice.
It might be, but I’m not a big fan. I’m too old-school for that. IMO, with the exception of a mental health visit, you should really be in the same room as your patient in order to do a good physical exam.
I’ve been a lawyer for almost 40 years and have often agreed with the criticisms of my profession but Geez the medical profession has imploded itself for $$$ the last 3+ years
Would you care to write up a brief article elaborating on your above?
I could but what would be of interest to you? As to lawyers, the corruption I’m talking about (and have experienced) are things like ambulance chasers, forum shopping, high contingent fees, ineptitude, lobbying legislatures. But where to begin on the medical side: no resistance to lockdowns, fake PCR, masking, does the virus even exist, dying with vs of covid, no autopsies, no cheap early treatments, no resistance to mandates...then on top of it all, taking $ from the Feds to do these protocols. My last trip to the doctor was in Aug ‘21 for regular check-up. They wanted me vaxxed. By then, I had plenty of info that the jabs were clotshots but they were still pushing them. I shortly thereafter learned that the whole statin drug regime was a ruse. Like I say, it’s a big topic. Not to mention that there’s no malpractice liability because of the PREP act and DoD involement.
We needed the lawyers, too, Kemper. They didn't step up. There have been some precious, brave voices coming from the doctor corps right from the start, but unfortunately almost nothing from the legal ranks. What happened? I think that the money imperative is more entrenched there than even among the health professionals. We really needed legal people of conscience and moral fibre to help us. They should have been everywhere, chiming in, but so far, not much. Not just as paid professionals, but speaking out as individuals with personal conviction. Jeff Childers is one of the few - and his is a combination of both religious and legal conviction. Aaron Siri with Dr Kheriaty's case is another. A few other cases, which of course get relegated to the fringe by the media. But not much to have given people hope or sustained them emotionally during that terrible time. And it's ongoing. The liberty-crushing juggernaut is clearly not done yet.
I work at a university and the legal fraternity there have been uniformly silent. It is both terrifying and reprehensible. Disgusting in the extreme.
Not to denigrate you personally, and clearly you are critical of it yourself, but I think that your profession has failed, abysmally.
Agreed
I've just seen this, so that's encouraging:
https://jamesroguski.substack.com/p/international-lawyers-versus-the
I forgot the brave work of Reiner Fuellmich. So there's that, too. Here in South Africa, we have a great human rights advocate, Sabelo Sibanda, who was very outspoken during the lockdowns and mandates. He gave much succour to those of us who were fighting it.
Tom Renz and Reiner Fuellmich are notable as attorneys who have stepped up to try and stop the genocide being committed upon us.
Ah, yes! Tom Renz is great, as well. Uncompromising and committed.
I’ve been a physician for 33 years and I would have to agree. Which is why I’m get5ing out of this racket (which is what it’s become). If I can get around this no-compete clause in my contract, I’m starting my own fee-for-service, cash only (will barter for dark chocolate 😁) practice.
Would “telehealth” be an option...no compete clauses have to be reasonable in time and area, at least here
It might be, but I’m not a big fan. I’m too old-school for that. IMO, with the exception of a mental health visit, you should really be in the same room as your patient in order to do a good physical exam.