Very brave nurse and veteran standing up! Hospital protocol kills!!! #COVID19 #CrimesAgainsHumanity #accountability (make sure to watch all 4 parts)
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A woman, Erin Olszewski, speaks in support of the Collier Health Freedom Bill of Rights Ordinance and the health freedom resolution. She emphasizes the importance of her background as a mom, registered nurse, author, and army combat veteran. Erin expresses her commitment to protecting her children, patients, and the public. She mentions her book, which has been censored and not made available in bookstores. Erin highlights her oath to her country and patients, stating that it never expires.
Speaker 0: Need to listen very closely to this next clip that I pay that I play. This, this woman is very courageous, and she is putting everything on the line because she took an oath not only as a combat veteran, but as a nurse as well. And she is living up to that oath. And there's a lot of you out there in the medical industry and a lot of you out there in the military that you are not living up to your oath. This is what a real soldier looks like.
This is what a real nurse looks like that takes an oath and stands by it. And for those of you that aren't, maybe you need to follow her lead. Homer Jennings. Aaron has been ceded additional time from James Rosenberger. James, are you here?
She will have a total of 6 minutes.
Speaker 1: Good morning, commissioners. Thank you guys so much for having me here and also listening to all of us. It's very unheard of these days. My name is Erin Olszewski and I'm here in support of the Collier Health Freedom Bill of Rights Ordinance and the she's a health freedom resolution. A little bit about my background and why it's important that you understand how imperative it is What I'm about to share with you is in your decision today.
First, I'm a mom. I have 3 boys. I'm here to protect them, But I'm also here to protect and defend your children and grandchildren as well. I'm a registered nurse. I'm here to stand up for my patients And honor those who have died unnecessarily.
I'm an author of a book that is no longer allowed on bookshelves, which I'm going to give each of you a copy to read because of censorship. She They won't even put it on bookshelves so people won't find out what's going on. And also, I'm an army combat veteran. I served over a year in Iraq, 2003 and 2004, Commissioner Locastro, thank you for your service, and Commissioner Cowell, thank you for your service as well. My oath never expires, not only to my country, but also to my patients.
Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker shares their experience working in the COVID ICU at Elmhurst Hospital in Queens, New York. They emphasize that the situation was not limited to New York, but was happening nationwide, including in Florida. They describe witnessing a disturbing assembly line-like process where patients were treated poorly and family members were banned. The speaker criticizes politicians and government interference in the doctor-patient relationship. They mention financial incentives for admitting patients and the neglectful protocols followed. They recount seeing patients with severe bed sores and feces dried on their backs. The speaker reveals that full code patients were not being resuscitated and were ultimately placed in body bags.
Speaker 0: From Florida in the Tampa Bay area to New York, to work in the COVID ICU. I actually was placed at the epicenter of the epicenter, which is Elmhurst Hospital in Queens, New York. I just want to make this very clear that this was not just solely happening in New York, all around our great nation including Florida and more specifically right here in your county. I know this because upon my return after getting kicked out of New York trying to advocate for my patients, I began advocating for patients all around Florida. The same situation in every single hospital.
What I witnessed in New York can only be described as a turnkey style assembly line to a body bag. There's no liability. There was gag orders on all of our staff, including myself. We were threatened to be sent home if we said anything. They banned family members, which are the patient's advocates, which should never happen ever again.
They banned treatments. I always say that politicians make lousy doctors. A politician. Our government should never get in between the doctor patient relationship ever again. If they wanted to do that, they can go to medical school and become a nurse.
There's financial incentives put on admissions of patients, so $13,000 to admit patients. Why not? We were actually ordered down from sending any of the patients to the comfort ship, which was wide open. The Javits Center was empty. This Good Samaritan tents were empty.
They admitted them for $13,000 a person. The protocols consisted of sedation, paralyzing agents, and then essentially events. Some of the patients' rooms that I went into, there's feces dried up their backs for 2, 3 weeks. They had bed sores where you could see their bones. They were coding full code patients.
Being a full code means that you want all resuscitation done, all measures done. CPR, you want to be saved. They were not doing that and they were not doing it behind locked hospital doors and nobody knew except for the people that were in there. They ended up in a in a body bag. Eventually we just had garbage bags, and then they were tossed into the
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The speaker shares a disturbing experience where patients died and their bodies were stacked in freezer trucks, but not from COVID. Autopsies were banned and there were price hikes for ventilators and deaths. Feeling unable to speak up, the speaker decided to go undercover and recorded conversations for four weeks. They play a clip of a doctor who didn't properly care for a patient, wrote her death certificate before she died, and lied to her family. The speaker believes it's important for the public to know about these unethical practices. They question why the hospital staff didn't act differently if family or ethics committees were present. The speaker asks for opinions on what the right thing to do in that situation would be.
Speaker 0: Every single one of my patients outside of 1 patient died and I had to stack their bodies in these freezer trucks but they were not dying of COVID. And on top of that, they ended up banning autopsies. So there was a $39,000 price hike for the ventilators and sometimes $10,000 for each death. It's absolutely disgusting. I tried to say something and I was unable to.
I was threatened with being sent home, so I decided that I was going to go undercover. Got some spy glasses, got some audio gear, and I started recording for the next 4 weeks. I'd like to share a little clip if I could because I think that it's very important that you actually here with your own ears. What is actually, what happened, what continues to happen to this very day in the hospital? This is a seasoned medical doctor working at the New York City hospital.
He was on a travel assignment. He was making approximately $75,000 a week. Nurses were getting $10,000 a week, so this was harsh money in my opinion. He ended up calling all the nurses together after he was essentially busted for not coating a full coated patient, actually wrote her death certificate before she even died and then called the family and lied to them. But I'd like to just have this on record because I think it's very important that the public know that this happened and this was going on.
If there was family in the room. If the ethics committees was in there and Jacob was standing in the room, you guys wouldn't do what you guys just did. You guys would have been way more proactive. The barrel. And that's what I'm wondering because if you and you're watching the same well, we wanna know the same thing regardless this.
If someone was watching us right now, then I'd be like, all right, fine. But I don't feel like that's the case. Let me ask you a question. And just whatever your opinion is, what do you think the right thing to do for her is in that setting? Let
Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker expresses concern about the lack of motivation to contact family members during emergencies. They believe that not allowing good nurses to do their job is equivalent to a death sentence for patients. The speaker emphasizes the importance of this issue and urges listeners to consider the impact on their own families. They suggest that anyone opposing their resolution may not be trustworthy or may have something to hide. The speaker concludes by stating that this issue is not only important for Floridians but for humanity as a whole.
Speaker 0: And When she was crashing, it was 115, 120. Yeah. So if you don't want to motivate you, you need to aggressively contact your family So we could have been on before this happened. Totally agree. I'm going to cut it short.
I know that my time is short, but that's clearly murder. Yeah. I'm just going to end with this. The last thing standing between a patient and body bag is a good nurse. If a good nurse isn't allowed Sorry.
This is tough. Sorry. If a good nurse isn't allowed to do her job. Sorry. Sorry.
But it's an automatic death sentence for our patients and we're forced to watch them die unnecessarily. And now we have to live with that reality forever in our hearts and our souls. And you know, a lot of us have been holding the line for a really long time. You. It could be your family members next time.
And in any person that's in opposition of this resolution in the ordinance is likely someone that you don't want taking care of you or they have something to hide. So on this with this, United, we stand against those we trusted. I hope that you guys will really dig deep in your souls and your hearts and understand that This is good for humanity, not only Floridians but all over the world. God bless you and thank you for listening to me.