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Saved - February 15, 2023 at 1:07 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
Norfolk Southern paid just $25k to a town after chemicals were used to open a railroad. Drinking water in Ohio is at risk and a task group is testing it. Three new chemicals were identified in the Ohio rail spill. The long-term health effects are unknown. The toxic chemical plume is moving southeast towards Pittsburgh. Over 1 million pounds of Vinyl Chloride leaked and burned. Norfolk Southern lobbied to kill federal safety rules around upgraded train braking requirements. The area has been deemed safe too quickly. Projectile vomiting and multiple kids sick is not normal.

@DrEricDing - Eric Feigl-Ding

NEW TOXINS IDENTIFIED—“We basically nuked a town with chemicals so we could get a railroad open,” said Sil Caggiano, a hazardous materials specialist. Rail company Norfolk Southern is paying just $25k to the town, or ~$5 per resident.🧵 HT @therecount

Video Transcript AI Summary
Three additional chemicals have been identified from the Norfolk Southern train derailment in East Palestine. The US Environmental Protection Agency revealed that ethylene Glycommonobutyl ether, Ethylhexylacrylate, and isobutylene were present in the derailed, breached, or burning rail cars. Ethylhexylacrylate is a concerning carcinogen that can cause skin and eye irritation, while inhalation may lead to nose and throat irritation, coughing, and shortness of breath. Isobutylene can cause dizziness and drowsiness when inhaled. Residents were allowed to return home, but the EPA recommends thorough cleaning to remove any lingering chemicals. Concerns about long-term effects, such as cancer clusters and contaminated well water, have been raised. It is advised that individuals in the area undergo health checkups and keep records for future reference.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: We now know 3 more chemicals that were on board the Norfolk Southern train that derailed here in East Palestine just over a week ago. And being told that some of those chemicals are dangerous. Speaker 1: We basically nuked the town with chemicals so we could get a railroad open. Speaker 0: The US Environmental Protection Agency sent a letter to Norfolk Southern stating that ethylene Glycommonobutyl ether, Ethylhexylacrylate and isobutylene were also in the rail cars that were derailed, breached or on fire. Caggiano says So acrylate is especially worrisome. He says it's a carcinogen and contact with it can cause burning and irritation in the skin and eyes. Breathing it in can irritate the nose, throat and caused coughing and shortness of breath. Isobutylenes is also known to cause dizziness and drowsiness when inhaled. Speaker 1: I was kind of Surprised that when they quickly told the people they can go back home, but then said if they feel like they want Their, their homes tested, they could have them tested. I I would have far out that they did all the testing. Speaker 0: Caggiano says it's possible some of these chemicals could still be present in homes and on objects until you clean them thoroughly. Speaker 1: There's a lot of what ifs and we're gonna be looking at this thing 5, 10, 15, 20 years down the line and wondering, gee, cancer clusters could pop up, you know, well water could go bad. Speaker 0: Kajano recommends anyone who's in the East Palestine area, get a health checkup. He says get a record of where your health stands now so that moving forward, you have documentation of any really related effects to the train derailment.

@DrEricDing - Eric Feigl-Ding

2) DRINKING WATER now endangered. East Palestine police in Ohio is warning that drinking water may be "at-risk" for some people. A task group is going door-to-door to test water. HT @therecount

Video Transcript AI Summary
The East Palestine Police Department warns that drinking water may be at risk after a recent train derailment. A portable well task group will visit homes with identified at-risk drinking water wells. Residents were allowed to return home after the train derailment on February 3rd, but now the Ohio EPA is investigating water impacts and collecting samples from nearby streams. They are also addressing sulfur runoff and installing a dam to prevent further contamination.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: East Palestine Police Department is warning that drinking water may be at risk for some people following last week's train derailment. Officials said that the portable well task group will be knocking on doors of the homes that they have identified as having that at risk drinking water wells. The news comes just days after officials gave the all clear for residents to return to their homes following a fiery train derailment on February 3rd, the Ohio EPA is investigating impacts to water and possible remediation, collecting water samples from nearby water streams, and sulfur were run where a dam was installed to prevent further contamination.

@DrEricDing - Eric Feigl-Ding

3) Yesterday I advocated potentially warning and advising everyone within 50 mile radius to be on high alert after the vinyl chloride rail spill. Here is 50 miles… it includes all the way to Pittsburgh!

@DrEricDing - Eric Feigl-Ding

4) Here are the 3 new chemicals identified in the Ohio rail spill, besides vinyl chloride— Ethylene glycol monobutyl ether (bad for central nervous system) https://www.ilo.org/dyn/icsc/showcard.display?p_lang=en&p_card_id=0059&p_version=2 Ethylhexyl acrylate (bad for GI/ulcers) https://www.arkema.com/files/live/sites/shared_arkema/files/downloads/socialresponsability/safety-summuries/acrylics-2-ethylhexyl-acrylate-2012-08-30.pdf https://nj.gov/health/eoh/rtkweb/documents/fs/1045.pdf

ICSC 0059 - ETHYLENE GLYCOL MONOBUTYL ETHER ilo.org

@DrEricDing - Eric Feigl-Ding

5) there is no way you can try to convince me this Ohio rail plume is okay for local residents or anyone downwind of the plume.

@DrEricDing - Eric Feigl-Ding

6) I would not move back to Eastern Ohio area or the Western Pa areas downwind of it until extensive testing of air water and soil shows it is safe. My thread 🧵 yesterday 👇

@DrEricDing - Eric Feigl-Ding

7) the real long term health effects won’t be know for years or decades down the road. By then insurance companies and corporations and politicians will have moved on. The untold risks are rarely uncovered (unless by diligent epidemiologists… yes, us again) who research it.

@DrEricDing - Eric Feigl-Ding

8) if you smell chemicals in the air — definitely stay far far away. Many residents in even neighboring counties also smell the chemicals. They should all evacuate.

@DrEricDing - Eric Feigl-Ding

9) Anyone saying it’s safe to return is completely lying to you. Burning vinyl chloride is a horrible thing that will pollute the air water and soil for years and likely decades. @GovMikeDeWine needs to evacuate the entire region of the plume. @JoshShapiroPA needs to monitor the…

@DrEricDing - Eric Feigl-Ding

10) “My chickens were perfectly fine before, and as soon as they started the burn, my chickens slowed down and they died,” “If it can do this to chickens in one night, imagine what it’s going to do to us in 20 years” Yeah—evacuate your families. ⚠️ https://www.wkbn.com/news/local-news/east-palestine-train-derailment/north-lima-woman-finds-chickens-dead-tuesday-questions-chemical-release-from-train/

North Lima woman finds chickens dead Tuesday, questions chemical release from train People across the Mahoning Valley -- including those who live in Mahoning and Trumbull counties -- reported smelling chlorine after Monday's controlled release in East Palestine. Officials said it wasn't dangerous, but one North Lima woman is skeptical about that statement. wkbn.com

@DrEricDing - Eric Feigl-Ding

11) Let’s check which way the toxic chemical plume is moving… EAST to Pennsylvania— specifically SOUTHEAST towards Pittsburgh! #trainderailment #OhioTrainDisaster

@DrEricDing - Eric Feigl-Ding

12) Years ago, I created a free early warning website called Toxin Alert. Back then there was no interest. I might bring it back if people are interested… I’ve been warning about these stuff for years. https://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2017/01/a-link-to-where-lead-lurks/

Where lead lurks A Harvard Chan School researcher has launched a website to connect citizens with data on the water coming through their taps. news.harvard.edu

@DrEricDing - Eric Feigl-Ding

13) 70 miles southeast of the train derailment where the chemical burn started… this is what came down in the rain 🌧️— it’s likely highly acidic rain combined with soot. You don’t want to breath this shit, not to mention LIVE in it.

@DrEricDing - Eric Feigl-Ding

14) over 1,000,000 pounds of Vinyl Chloride leaked, spilled and burned. We are talking about an ecological disaster for years to come… water and soil … agriculture and human health disaster. Thanks @nscorp - thanks for skimping on train upgrades and skipping new brake system.

@DrEricDing - Eric Feigl-Ding

15) Was this just a freak accident that couldn’t have been prevented by @nscorp? Norfolk Southern actually lobbied to kill federal safety rules around upgraded train braking requirements. Those brakes could have likely dropped the derailment. NS has blood 🩸 on its hands.

@DrEricDing - Eric Feigl-Ding

16) “THESE ARE NOT EFFING STORM CLOUDS”—the frustrated resident says: the contents of the train could have been transferred into tankers but instead it was set on fire to save time and money. #OhioChernobyl

Video Transcript AI Summary
These are not storm clouds, but rather the smoke from a controlled burn in East Palestine. The speaker expresses frustration and anger towards those responsible, accusing them of being greedy and impatient. They believe that the burn could have been avoided if proper precautions were taken, suggesting that it was done for the sake of saving time and money.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: These aren't these aren't these aren't storm clouds. This is the fucking shit that they burn off, the fucking shit they burn off in east Palestine. This is not fucking storm clouds. Look at it. This is over Darlington. This is their fucking success. That ain't no fucking storm cloud. That's the fucking shit from East Palestine. They're fucking controlled burn. You ready? I'm ready. Let's get out of here. I wish we could get the fuck out of here. Motherfuckers. You fucking greedy motherfuckers, impatient bitches. You could have fucking waited. You could have fucking called the tanks. You could've transferred the contents. You didn't have to do this. You did it because of time and money. That's exactly why you did it.

@DrEricDing - Eric Feigl-Ding

17) Reminder— Norfolk Southern @nscorp chose to do a $10 billion stock buyback instead of investing on worker pay or train safety—especially needed brake replacements. Never forget — we need to sue NS executives to the ground. http://www.nscorp.com/content/nscorp/en/news/norfolk-southern-announces-new--10-billion-stock-repurchase-prog.html

Norfolk Southern Announces New $10 Billion Stock Repurchase Program Norfolk Southern Corporation (NYSE: NSC) today announced that its Board of Directors has authorized a new program for the repurchase of up to $10 billion of its common stock beginning April 1, 2022. The company’s current program will be terminated on March 31, 2022. nscorp.com

@DrEricDing - Eric Feigl-Ding

18) And hell yes the rail companies like Norfolk Southern are responsible - they actively lobbied to block safety rules around new brake requirements. @nscorp executives and lobbyists have blood 🩸 on their hands. #OhioChernobyl #OhioTrainDisaster https://www.levernews.com/rail-companies-blocked-safety-rules-before-ohio-derailment/

Rail Companies Blocked Safety Rules Before Ohio Derailment The train derailment came after Norfolk Southern helped convince government officials to repeal brake rules and lobbyists watered down safety regulations. levernews.com

@DrEricDing - Eric Feigl-Ding

19) “I am concerned that the area has been deemed safe so quickly without extensive data to show [it],” says a chemist. A @nscorp spokesperson concedes: “it’s hard to tell what was burned off and what went into the soil.”🔥 By @prem_thakker https://newrepublic.com/post/170570/life-ohio-train-derailment-trouble-breathing-dying-animals-saying-goodbye

Life After the Ohio Train Derailment: Trouble Breathing, Dying Animals, and Saying Goodbye After a train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio, leaked noxious chemicals, residents in the area are still trying to recover. newrepublic.com

@DrEricDing - Eric Feigl-Ding

20) I wrote a summary of the Ohio train disaster situation: (free to subscribe) Ohio’s “Chernobyl” was entirely preventable—but now we have an environmental disaster https://drericding.substack.com/p/ohios-chernobyl-was-entirely-preventablebut

Ohio’s “Chernobyl” was entirely preventable—but now we have an environmental disaster Despite officials’ insistence that Ohio and Pennsylvania residents are safe, the Norfolk Southern ecological disaster poses an immediate threat to nearby & downwind residents. drericding.substack.com

@DrEricDing - Eric Feigl-Ding

21) projectile vomiting in the middle of the night and multiple kids sick is not normal. @StatusCoup https://t.co/OpINwJehCI

Saved - April 21, 2024 at 5:26 PM

@VictorFromDE - Victor Scott

Nurse Erin continued. /4 https://t.co/In1J6adX2A

Video Transcript AI Summary
He was caring for a patient who was doing well, but suddenly transferred to the emergency room. Shortly after, the patient died, leaving the speaker questioning if the hospital's actions led to his death. The speaker is confused and upset, feeling that the patient shouldn't have died and suspecting foul play.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: What killed him? Was being did the vent kill him? Yeah. Oh, yes. They're so sedated. He had probably 8 or 9 drips. It's all sedation. She made this recording on what ended up being her last day at the hospital. I've been taking care of a patient for, like, a week right now. Who is this my and I call them. And He's been doing great. He has a trach put in and he's been doing great. He's been talking, like, or communicating with me. He's telling me, like, laughing at my jokes and talking to his kids on FaceTime a couple days ago. And I told him that. I told his kids that he was doing fine. And he and he was. And today, I was given him, and they came in. They told me that I need to leave the room, and I have to give report to somebody else. They took me from that unit. They put me in the emergency room. And they don't need me there, but they put me there. And I'm not even there, like, 20 minutes. Not even there 20 minutes and I hear a code being called in my room that I was just left. And it's him. And he was fine. He was fine. I don't understand that nothing makes sense. Like, why would they take me out of his room and put me in the ED? And then not 20 minutes later, he's dead. It doesn't make sense. Like, did they kill him? He was my one patient that was gonna live. He shouldn't have died. I don't know what they did to him. Something's not right.
Saved - April 22, 2024 at 5:32 PM

@VictorFromDE - Victor Scott

A father discussing how his daughter was killed in the hospital and all of the techniques and deception used to do it. /7 https://t.co/YpWJ35TEoy

Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker's daughter was almost put on a ventilator based on incorrect test results. The speaker challenged the doctor's decision and discovered the numbers were inaccurate. The daughter was not given certain treatments and the speaker was removed from the hospital for questioning protocols. The daughter's oxygen levels were misrepresented, leading to her death from respiratory failure caused by a sedation drug. The speaker's advocacy was absent for 44 hours, during which the daughter's sedation was increased, ultimately contributing to her death. The hospital's negligence led to the daughter's death.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Doctor came in and said, you'll need to put your daughter on a ventilator in the next 2 hours. You know, what the heck happened here? So I asked him, what is that based on? And he said, well, we did a blood gas draw last night and it shows that she needs to be on a ventilator. He says that we, you know, we did this blood gas draw last night. So I asked him what time he said, 11:30. I said, well, that 11:30 last night, Grace's blood pressure was 235 over 135 and her heart rate was 150 beats a minute. So I said, I don't think those numbers are objective and I want you to retake the numbers. So they did and Grace was fine. And she said, well, Grace's oxygen saturation's only at 85%. And because I was suspecting I would get COVID while I was in the room with Grace, I had all of my COVID materials in the room, including my own oxygen pulse ox. So I put that on Grace's finger, and it read 95%. So I called the nurse back in and said, is my finger meter accurate? And she said, yes. It is. I said, well, why is my meter reading 95% while your machine is only reading 85 percent? And she said it's because the leads get sweaty. She was only in the hospital 7 days. She was never on remdesivir or Avent because we refused those treatments. But they figured out a different way to take her out. And so I was with her from 6th through the morning of 10th. I was taken out by an armed guard for challenging, you know, the protocols. That's a whole another story. But then we had to hire an attorney to get my daughter Jessica in as a replacement and so Grace didn't have advocacy for 44 hours. During that 44 hours they increased the dose of a sedation drug called Presodex 7 different times. So they sedated my best buddy instead of taking care of her. And that drug, they started her on October 9th. So by the time her last day came around, October 13th, she was already on it for 4 days. The package insert says specifically to not use that drug for more than 24 hours because it causes acute respiratory failure. They listed the first cause of death on Grace's death certificate as acute respiratory failure which was directly caused by the hospital using that drug. So that piece of Grace's death certificate is true.
Saved - May 28, 2023 at 3:01 AM
reSee.it AI Summary
In spring 2020, tens of thousands of Americans died after being placed on mechanical ventilators. Ventilators were vastly overused, and patients were often put on them not for their own benefit but to protect hospital staff. Prolonged intubation was consistent with guidance from China, and split-ventilation made intubation even more dangerous. Mortality among COVID patients in New York area hospitals fell by over two-thirds between spring 2020 and summer 2020. Despite all this evidence, the establishment is arguing that no patients were killed by ventilators in spring 2020.

@michaelpsenger - Michael P Senger

THREAD – The Great COVID Ventilator Death Cover-up Tens of thousands of Americans died after being placed on mechanical ventilators in spring 2020. It’s long past time we got real answers as to how many were killed this way. 1/

@michaelpsenger - Michael P Senger

Early COVID data from China had suggested that ventilators would need to be used widely in the treatment of COVID patients, and this led to a major rush by politicians and hospitals to procure tens of thousands of ventilators. A small sample of the headlines from that period. 2/

@michaelpsenger - Michael P Senger

However, it soon became clear that ventilators were being vastly overused. Dr. Cameron Kyle-Sidell acted as an early whistleblower, sounding the alarm in a widely-shared video. 3/

Video Transcript AI Summary
In the past 9 days, I've been working in an intensive care unit for COVID-19 patients. However, I've noticed some unusual medical phenomena that don't align with the expected viral pneumonia. The common understanding is that patients start with mild symptoms and progress to acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). But based on what I've seen, I believe we may be treating the wrong disease. This could lead to significant harm for many people in a short period of time. I fear that our current medical paradigm is incorrect and that COVID-19 is not the disease we thought it was.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: 9 days ago, I opened an intensive care unit to care for the sickest COVID positive patients in the city. In these 9 days, I have seen things I have never seen before. In treating these patients, I have witnessed medical phenomenon that just don't make sense in the context of treating a disease that is supposed to be a viral pneumonia. 9 days ago, I presumed I was opening an intensive care unit to treat patients with a virus causing a pneumonia That was ravaging lungs across the world, starting out as something mild, cough, a sore throat, and progressively increasing in severity until ultimately ending in something called acute respiratory distress syndrome or ARDS. This is the paradigm that Every hospital in the country is working under. This is the disease ARDS that every hospital is preparing to treat. And this is the disease ARDS for which in the next 2 to 6 weeks, a 100000 Americans might be put on a ventilator. And yet, everything I have seen in the last 9 days, All the things that just don't make sense, the patients I'm seeing in front of me, the lungs I'm trying to improve have led me to believe That COVID nineteen is not this disease and that we are operating under a medical paradigm that is untrue. In short, I believe we are treating the wrong disease and I fear that this misguided treatment will lead to a tremendous amount of harm to a great number of people in a very short time.

@michaelpsenger - Michael P Senger

In interviews with major media outlets, several practitioners later disclosed that patients had often been put on ventilators not for their own benefit, but in order to protect hospital staff and stop the virus from spreading. 4/

@michaelpsenger - Michael P Senger

As Dr. Rich McCormick told the House COVID Select Subcommittee, “we were intubating people that probably shouldn’t have been intubated.” 5/

Video Transcript AI Summary
In my 20 years of military and ER experience, I witnessed the challenges of dealing with a novel virus. As healthcare professionals, we made mistakes due to outdated knowledge and assumptions. We intubated patients unnecessarily and didn't consider alternative treatments. Families suffered as they were unable to be with their loved ones during their final moments. I held dying patients' hands, knowing there was little I could do. The government exacerbated the situation by interfering with healthcare decisions and keeping families apart. We shouldn't rely on the government to solve problems it created.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: In my experience, over 20 years in the military and and finished up as an ER doc. And matter of fact, from the beginning of the pandemic, I was serving as a night shift ER doc, full time, working in the ER, being exposed to fevers. We didn't know where it came from and trying to figure out what this novel virus would do to our patient population, and we got it wrong. I'll tell you, when the novel virus hits you or any novel disease, you don't know what to do. That's a fact. So we're the healthcare professionals, the people with the scientific background, the people who understood how viruses work, how they propagate, how they crate inflammation got it wrong. We're going off of old technology, old assumptions. And I remember we were intubating people that probably shouldn't have been intubated. We didn't use NSAIDs. We didn't use steroids. We didn't, take into account how this virus could be different from other viruses we knew in the past. Let me tell you what else I witnessed as an ER doctor. I watched families struggle with this. Once we we're no longer able to allow families into the ER or watch people die by themselves. I held the hands of people who were dying and looked in their eyes and and told them I was gonna do my very best, but knew there was very little I could do because we didn't know what to do. I I watched and prayed with people, knowing that the outcome was gonna be very poor and knowing we're doing some things very wrong, over time and and realizing As it continued, I became very aware that the government was the biggest problem of all. They didn't help this pandemic. They got in the way of the conversation. They interjected themselves between the professionals and the patients. They kept families apart. They didn't let people even die with dignity or with any choice in their own health care. Let me ask you this. This this is my take home, is why do we keep on turning back to the government to solve the problems that the government created? That's what I get out of this.

@michaelpsenger - Michael P Senger

As Meredith Case, an internal medicine resident at NewYork-Presbyterian hospital, put it in a series of since-deleted threads, hospitals were “early intubating” patients for “many days if not weeks” “to avoid aerosolizing procedures to protect staff.” 6/

@michaelpsenger - Michael P Senger

This practice of prolonged intubation was apparently consistent with guidance from China. As Zeynep Tufekci had put it, “Chinese scientists” advised “many COVID-19 patients need to stay on mechanical ventilators as long as four weeks.” 7/

@michaelpsenger - Michael P Senger

Some hospitals in New York began engaging in “split-ventilation”—putting patients on ventilators two-at-a-time. “Split-ventilation” made intubation even more dangerous than it already was. 8/

@michaelpsenger - Michael P Senger

Even Anthony Fauci eventually admitted that having “very very readily put people on mechanical ventilation” may have “caused more harm than good.” 9/

Video Transcript AI Summary
Intensive care has improved as we now understand that mechanical ventilation may not always be necessary. Instead, proper positioning in the prone or supine position can be beneficial without the need for intubation. This new approach has been learned through clinical experience, as it has been found that intubation can sometimes cause more harm than good.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: I think the intensive care has improved. We very, very readily would put people on mechanical ventilation. When we found out through clinical experience, it might have been better just to make sure we position them properly in the prone or supine position and not necessarily intubate somebody so readily, which might have actually caused more harm than good. We learned that as we got more

@michaelpsenger - Michael P Senger

The New Yorker featured a harrowing account of one early victim’s final moments before he was put on a ventilator and died—even though he didn’t even “feel sick” at the time he was intubated. 10/

@michaelpsenger - Michael P Senger

A study in JAMA later revealed a 97.2% mortality rate among those over age 65 put on mechanical ventilators. Patients over age 65 were more than 26 times as likely to survive if they were NOT placed on mechanical ventilators. 11/

@michaelpsenger - Michael P Senger

Overall, mortality among COVID patients in New York area hospitals fell by over two-thirds between spring 2020 and summer 2020. 12/

@michaelpsenger - Michael P Senger

Yet astonishingly, despite all this evidence, the establishment is arguing that *no patients* were killed by ventilators in spring 2020. An astonishing argument, even by the abysmal standards of the COVID era. 13/

@Craig_A_Spencer - Craig Spencer MD MPH

You know why we intubated people for Covid in March 2020? Because otherwise they were going to die. Full. Stop. I remember a patient rolling in with an oxygen saturation of 42%, breathing twice as fast as normal,struggling on a face mask with oxygen all the way up. What to do?

@michaelpsenger - Michael P Senger

The data bears out that ventilator use was sharply curtailed after spring 2020. Overall, CDC data shows that about 10,000 patients died with COVID in NYC hospitals after being put on ventilators in spring 2020. 14/ https://www.michaelpsenger.com/p/the-great-covid-ventilator-death

The Great COVID Ventilator Death Cover-up Tens of thousands of Americans died after being placed on mechanical ventilators in spring 2020. It’s long past time we got real answers as to how many were killed this way. michaelpsenger.com

@michaelpsenger - Michael P Senger

As I’ve previously written, the percentage increase in excess deaths in the greater New York area in spring 2020 vastly outstrips the percentage increase even in other cities with similar climate and social and economic demographics. 15/ https://www.michaelpsenger.com/p/an-estimated-30000-americans-were

An Estimated 30,000 Americans Were Killed by Ventilators & Iatrogenesis in April 2020 Reexamining excess deaths during peak lockdown michaelpsenger.com

@michaelpsenger - Michael P Senger

Further, as @ewoodhouse7 has documented in meticulous detail, New York City experienced an unnaturally sharp, breathtaking mortality event just after its lockdown began, unlike anywhere where else or at any other time. 16/ (Source: CDC Wonder mortality, 2018–last month).

@michaelpsenger - Michael P Senger

A side-by-side comparison of inpatient hospital mortality from 2018 to present in NYC vs America’s other largest metro areas illustrates this unnatural, sharp spike in mortality in NYC in spring 2020. 17/ (Source: CDC Wonder mortality, 2018–last month).

@michaelpsenger - Michael P Senger

Moreover, the spike in mortality among young people is inconsistent with COVID’s heavily-stratified IFR by age. This is the most widely-cited data on COVID’s IFR by age. Thus, the unnatural spike in mortality in NYC in spring 2020 cannot be attributed to COVID. 18/

@michaelpsenger - Michael P Senger

The establishment has responded with studies claiming “early intubation” actually reduced time on ventilators, but this is a straw-man. The real issue is whether patients were put on ventilators unnecessarily, or kept on them too long. 19/

@michaelpsenger - Michael P Senger

Even more strangely, most attorneys with whom I’ve discussed the ventilator issue agree that there’s actually little litigation risk for the medical establishment given the perceived global emergency and the information coming from China at the time. 20/

@michaelpsenger - Michael P Senger

This, too, leads me to believe that the real number of patients killed by ventilators must be frighteningly high; even absent any real litigation risk, the embarrassment alone is leading to this broad cover-up. 21/

@michaelpsenger - Michael P Senger

Given all the clumsy, self-contradictory arguments about ventilator deaths coming from the medical establishment, you’ve probably gathered that these are not sophisticated crooks. Rather, these are ordinary people who can’t seem to face what really happened. 22/

@michaelpsenger - Michael P Senger

As I detailed in Snake Oil, it’s the hallmark of any great dictator to be able to bring out the evil even in ordinary people. And some men are uncannily good at what they do. 23/

@michaelpsenger - Michael P Senger

Nonetheless, the situation is morally inexcusable. We need to know how these patients died, not only so we know what really happened during the initial response to COVID in spring 2020, but also because it’s the least we can do to honor the deceased. /end https://www.michaelpsenger.com/p/the-great-covid-ventilator-death

The Great COVID Ventilator Death Cover-up Tens of thousands of Americans died after being placed on mechanical ventilators in spring 2020. It’s long past time we got real answers as to how many were killed this way. michaelpsenger.com
Saved - September 16, 2023 at 10:32 PM

@CityNewsTO - CityNews Toronto

ICYMI: An estimated 11,000 Ontarians have died while waiting for surgeries, MRIs and CT scans in the past year.

Estimated 11,000 Ontarians died waiting for surgeries, scans in past year | CityNews Toronto Jordanna Bialo, a 38-year old patient who became sick in 2020, is one of many who are fearfully navigating the current healthcare system. toronto.citynews.ca
Saved - September 19, 2023 at 8:01 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
Canadian healthcare system criticized for long wait times, lack of pain management, and inefficient processes. A child's broken arm took over 24 hours to assess, with no follow-up appointment. The system is costly, collapsed in many provinces, and prioritizes other issues over urgent care. Canadians question when change will come.

@NatashaMontreal - Natasha Montreal Live Free or Die

A tale of "free" Canadian health care... My child broke and dislocated an arm on Thursday afternoon. After spending 4 hours at a private clinic we were told the injury would require an assessment from a pediatric orthopedist. We were told not to go to the hospital until the following morning because no pediatric orthopedist would be available in the evening for consult. The next morning we went to emerge with a referral and the x-rays. They couldn't open the x-ray images. More x-rays were taken. No food or water all day. No pain killers (in case of surgery.) At 6 PM the ortho tried a ketamine reduction. My child was murmuring during the procedure and afterwards remembered everything-the pulling, the x-rays, the temporary cast, the talking. More x-rays. Waiting. More x-rays. At this point came the tears of frustration, "The hospital is like a prison. Why can't I go home?" The ortho finally came to say that her bone was at the upper limit of the range to properly heal. Another reduction or surgery might be required. More doctors would need to review the case at rounds. However, we couldn't get an appointment before leaving because the secretaries were gone for the weekend. We were advised to call next week, as they might not call, and to also ensure that the appointment was within the week because the staff may try and delay the appointment. So. To recap. My parents' dog had a broken leg set and cast inside of 2 hours. A CHILD has to wait over 24 hours for a procedure that may or may not have actually worked. The pain was unmanaged. No eating or drinking for 10 hours. We didn't leave with a follow up appointment. The waiting areas are plexiglass-encased chair prisons. They are still masking in the name of the Covid Regime. This is the health care that Canadians brag about and praise. Our "universal" medical system is one of the only ways that Canadians define themselves. It is one of the most costly and inefficient of all of the OECD countries and it has been for ages. It has all but collapsed in most of the provinces. Most Canadians agreed to tank our economy and humanity with the Covid Regime to preserve what amounts to a sclerotic and already collapsed socialist medical system. The industry is too busy drugging kids who have the sads or the hypers, mutilating mentally ill children, and killing old people with euthanasia or lack of medical care to fix actual injuries. When will Canadians awaken? When will enough be enough?

Saved - October 22, 2023 at 2:43 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
Title: The Harrowing Journey of an HPV Vaccine Reaction A mother shares her daughter's traumatic experience after receiving the HPV vaccine. Within seconds of the injection, her daughter experienced severe chest and stomach pains, difficulty breathing, and weakness. Multiple hospital visits led to a diagnosis of POTS syndrome, believed to be caused by the vaccine. The daughter's physical and mental health deteriorated, impacting her ability to attend school and perform daily activities. Despite various medical consultations, no answers were found. The mother urges others to research the potential negative side effects of the HPV vaccine and shares her hope for her daughter's recovery. (499 characters)

@catsscareme2021 - Jessica Rojas 🇺🇸💪

HPV vaccine- shared by Mom. "Caution!!!! LONG, but informative post. A lot of my friends have kids the same ages as mine, (Cami is 13) and this most definitely is something you should be aware of, and is absolutely a matter of life and death. (Call me dramatic, I don’t care. I know what we have been through and I can tell you, the nightmare is very real.) I’m sitting here at Riley Hospital, writing a post I never thought I’d be making. The last 10 months have been an absolute nightmare, and I think it’s time to tell our story, to try and prevent someone else from going through what we have. In January, 2020, we went for a doctor visit because Cami had previously had strep throat over Christmas vacation, and we wanted to make sure it wasn’t coming back. (Repeat strep test came back negative) Cami was laughing and joking with the dr and nurses caring for her that day. It came up that she was due for her 2nd HPV vaccine and we were asked if we wanted to go ahead and get it done since we were already there. I asked her and gave consent, and the nurse came and gave her the injection. Within seconds, our whole world changed. Before Cami got up from the exam table, she told me she didn’t feel very good. Knowing that sometimes that happens, we just got up and went on our way. By the time we got to the elevators, Cami could barely walk, and had to sit down in the elevator. By the time we got to the hospital lobby, she could not make it to my truck, I had to come and pick her up at the doors. The next 2 hours were pure hell. She started having chest and stomach pains, couldn’t walk, or stand at all, and was having trouble breathing. I called the dr office and let them know I believed she was having a reaction to the shot. They told me, that wasn’t something they had heard of, but if it persisted to let them know. At that point I had had enough. I had Jesse carry her to the truck and I took her straight to the ER. They ran tests and did bloodwork, but kept telling me she was fine. Everything looked fine. I told them she was NOT FINE, that this all started with the HPV injection and I was told “it shouldn’t be that.” “She’s hyperventilating and just needs to calm down.” 😳😡 She was still struggling to breathe and we were both terrified. Her Blood pressure was up and down and she was still struggling with standing anytime she tried to walk. Anytime she would stand, she would get weak and almost pass out. They said she was dehydrated and ended up giving her 2 bags of fluid and ran a bunch of tests. (She was FINE in the dr office a few hours ago, mind you..) After 6 hours, we were released with no answers and just told that she was hyperventilating and needed to take deeper breaths, calm down and come back if not better in a couple days, and referred her to a pediatric GI doc for her stomach/chest pain. Things did NOT get better. She couldn’t stand longer than a couple minutes without almost passing out, and couldn’t walk from one end of the house to the other. I decided to take her to Peyton Manning Children’s Hospital ER, to get a second opinion and prayed for some answers. After another 6 hours in there, and many tests run, they believed that she had POTS syndrome, and suggested for us to do a tilt table test ASAP, and to see a pediatric cardiologist. We saw the cardiologist at witham and they confirmed needing the tilt table test to get a gauge on what was happening. We went for the tilt table test and it was confirmed that she had POTS syndrome. During that test, her BP dropped to 60/30, and just scared us both more. We were referred to a pediatric cardiologist at that point to arrange more tests to see what was going on. We started a treatment plan, with hopes that she would feel better. They said that they believed The injection “zapped the connection between her brain and her adrenal system, depleting her sodium levels.” We were given a treatment plan and sent on our way with high hopes." Continued 👇

@catsscareme2021 - Jessica Rojas 🇺🇸💪

"By this time, it was March and we were still not seeing any improvements. School became a huge obstacle, because not only was she struggling physically, she was also struggling mentally, as all of her progress she had previously made, was set back. She was in 6th grade, and had almost worked her way out of needing an IEP, and was sitting in with the high school band at performances. She was getting dizzy and lightheaded in class, and her resting pulse rate would get so high that the school wasn’t comfortable with her being there, since the equipment couldn’t register her pulse being that high, understandably! At this point, she was struggling to remember her flute fingerings and wasn’t able to retain information or keep a train of thought. She was having issues at school making it through the day and her teachers could definitely tell she was struggling. I called her pediatrician and asked for more help, Because she just wasn’t getting better. She was in constant pain and nothing was helping her. It was like having a newborn again. She couldn’t sleep, and was in excruciating pain at night. Nothing helped. At her GI appointment, at Riley, there were more tests and after finding nothing wrong in that department, we were back to the drawing board. No one had any explanation as to why this was happening to her, other than receiving the HPV shot. Another call to her pediatrician for help. We were referred to Riley Rheumatology, Riley Neurology and Pain specialist team, but available appointments were months out. At this point, Cami can’t attend school, stand for more than a few minutes, she wasn’t sleeping or eating like normal, and was just miserable. When your child tells you, she feels like she’s being ripped apart from the inside, you make some waves and make things happen! More phone calls to get into Riley ASAP. Riley Neuro and Rheumatology appointments all had thorough checkups/ tests, and bloodwork, and Cami was cleared in their respectable departments. That meant no answers, and another referral to Riley Pain Management. A 3 hour appointment with 5 incredible doctors has led us to today. Doctors that are certain that all of this was caused by that HPV shot. There literally is no other explanation for what has happened to my Cami Mae. We went from having one pediatrician that she saw once a year, maybe twice if she got sick, to now having a total of 11, and she is a Riley kid. I thank God for this hospital and the doctors and nurses that have helped us along the way. Cami was just taken back by her pain management team/surgical staff to do an intercostal nerve block to try and alleviate her pain. Pain that was caused by an injection that is supposed to help kids. This is only step one, in what could be a very, very long process to get her back to “normal”, if that ever happens. This is not supposed to happen. I in NO way blame her pediatrician OR the nurse that administered the injection. In fact, I adore them both for all they have done for her, and the people in the office that have pushed us along to get us where we are today. Cami went from a healthy, active child, who loved to play softball, and playing outside to a child that can’t swing a bat. This injection almost killed her. As a parent, it’s the hardest thing in the world to have to go through. This injection is NOT required for children to attend school. It is NOT mandatory. Your body can heal itself if you do indeed get HPV. I am in no way telling you to not vaccinate your kids because as parents, we want to protect them in any way we can. But, I am BEGGING you to research all of the negative side affects that it brings with it, and to SHARE THIS POST!!!!!! I truly believe that if I hadn’t taken Cami to the ER as fast as I did the day she got that shot, that she wouldn’t be here right now. "

@catsscareme2021 - Jessica Rojas 🇺🇸💪

The last 10 months have been excruciatingly awful. I know it’s a long post, and I just hope you made it this far. Please research this injection. Do your homework and search for the really bad things. Turns out, they CAN happen to you, or your child. If I have prevented even one of you from going through what we are, I’ve done my part, for now. Please say a prayer for Cami, and her medical team. We are so incredibly ready for this nightmare to be over. I just pray that there is indeed an end in sight and that she’s not permanently affected by this. Thank you all, so much, for taking the time to read this. ❤️ I’m happy to answer any questions I can about our story. Please, PLEASE, PLEASE SHARE!!!! UPDATE: the procedure did not work as they had hoped. Cami is still in pain so we have to move on to plan B. I NEVER expected this post to take off like it has. I’m incredibly grateful for each and every one of you that has taken the time to read this and pass it along. My heart is full knowing so many people are now aware. Adding a picture of a book I have been made aware of and have started reading, so that you can get it too, and be able to make a more informed decision. I have received SO MANY messages of parents who are going through similar situations, and so much worse 😞 Thank you all so much for your prayers 💜

Saved - November 7, 2023 at 4:54 PM

@immipti - immi khokhar

@jacksonhinklle First doctor: "She's in dire need of an immediate surgical procedure." - Second doctor: "There are no more surgical procedures!"😭😭😭 https://t.co/6PxlXamyLp

Saved - November 16, 2023 at 3:37 AM

@stairwayto3dom - The Saviour

🇵🇸 Injured children at Al Shifa hospital that need to be in the ICU unit are now facing death following the breakdown of the health system in the hospital https://t.co/HlEyoVVQgJ

Saved - November 20, 2023 at 4:50 PM

@CartlandDavid - Dr David Cartland

Why are doctors and nurses still silent?? It’s literally inexplicable…..it’s 2023…..please let me know thoughts below!

Saved - November 22, 2023 at 6:20 PM

@gazanotice - Gaza Notifications

Where to go? No ambulance, no hospital via IG:motaz_azaiza https://t.co/w9rjW6rX5v

Saved - January 23, 2024 at 2:56 AM

@madhoun95 - Ahmed El-Madhoun from #Gaza

Zahra, a seven-year-old, suffered an injury in her tent after being displaced from the north. Her wounds are now being stitched without any pain relief, and she is trapped at Nasser Hospital We will never forget! https://t.co/5gmdmLVKkj

Saved - January 24, 2024 at 5:01 AM

@Resist_05 - Pelham

The situation inside the Nasar Hospital is absolutely catastrophic. Dr. Mahammed Harar fights to save a young girls life… doctors are forced to treat children on the the floors…🇵🇸💔 https://t.co/2dTuObOgva

Saved - February 25, 2024 at 6:02 PM

@Ema97n - eman.

It's 2024, and Israel is using the deprivation of medication as a tool of war, and this is acceptable by the world. I can simply say that humanity has failed.

@ahmadkazz - السيِّد الشَّابْ.

My cousin's daughter Miyan has meningitis, in need of urgent evacuation from Gaza. Please help and share! https://t.co/V4LdKQpbHO

Saved - September 17, 2024 at 10:36 AM
reSee.it AI Summary
I’m deeply concerned about Alexis Lorenze at UCI Irvine Medical Hospital. She’s currently fighting for her life after being injured by three vaccines at once, and the hospital is neglecting her needs. She went in for treatment for PNH but was forced to receive the vaccines first. Her condition has worsened, and she even had to use a bucket because no one would assist her. We need to hold the hospital accountable and demand better treatment for her. Anyone nearby, please join us outside the hospital to advocate for her care.

@erin_bsn - NurseErin

Have you seen what’s happening to Alexis Lorenze at UCI Irvine Medical Hospital?! She’s fighting for her life right now—Injured by THREE V🪓’s at once, and the hospital is doing NOTHING to help her! She’s being gaslit and neglected—she even had to pee in a bucket because no one would assist her! Lexi went in for treatment for PNH, but they forced her to take those V🪓’s first. This is absolutely unacceptable! We need accountability and we need to save her life! 📍 UCI Irvine Medical Hospital 101 The City Dr S, Orange, CA 92868 ☎️ (714) 456-7890 Anyone near the area, we need YOU outside the hospital demanding better treatment for her NOW! Let’s save her life. 🙏 #SaveAlexisLife Update with more info: She has PNH and had terrible migraines for the last 2 weeks. Went in for help. Her hemoglobin was 3.1 (severely low). They did bone marrow biopsy and 2-3 transfusions and said she couldn't get treatment unless her V’s were up to date. Gave her tetanus, meningitis and pneumonia all at once. She has had ZERO V’s with the exception of when she was a baby. Just 10-minutes post V’s, she couldn’t move her arms—2 V’s in her left arm and 1 V in her right.

Saved - October 24, 2024 at 8:26 PM

@GhassanAbuSitt1 - Ghassan Abu Sitta

Finished operating with my colleagues on a 4 year old with a fractured thigh bone and multiple severed tendons in the hand. Maybe the German Foreign Minister can explain to him why it is necessary for him to go through life with these injuries and a dead mother and 2 siblings. https://t.co/Bd7Gl2RKbA

Saved - November 4, 2024 at 3:51 PM

@MakisMD - William Makis MD

TURBO CANCER Ontario Police Officer DENIED CARE Eddie Phillipo developed a rare cancer in Jan.2024 Pseudomyxoma Peritonei "treatment seemed to be working at first but stopped being effective" He is now being DENIED life saving surgery, so will go to US Cancer Care in CANADA! https://t.co/4PANcEQ0Tv

Saved - December 9, 2024 at 4:54 PM

@againstgrmrs - Gays Against Groomers

Serious question: Does this look like “lifesaving care” to you? https://t.co/ImxMNakDb1

Saved - December 15, 2024 at 3:51 AM

@WallStreetApes - Wall Street Apes

This is Ali Haider, he is a cardiologist in America “So here’s the state of American Healthcare today” Normally I would summarize but you need to hear this directly from him The US Healthcare system is broken so much worse than we realize. We need more doctors speaking out. https://t.co/g5DQI5Oylb

Video Transcript AI Summary
The current state of American healthcare involves a lengthy process for getting insurance approval for necessary procedures. A cardiologist submitted a request for a patient’s procedure, but it was denied, requiring additional information. After resubmitting data, the insurance company still denied the request, necessitating a peer-to-peer review. This involved scheduling a phone call with an insurance-employed doctor, which took nearly two weeks of back-and-forth communication and long hold times. Ultimately, despite all efforts, the procedure is likely to be denied again.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: So here's the state of American health care today. I'm a cardiologist, and a patient was referred to me for a cardiology procedure because, well, they need the procedure. Now before we can schedule it, we have to get approval from the insurance company, which often requires a prior authorization. So for that, we submit all the information to the insurance company and await their decision whether it's approved. Of course, as it frequently happens, it was not approved, and they're requesting more information. So we submit more data. Several days later, they come back and say, nope, still not approved. So they are requiring a peer to peer, which means that I get on a phone call with a doctor who's employed by the insurance company. So then we have to schedule the peer to peer. So my staff gets on the phone, day 1, day 2, day 3, an hour plus on hold each time until they finally get through. And then they schedule a phone call, which is scheduled at the end of the week. They give you the time, and I gotta carve out time in my schedule in the middle of the day so I can speak to this doctor. Mind you, this process is now taking almost 2 weeks. Speaker 1: And at the end of the day, Speaker 0: it's probably still gonna be denied.
Saved - December 20, 2024 at 11:18 PM

@EndWokeness - End Wokeness

Cancer patient in Canada has to flee to the U.S. because "FREE" healthcare is overrun https://t.co/6WXr1ZVfna

Video Transcript AI Summary
I’m heading to the United States for the third time to seek faster cancer care, as my tumor markers are rising. A year and a half ago, I was diagnosed with stage 4 ovarian cancer in Canada. If I had waited for treatment there, I wouldn’t be here today. As a dual citizen and veteran, I accessed medical benefits in the U.S. and received timely, aggressive treatment, leading to no evidence of disease by March 2024. However, this aggressive cancer has a high chance of recurrence. Despite trying various treatments, including off-label medications, it seems to be returning. In Canada, I was told I might wait two weeks for a CT scan, but the U.S. oncology team can see me immediately. Time is critical, so I’m on my way to the U.S. for urgent care.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: I really don't wanna keep telling you this story. Here I am again for the 3rd time going to the United States to get faster cancer care. This time because my tumor markers are starting to trend upwards. They're just outside the normal range, and time is of the essence. For those of you who don't know, year and a half ago, I was diagnosed with a stage 4 ovarian cancer. Extremely aggressive. I was diagnosed in Canada, and had I waited for treatment there, I would have died. Instead, because I'm a dual citizen, I went down to the United States where I'm also a veteran, activated medical benefits, and barely saved my life. Barely got treatment in the nick of time. Treated it aggressively, had the surgeries. March of 2024, I was declared no evidence of disease. Unfortunately, this is a very aggressive cancer. 90 to 95% chance of recurrence with this cancer. So we have done everything we can to be as aggressive as the cancer. We've thrown everything at it since I came home, as most of you know, including off label medications like Ivermectin. Anything and everything. But it looks like it's trying to make a comeback. So here in Canada, they told me, yeah, maybe we can get you in a CT scanner in about 2 weeks. Meanwhile, the US oncology team said, get down here right now. We can get you in today. So I'm gonna be down there. I'll be in a CT scanner tomorrow. This is an aggressive cancer, so we have to be aggressive. There is no wasting time. So here we are, on our way to the US again.
Saved - March 24, 2025 at 1:01 AM
reSee.it AI Summary
I’m facing a shocking reality with Canadian healthcare. I need an MRI to check for a brain tumor, but the appointment is scheduled for 2026. It’s March 2025 now, which means I’m waiting 13 months just to see if I have a serious condition. I initially thought there was a mistake, but the clinic confirmed that this is the earliest they can fit me in, despite my doctor requesting an earlier date. It’s frustrating to think that while healthcare is free, the wait times make it feel anything but accessible.

@WallStreetApes - Wall Street Apes

Canada healthcare is horrifying “Today on how f*cked is Canadian healthcare: I need an MRI to see if I have a f*cking brain tumor. Go ahead guess when it is? Go ahead, guess. It's in 2026” “My MRI to see if I have a brain tumor is in 2026. It's March 2025 right now” “If you thought this was bad, it's actually worse than you thought. Because the appointment where we decided that I need this MRI was in December of last year. So it's not like it's 10 months from now. It's 13 months. It's a 13 month wait to see if I have a brain tumor” “I just thought this was a mistake — But no, I called and the clinic was like, yeah, the doctor actually requested that you have it earlier, but this is the next spot we have. We're seeing about 13 months out” “Canada where healthcare is free, but only if you can afford to wait.”

Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker needs an MRI to check for a possible brain tumor. The MRI is scheduled for 2026. The appointment to determine the need for the MRI was in December of the previous year, making the wait thirteen months. The speaker already gets annual MRIs to monitor a spine tumor, which prompted the brain tumor concern. The speaker initially thought the 2026 date was a scheduling error, assuming it was mistakenly placed on the annual monitoring timeline. However, upon calling the clinic, they were informed that the doctor requested an earlier appointment, but the next available slot was in thirteen months. The speaker concludes that in Canada, healthcare is free, but only if you can wait.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Today on how fucked is Canadian health care, I need an MRI to see if I have a fucking brain tumor, and go ahead, guess when it is. Go ahead, guess. It's in 2026. Twenty '20 '6. My MRI to see if I have a brain tumor is in 2026. It's March 2025 right now, and if you thought this was bad, it's actually worse than you thought because the appointment where we decided that I need this MRI was in December of last year. So it's not like it's ten months from now, it's thirteen months. It's a thirteen month wait to see if I have a brain tumor. At first I just thought this was a mistake because having an MRI every year is a monitoring timeline. I already have an MRI every year for my spine tumor, which is why we think maybe I have a brain tumor too. So I was like, okay, they just made a mistake and scheduled this on a monitoring timeline. But no, I called and the clinic was like, yeah, the doctor actually requested that you have it earlier, but this is the next spot we have. We're seeing about thirteen months for these brain and spine MRIs. Cool. Cool, cool, cool. Canada, where healthcare is free, but only if you can afford to wait.
Saved - April 30, 2025 at 4:50 AM
reSee.it AI Summary
Last night, I experienced excruciating dental pain that made me reconsider my health. Despite my experience as an ER doctor, I found myself contemplating a trip to the ER due to the intensity of the pain. I realized how often we dismiss patients, assuming they are drug seekers, a habit formed by the opioid crisis. Thankfully, I found lidocaine in my coat, but not everyone has that option. Pain isn't always visible or documented, and we must remember to stay compassionate and human in our responses, as the culture of disbelief is damaging.

@Rick_Pescatore - Rick Pescatore, D.O.

I woke up last night to the kind of pain that makes you sweat, cry, and curse yourself for ever taking a single second of health for granted. Dental pain. Unrelenting. Excruciating. I emptied every medicine cabinet and drawer. Nothing helped until....

@Rick_Pescatore - Rick Pescatore, D.O.

I’m a board-certified ER doctor. Over a decade in this field. I've seen every kind of suffering. I like to think I’m tough. But lying there at 2AM, unable to function due to the lightning bolts coursing through my face, I seriously considered going to the ER. It was that bad.

@Rick_Pescatore - Rick Pescatore, D.O.

And here's the uncomfortable truth: We dismiss these patients all the time. We roll our eyes. We mumble about drug seekers. We armor ourselves with cynicism because the opioid crisis taught us to doubt every cry for help.

@Rick_Pescatore - Rick Pescatore, D.O.

If I hadn't found an old bottle of lidocaine in my white coat pocket — a literal stroke of luck — I don't know what I would have done. I drew it up, stuck a needle in my own face, and bought myself a few hours of shaky, broken sleep.

@Rick_Pescatore - Rick Pescatore, D.O.

Imagine not having that. No lidocaine. No prescriptions. No medical knowledge. Just the same agony...walking into an ER full of exhausted doctors trained to assume you're lying. And being waved away. Sent home to suffer.

@Rick_Pescatore - Rick Pescatore, D.O.

Pain doesn't always come with paperwork. It doesn't carry a police report or a CT scan. Sometimes it's just a human being standing there, begging for help. And if you think you're immune to that cry because you're "experienced," you're lost.

@Rick_Pescatore - Rick Pescatore, D.O.

The opioid crisis was (is) real. It gutted us. It made us wary. But we built an entire culture of disbelief in its wake. A culture where real pain is minimized, doubted, ridiculed, or criminalized. And it's rotting us from the inside out.

@Rick_Pescatore - Rick Pescatore, D.O.

It's easy to dismiss pain when it's not your own. It's easy to label, to turn away. It’s harder to stay human. But that's the real work. And it's the only work that matters.

Saved - June 21, 2025 at 9:28 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
I shared a heartbreaking story about a mother in Canada who is devastated after the BC Government denied funding for her daughter's medicine. Her daughter, the first child in the world taken off Brineura, has Batten disease, a rare and fatal genetic disorder. This denial feels like a death sentence.

@WallStreetApes - Wall Street Apes

This is what Government Healthcare looks like Mother in Canada in tears because the BC Government has denied funding for her daughter’s medicine, “she’ll receive her final infusion tomorrow” Her daughter is the 1st child in the world to be taken off Brineura This is fatal Her daughter has Batten disease, a rare, fatal genetic disorder that affects the nervous system and brain. Government healthcare has denied the medication, this is a death sentence.

Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker announces with heartbreak that Charlie's final infusion will be tomorrow. They state they are processing this news and have little else to say at this time. The speaker expresses love for Charlie and apologizes to him.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Our family is heartbroken to share, that Charlie's final infusion will be tomorrow. We are processing this news, and at this time, there's just not much else I can say. I'm just really sorry, Charlie, and we love you so much.
Saved - October 22, 2025 at 4:13 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
I describe how hospitals allegedly profit from COVID protocols—Remdesivir, ventilators, early discharges—while denying cheaper therapies like ivermectin and sidelining independent judgment. Based on @MidwesternDoc’s report, NIH guidelines punished alternatives and rewarded costly care, with doctors pressured or fired. Families fighting for care, bedside advocacy, and revisiting forgotten therapies are urged to reform the system and restore doctor autonomy.

@VigilantFox - Vigilant Fox 🦊

Hospitals murdered COVID patients. The more they killed, the more money they made. When the hospitals tested for COVID, they got paid more. When they admitted patients for COVID, they got paid more. When they put people on Remdesivir, they got paid more. And when they put loved ones on the ventilator, they got paid more. Meanwhile, family requests for ivermectin were denied, while their loved ones were placed on this death protocol instead. If you think this started with COVID, think again. Hospitals are still a death sentence for loved ones. Before the unexpected happens, learn how this death trap works to keep your loved ones safe. 🧵 THREAD

@VigilantFox - Vigilant Fox 🦊

The information in this thread comes from the work of medical researcher @MidwesternDoc. For all the sources and details, read the full report below. midwesterndoctor.com/p/what-makes-h…

@VigilantFox - Vigilant Fox 🦊

COVID pulled the curtain back for millions of people. On a mass scale, we learned that hospitals across the country followed standardized federal protocols—not individualized care. Things like Remdesivir and ventilators were pushed on dying patients. Ivermectin and other affordable therapies were banned. Even when doctors knew their patients would die, many refused to try alternatives. And families were left in the dark.

@VigilantFox - Vigilant Fox 🦊

Why did this happen? Because the NIH treatment guidelines (written by Fauci’s hand-picked panel) financially rewarded hospitals for using Remdesivir and ventilators, and punished them for using cheaper, off-patent drugs. Doctors who resisted were threatened and even fired. Hospitals that complied were paid handsomely. Even when their success rates treating COVID patients were abysmal.

@VigilantFox - Vigilant Fox 🦊

It’s common knowledge now. Remdesivir increased the death rate. Hospitals and doctors had to see it playing out in real time, but it stayed the “standard of care.” That’s because the committee behind those rules was stacked with people who had financial ties to Gilead, Remdesivir’s manufacturer. Nothing about the COVID protocols used by hospitals around the country and around the world was actually about saving patients.

@VigilantFox - Vigilant Fox 🦊

@MidwesternDoc The main cause of preventable hospital deaths isn’t illness itself, but blind obedience to “protocol.” When “protocols” replace thinking, patients die. It’s simple and it’s beyond tragic. This report by @MidwesternDoc lays out the case brilliantly: midwesterndoctor.com/p/what-makes-h…

@VigilantFox - Vigilant Fox 🦊

Desperate families had to sue hospitals for the right to give dying relatives ivermectin. In 80 court cases handled by attorney Ralph Lorigo: • 40 families won—38 of those patients survived. • 40 families lost—only 2 survived. Those numbers speak volumes. But hospitals still refused to change course.

@VigilantFox - Vigilant Fox 🦊

One whistleblower nurse secretly recorded New York hospital staff during COVID. Doctors openly admitted that they’d rather follow orders than try something that might save someone’s life. Let that sink in. It was a moment that exposed just how far medicine had fallen. Unfortunately, this attitude wasn’t unique to COVID.

Video Transcript AI Summary
The dialogue centers on treatments and outcomes for COVID-19, with concerns about what is being used and what might work. One participant remarks on the reluctance to use certain treatments that are successful worldwide, recounting a conversation with a doctor. Another asks what kinds of treatments are being tried, noting that some approaches “are coming out with different things that are in the testing phase.” A third person criticizes a platform they believe “kills more people than actually save,” and another agrees that “they don’t work anyway,” questioning the harm in trying alternatives when current efforts aren’t effective. A key exchange discusses expectations for patient survival. One person says, “I don’t expect any of these people to survive. Ninety percent of them would die,” while another adds that if patients are “already dying anyway,” it may be reasonable to try additional measures rather than do nothing. There is debate about whether trying unproven treatments is appropriate; one participant notes that without a scientific basis, extra attempts can make patients worse, while another concedes that they would try anything to save their life. The conversation then shifts to clinical presentations and treatment strategies. With COVID patients who cannot breathe, X-rays show “the lungs are white,” indicating affected lungs with very thick, white secretions. The question arises of what “white lung” means—whether it is mucus and coating that fill the lungs and impede oxygen transfer. In response, the discussion distinguishes between early-stage treatments (like hydroxychloroquine and zinc) and later-stage interventions. It is stated that once lungs are severely affected, certain proven treatments exist that have passed trials in Asia through Dr. Chang, described as a US-board-certified physician. Specifically, extremely high-dose IV vitamin C is claimed to be successful in treating patients, providing the lungs with antioxidant support to help expel the infection, alongside IV antibiotics to treat the infection while avoiding reliance on ventilation and sedation. There is a contrast drawn between approaches in different regions. The dialogue notes that high-dose IV vitamin C has passed three trials in Asia and is reported as effective, while in the speaker’s locale, there is hesitation or reluctance to adopt this method. The discussion ends with a remark about how some people might attribute success to “good genes,” implying a belief that genetics may influence susceptibility or outcomes, though this is stated rather than argued as a scientific conclusion. Overall, the conversation emphasizes that several participants are wary of conventional treatments, advocate for exploring high-dose IV vitamin C as a therapeutic option, and describe the characteristic radiographic and clinical features of severe COVID-19 lung involvement.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: I I mean, when you think about it, it's sick. It's the Speaker 1: same reason they won't use, like, other treatments that are being that are successful around the world. And I had a conversation with a doctor about this. Speaker 2: Are you guys doing, like, different sorts of, like, treatments? Because I know, like Speaker 3: Nothing works. Speaker 2: They have yeah. But, I mean, there's you know, they're coming out with different things that are in the testing phase. Speaker 3: The same thing they come with a platform and that kill more people than actually save. Uh-huh. So that's one. Speaker 1: And he said that they don't work anyway. And I told him, well, obviously, what you guys have going on here isn't working. So what's the harm in trying? Speaker 3: I don't expect any of these people to survive. Ninety percent of them would die. Speaker 2: I mean, it's just maintaining. So I figured if it's assumed they're gonna die anyway Yeah. Just not throw a few. Speaker 3: Well, it's you know? Yeah. I I don't know. That's that's always an issue in medicine whether you should just look into whether they're dying anywhere or not. I Speaker 0: But if you could find a cure Speaker 3: Yeah. I mean, like cure. So there's no antiviral therapy. The only way to do it is cure. But I there's no treatment, Speaker 2: I should say. Speaker 0: Re rephrase. Treatment. Speaker 3: You could treat it, but but, you know, it's you have to have some scientific basis for whether these things are working or not. They're throwing everything at them. You could make them worse. Speaker 2: Uh-huh. So Worse than death. Worse than death? Speaker 3: Well, we said ninety percent, maybe that ten percent maybe maybe they're two. I don't know. Speaker 2: Yeah. So Speaker 3: but, I mean, if there's no basis for it working, I mean, you wanna just try things just because. I mean Speaker 2: I would. Oh, I might. Yeah. Save my life. Yeah. Hell yeah. Speaker 4: So with these actual COVID patients, they they present by not really being able to breathe. Maybe they've, as you say, they've probably waited too long. They're not able to breathe, and some of that's anxiety. And and what else so what else do they what how how else do they present? Speaker 0: So their lungs, if you look at their X Speaker 1: rays, you can immediately see that these patients are affected by COVID because they're white. Their lungs are white. And the secretions are really, really thick, and white. And that's what Speaker 0: the the photo or the X-ray of these lungs look like. Speaker 4: And what so what does a white lung look mean? What is that? Is that just is that mucus Speaker 0: in the lung? It's coated. It's almost like their lungs are coated. Speaker 4: So so that makes it hard to obviously transfer oxygen into the bloodstream. And so okay. So they've got very mucousy lungs. And how how do you deal with that? Is that what hydroxychloroquine and zinc do? Or Speaker 1: I mean, those treatments are for beginning stages. Speaker 0: Like, once Speaker 1: you get to the stage where your lungs are looking like that and you're having a lot of trouble breathing, there are proven treatments that have passed, like, three trials in Asia through Doctor. Chang. He's a US board certified physician. Is this, like, extremely high dose IV vitamin c. He's successfully treating people with that. And what that's doing is it's giving your body, essentially your lungs, like, the power, the antioxidant power to kick it out Speaker 3: Mhmm. Speaker 1: While you can be getting IV antibiotics to be treating this and getting rid of it. But they don't wanna have anything to do with it here. What they wanna do is just throw them on a vent and sedate them. Speaker 2: Yeah. Have you done the high dose IV vitamin c that's successful in Asia? Speaker 3: Work. Do you need other stuff? There's no Speaker 2: But it Speaker 3: is basic for vitamin c if you're working here. Speaker 2: And then Speaker 0: Well, the doctor Chang, he was the Speaker 2: one that it went through Speaker 0: the the that high dose. I'm talking super high dose IV vitamin c. That's super antioxidants. Helps your body fight that. Speaker 2: Yeah. Speaker 0: It passed three three trials, and it's being effective. It's just weird how, like, Speaker 3: good jeans. If you're not getting sick, I don't think it's time why you didn't see. I mean, just a good jeans.

@VigilantFox - Vigilant Fox 🦊

Well before the pandemic, this shift was already underway. Medicine was moving away from the art of healing toward algorithmic obedience and billing codes. In this new world of medicine, doctors are trained to follow protocols, not question them. Independent judgment is punished. Bureaucratic compliance is rewarded.

@VigilantFox - Vigilant Fox 🦊

@MidwesternDoc Hospitals have become more dangerous than the diseases they treat. @MidwesternDoc is shining a light on how—and what it’ll take to fix it. Read the full report. midwesterndoctor.com/p/what-makes-h…

@VigilantFox - Vigilant Fox 🦊

Hospitals are no longer run by doctors, but by corporate administrators obsessed with metrics. When it comes to health and medical care, some metrics make sense. For instance, things like infection rates make sense to track. Others are meaningless (like vaccination rates), yet they determine how much Medicare reimburses hospitals. Doctors are trained and incentivized to chase numbers instead of outcomes.

@VigilantFox - Vigilant Fox 🦊

Right now, the U.S. spends more on healthcare than any other equally wealthy nation—two to four times as much—yet has the worst outcomes. In 1900, healthcare cost 0.25% of GDP. Now, it’s a monstrous industry built to serve investors, not patients. Profit has replaced purpose. It’s profit over people to an extreme. And most people who end up in a hospital aren’t prepared for it.

@VigilantFox - Vigilant Fox 🦊

Hospitals are financially rewarded for shorter stays, not successful recoveries. Read that again. Medicare and JHACO accreditation require the average hospital stay to be under 96 hours. Doctors are pressured to discharge patients early. And may be reprimanded when they don’t. Patients who can’t recover fast enough are pushed toward palliative care or even hospice. That should make everyone very, very angry.

@VigilantFox - Vigilant Fox 🦊

This rule is literally killing people. That’s not a stretch. Frailer patients often can’t handle the same aggressive drug doses used on stronger ones. They need slower, gentler care for success—but that obviously takes time. Hospitals and their doctors don’t have time. They have quotas.

@VigilantFox - Vigilant Fox 🦊

Take congestive heart failure, for example. Aggressive fluid-draining over two days works for some strong and otherwise healthy patients. But in weaker ones, that level of aggression can cause kidney failure or death. A slower, 4–5 day approach saves lives. There’s no question. But hospitals don’t care. They push patients through like cattle on a conveyor belt.

@VigilantFox - Vigilant Fox 🦊

When those patients who need more care and a slower pace inevitably decline, families are told: “There’s nothing more we can do.” Then comes the morphine drip. The “comfort care.” The hospice transfer. But there is more they can do. There’s a lot more they could have done. Instead, they choose systematized euthanasia. And it’s disguised as efficiency. It’s disgusting.

@VigilantFox - Vigilant Fox 🦊

Because hospitals want empty beds, they invest in social workers to handle discharges, not nurses to handle needed care. If every floor had just a couple more nurses, outcomes would improve dramatically. But administrators won’t pay for that, because it doesn’t boost metrics—at least not the ones they’re interested in measuring.

@VigilantFox - Vigilant Fox 🦊

This obsession with early discharge actually costs more. Patients leave before they’ve healed and often celebrate it, thinking that, despite how they feel, they must be strong enough to go home. But they bounce back to the hospital for readmission—starting a fatal cycle that drains money and lives. Quality analysts inside the system see the data. It’s so obvious. But they’re ignored.

@VigilantFox - Vigilant Fox 🦊

It’s the same logic that shaped Obamacare. Policies aimed to reduce end-of-life costs by denying costly care to people at the end of their lives. Critics called the practice death panels. Right now, about one-fourth of all medical spending happens in the final year of life. Bureaucrats are always trying to shrink that number. How? By shrinking life itself.

@VigilantFox - Vigilant Fox 🦊

@MidwesternDoc Modern doctors are trained not to think. They’re taught to follow the playbook, call for consults, and “manage expectations.” We put them on a pedestal, but they’ve become mindless drones with a really expensive education.

@VigilantFox - Vigilant Fox 🦊

Hospital doctors today are taught to accept death, not prevent it. Of course, death is inevitable, but there’s often a fairly wide spectrum between entering the hospital and leaving via the morgue. Death need not be an option for many people who unfortunately unnecessarily reach that outcome.

@VigilantFox - Vigilant Fox 🦊

@MidwesternDoc To Make America Healthy Again, we need to retrain doctors to think critically and outside of the box, tailor treatment to the unique patient before them, listen to patients and their families, and break free from bureaucratic pressure. It’s not impossible.

@VigilantFox - Vigilant Fox 🦊

Emergencies happen. Despite our best efforts, we and the people we love sometimes end up in the hospital. So how can families protect themselves? Find out which hospitals and doctors near you have better outcomes. When someone you love is hospitalized, stay at the bedside 24/7 as an advocate. Engage staff calmly—build a trusting relationship, not confrontation. And as always, treat at home with proper medical support whenever possible.

@VigilantFox - Vigilant Fox 🦊

@MidwesternDoc During COVID, countless families secretly gave “unapproved” treatments like ivermectin or vitamins—and their loved ones survived. Those who trusted the system often didn’t. It was tragic. Sometimes saving a life means defying the rules.

@VigilantFox - Vigilant Fox 🦊

There are still good doctors hidden within hospitals—the ones who think, question, problem solve, get creative, talk to their patients, and refuse to abandon the art of medicine. Pierre Kory once analyzed ICU records and found massive differences in survival depending on which doctor you got. In medicine, who treats you matters more than where you are. That shouldn’t be the case. But it is.

@VigilantFox - Vigilant Fox 🦊

Now imagine if hospitals revived the therapies that once worked—the ones bureaucrats buried. Things like ultraviolet blood irradiation, DMSO, and high-dose IV vitamin C for sepsis (the #1 killer in hospitals). Each could save thousands. Yet all were erased to protect the pharmaceutical monopoly.

@VigilantFox - Vigilant Fox 🦊

@MidwesternDoc The most effective medical intervention of COVID wasn’t a drug. It was suing the hospital. 38 lived. 2 didn’t. It shouldn’t be that way, but it is. Here’s what that says about our system: midwesterndoctor.com/p/what-makes-h…

@VigilantFox - Vigilant Fox 🦊

@MidwesternDoc If RFK Jr. follows through on reform, the quickest way we can improve outcomes is hospital trials of these forgotten therapies—and restoring doctor autonomy. Healing must come before profit. Doctors must not be punished for trying to save lives.

@VigilantFox - Vigilant Fox 🦊

@MidwesternDoc Hospitals don’t have to be where you go to die. But as long as money dictates medicine, they will be. The cure isn’t another regulation or billion-dollar drug—it’s remembering what healing actually means and giving the power to heal back to doctors.

@VigilantFox - Vigilant Fox 🦊

@MidwesternDoc Thanks for reading! This information was based on a report originally published by @MidwesternDoc. Key details were streamlined and editorialized for clarity and impact. Read the original report here. https://www.midwesterndoctor.com/p/what-makes-hospitals-so-deadly-and

What Makes Hospitals So Deadly and How Can We Fix It? November's Open Thread midwesterndoctor.com

@VigilantFox - Vigilant Fox 🦊

@MidwesternDoc For a deeper dive into what modern medicine has overlooked—or intentionally buried—check out these other eye-opening reports by @MidwesternDoc. The Great Alzheimer’s Scam and The Proven Cures They’ve Buried for Billions https://www.midwesterndoctor.com/p/the-great-alzheimers-scam-and-the

The Great Alzheimer's Scam and The Proven Cures They've Buried for Billions Decades of neglect in understanding the actual causes of dementia have transformed it into one of the most costly diseases in existence. midwesterndoctor.com
Saved - February 18, 2026 at 2:49 AM

@DianaT192 - Diana PATRIOTS ARE UNITED❤️🇺🇸❤️🙏

This nurse tells the truths about our horrible medical system ! https://t.co/qgR0d2ERlo

Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0 announces that they are retiring tomorrow, the last day of ten years working in a hospital, and shares key messages they believe others in the field should know. They reiterate their guidance: do not put your name on the donor registry, even though you can donate and share your life or organs; they note that their prior video with this point was taken down, but they are repeating it. They express strong, conspiratorial concerns about food safety, claiming they are being harmed by what is put in food because of a for-profit health care system aimed at making people sick to drive health-care spending. They pose questions about how cancer, diabetes, and other diseases are caused, attributing these to diet and processed foods, and urge stopping processed foods. They urge listeners to stop vaping and state a personal view that cigarettes might be a better option than vaping. They describe cases of people with pneumothorax resulting from vaping cartridges being used too aggressively, and warn that vaping can send someone to an early grave. They also suggest a cynical view about aging and social security, implying society does not want people to reach old age for financial reasons, and question what defense people have in the country, framing life as a basic wish to live without being obstructed. They advise always getting a second opinion after any medical diagnosis, emphasizing that doctors can be fallible and that one should seek multiple opinions to protect oneself. Despite these warnings, Speaker 0 expresses gratitude for the field of medicine, noting pride in learning, meeting amazing people, and the daily opportunity to help others. They describe waking up every day to assist someone as filling their heart and state a hope that more medical people feel the same. The address ends on a personal note about retirement, with Speaker 0 asking the audience to share what their day looks like as they retire the next day.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: So I am lucky enough to say that I'm retiring tomorrow. Tomorrow is my last day of my ten years of working in a hospital, and I'm gonna share with you some things that I really think you guys need to to know as somebody who's been doing this a hot minute. My other video got kinda taken down, but I'm gonna say it again. Do not put your name on the registry. Okay? You can donate, share your life, absolutely, share your organs, but do not put your name on the donor registry. They took down that video, so I'm gonna kinda stuff it in here and see if we can keep going and maybe it'll slide. They are trying to kill us with our food. They are. I'm sorry. I've been seeing 20 year olds who are coming in with cardiac problems. It's not just the food, the energy drinks, the vaping, all of those things, guys. You know that they're testing the bread and the candies to see what kind of poison they're putting in it. And the reason they're putting poison in our food is because we have a for profit health care system. They are trying to make us sick so that we spend our money in health care. How do you get cancer? How do you get any of these diseases? Diabetes? It's all on what you put in your body. We have to stop eating processed foods. Please stop vaping. Stop vaping. Cigarettes are, I think, better point than vaping. We were seeing people coming in with pneumos because they try and hit that cartridge too hard and they actually pop a lung. You have to quit vaping. That will send you to an early grave. And they don't want us to get older because we're paying into social security, right? And they don't want us to hit the age where we actually will take it. What defense do we have at this point in this country? All we're trying to do is just live our lives. Always get a second opinion. I know, anytime a doctor or anyone diagnoses you with anything, always get a second opinion. They might be the highest, best doctor in the thing, always get a second, maybe even third opinion. Medical people are humans and they make mistakes. Please protect yourself. I love medicine and I feel very grateful to have been able to work in this field. And I've learned so many things, and I've met so many amazing people. I'm really grateful that I got to go and wake up every day and help someone. That fills my heart, and that's why I do this. And I hope that more medical people feel the same way still. Have a great day, guys. I'm retiring tomorrow. What's your day?
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