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The speaker discovered a nursing home was giving her unauthorized sedative pills, leading to her removal. The facility then gave her an inappropriate antipsychotic drug, claiming she had schizophrenia. A doctor warns of the dangers of unnecessary antipsychotic use in nursing homes, which can increase the risk of cardiac issues and falls. The misuse of these drugs in nursing homes has raised concerns due to the serious health risks they pose.

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The CDC and NVSS changed death certificate reporting in violation of federal law. Two days later, the HHS increased reimbursement for hospitals and doctors who listed everything as COVID, making it the most lucrative diagnosis. There are reports of patients being starved and denied water, possibly to increase the use of Remdesivir. The range of fraudulent death certificates is estimated to be between 88.6% and 94.0%. Reimbursement for a diabetic patient labeled as COVID is 3 to 6 times higher. Hospitals had to go along with this to stay in business. Doctors who spoke up were threatened with license revocation and faced censorship. This is seen as collusion and murder for profit.

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BlackRock is reportedly suing UnitedHealth, its largest shareholder, for providing "too much care" to patients after CEO Brian Thompson's murder. The lawsuit alleges UnitedHealth, spooked by public outcry over claim denials, approved more treatments, misleading investors by not clarifying how this would impact profits. BlackRock claims UnitedHealth's shift towards honoring insurance contracts cuts into profits, devaluing their stake. Shareholders allege UnitedHealth inflated its stock price by sticking to old forecasts despite public anger and a Senate report on claim denials. UnitedHealth shares fell 22.4% after the insurer cut its 2025 profit forecast, citing higher costs in its Medicare business. The speaker connects this to broader issues of BlackRock's involvement in destructive initiatives, such as build-to-rent schemes and private equity takeovers, advocating for supporting local businesses and investing in gold and silver as safe haven assets.

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New developments in the UnitedHealth CEO saga reveal troubling aspects of their physician contracts. A specific clause states that whether a treatment is covered should not determine if it's provided, implying that healthcare professionals should offer necessary care regardless of insurance coverage. This shifts responsibility from the insurance company to the provider, potentially leaving them liable for care that may not be reimbursed. It's shocking that such a clause exists, and there seems to be a lack of regulatory scrutiny, such as class action lawsuits or investigations by agencies like the FTC or SEC. This situation raises significant concerns about accountability in healthcare. What are your thoughts? Leave a comment below.

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The speaker claims that unvaccinated individuals entering hospitals were deliberately killed. According to the speaker, every unvaccinated person they interviewed who went to the hospital reported not receiving the same treatments as vaccinated patients. Instead, they were allegedly given remdesivir, ventilation, and fentanyl, leading to their deaths. Another speaker adds that hospitals had financial incentives to produce COVID-related deaths, allegedly receiving up to $500,000 per death in California. The first speaker agrees, stating that hospital coders and whistleblowers revealed that patients were repeatedly tested for COVID until a positive result was obtained, triggering payments. They claim hospitals received additional payments for each drug and piece of equipment used, totaling over $500,000 per person. One person allegedly said their daughter was worth more dead than alive.

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There's a lot of discussion about the UnitedHealthcare CEO being shot, with media outlets claiming there was no motive. However, it's noteworthy that he was scheduled to testify against Nancy Pelosi regarding insider trading just days later. The media is not highlighting this connection.

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Unvaccinated patients entering the hospital reported being treated differently based on their vaccination status. Those who had not received the COVID-19 shot were quickly given treatments like remdesivir and placed on ventilators, leading to a high mortality rate. There are claims that hospitals had financial incentives to classify deaths as COVID-related, with some receiving substantial payments for each case. Whistleblowers from within the healthcare system indicated that staff were pressured to ensure positive COVID tests to secure funding. The financial motives behind these practices raised serious ethical concerns, with one individual stating that their loved one was valued more dead than alive due to these incentives.

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Eighteen healthcare workers were arrested at Colonial Heights Rehab and Nursing Center in Virginia after a patient death. The state responded to the death of a 78-year-old resident and arrested the employees, including a nurse and the administrator, as they arrived for work. The charges include seven counts of felony abuse and neglect of a vulnerable adult, two counts of misdemeanor abuse and neglect of a vulnerable adult, two counts of obstruction, and 27 counts of falsifying patient records.

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Patients are dying not from COVID, but from treatments like remdesivir causing organ failure. One person's mother died after being given remdesivir against their wishes, leading to organ shutdown. There was a financial incentive for hospitals to admit patients and put them on ventilators, resulting in unnecessary treatments and deaths.

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The transcript presents a long-form exposé-style investigation into what the speakers describe as widespread fraud in California’s caregiving sectors, focusing on hospice, home health care, and daycares, with emphasis on Los Angeles and Van Nuys. - Opening claim and context: - Speaker 0 asks why there is a thousand percent increase in hospice care in Los Angeles and whether paperwork exists to enroll a child named Joey. They claim California has the largest fraud risk, with Medi-Cal spending rising from 2022 to 2026 (from $108 billion to a proposed $222 billion) while population growth hasn’t matched spending growth. They allege “one out of every $10 of home health care in America is spent in Los Angeles.” They argue government-funded daycare programs are “filled with violations,” and that fraud could be “hundreds of billions of dollars.” - Daycare fraud focus: - The video claims daycares are used to receive government money (CalWORKS) by enrolling children on paper while not having real enrollments. They show various locations and describe conditions as suspicious or unsafe (graffiti, boarded-up buildings, dumpsters, a homeless person near a daycare). - Medina Learning Center is described as “now enrolling,” with “as their backup facility, the UMI Learning Center,” which was “convicted in federal court in 2024 of having a 150 ghost kids.” They seek paperwork to enroll a child named Joey. - Hayden Sarah Family Child Care is described as having “14 children enrolled” per state records but “zero present” when inspectors arrived; the facility roster and missing children records are cited as violations. - Jama Shukri Family Childcare is described as a daycare located in an apartment building (one-bedroom, eight capacity) with two children outside and no adult visible, raising concerns about supervision. - The video notes California allocates $6 billion to childcare, “over 39,000 facilities,” with a state audit error rate of 1.6%, and conservative estimates suggest “upwards of a $100,000,000 in fraud lost each and every single year.” - A recurring theme is “shell registrations” and unregistered CMS (Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services) entities; seven of the four entities shown have “zero SMS data,” implying shell companies or fraud networks possibly connected to Armenian/Russian gangs. - Hospice and home health care fraud focus: - The group shifts to Van Nuys, California, claiming “home health care and hospice fraud” is pervasive there; they assert “one out of every $10 that goes towards home health care in the United States goes to a business here in LA.” They visit numerous hospice centers in a single plaza, naming Gardens of Angels Hospice and Blossom Hospice as examples of high billing with few services performed (e.g., Gardens of Angels: “billed $4,800,000 per beneficiary,” “$5,807 per claim,” 28.6 claims per patient, only two codes). Blossom Hospice is described as “$3,400,000” billed with “$927 per claim,” again with only one code and minimal services. - They claim “seven of the four entities have zero SMS data” and label some facilities as shell registrations; some locations appear “registering for hospice but not actually providing care,” with claims of “shell buildings” or storefronts that are empty or only used for billing. - The video notes the presence of luxury cars at these sites (Mercedes, Teslas, BMWs, a Cybertruck) and references a pattern of wealthy vehicles associated with hospice sites, suggesting profits from taxpayers’ dollars. - Miracle Healing Hospice is described as having billed $1,300,000 in 2023 with 38 beneficiaries: “$32,000 per beneficiary,” but the location was reported as an empty building when visited. - The presenters also describe finding a location that “received $19,000,000” over the past years for Healthy Life Adult Daycare, yet the building appears dilapidated and shows no adults present during visits. Phone lines and mailboxes are reported as failing to provide information or contacts. - Interviews and expert commentary: - A professional in the medical industry is interviewed to explain how fraud could occur: someone could obtain a Medicare number and use it to bill Medicare for hospice services; fraudsters reportedly can open a hospice license without being a physician, then bill the system and receive payments quickly. - The interview suggests Medicare numbers can be stolen or purchased; the speaker emphasizes that “anybody can get a hospice license,” and that the process enables easy billings to Medicare/Medicaid. - A participant describes a trend of these facilities opening and billing, with the implication that people exploit the system for swift returns. - Overall framing and conclusions presented: - The speakers argue that there is a thousand percent increase in hospice openings in California, a surge in fraudulent activity across daycares and hospice/hom e health facilities, and that tax dollars are funding these entities with little-to-no accountability. They juxtapose luxury cars and upscale appearances with empty or non-operational facilities to illustrate alleged misappropriation of funds. They advocate scrutiny, data-backed investigation, and accountability for what they describe as widespread fraud affecting taxpayers and vulnerable populations. - Closing sentiments: - The narrative closes with a call to action against fraud, emphasizing the impact on ordinary Americans who face rising costs and debt, and claiming that exposing fraud is essential to protecting taxpayer dollars and national financial health.

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Pharmaceutical companies paid $1.06 billion to reviewers at major medical journals, allegedly corrupting the peer review process. Studies from the CDC, FDA, and Pfizer purportedly revealed major breaches in COVID-19 vaccine safety signals during pregnancy, but these findings were allegedly ignored. Independent researchers who published findings contradicting pharmaceutical industry narratives faced persecution, censorship, and threats to their medical licenses and board certifications. The speaker claims this happened to them personally.

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A recent study suggests that Pfizer may have excluded known deaths in the vaccine arm of its clinical trial from its data filing with the FDA in 2020. The study also found that trial subjects vaccinated with Pfizer's COVID-19 vaccine experienced a significant increase in cardiovascular deaths compared to placebo controls. This information was not disclosed by Pfizer when the FDA was evaluating the vaccine for emergency use. Additionally, researchers identified instances where Pfizer attributed potential vaccine-associated deaths to other causes, undermining vaccine safety data. The data presented to the FDA prior to the authorization of Pfizer's vaccine did not include all the deaths that occurred during the trial. The speaker raises concerns about the prioritization of profit over lives and warns against trusting Big Pharma.

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Speaker 1 reveals that Bear Corporation knowingly sold medication infected with the AIDS virus. They pulled the product from the US market and dumped it in France, Europe, Asia, and Latin America to make a profit. Shockingly, no corporate executives have been indicted or investigated by the US Justice Department. The FDA allowed this to happen, resulting in the deaths of thousands of innocent hemophiliacs and their family members. The government is turning a blind eye to the situation.

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The speaker discusses the numerous unethical practices of Johnson and Johnson, a company that has faced lawsuits for fraud, bribery, and deceptive marketing. They specifically mention the issue of asbestos in talcum powder, which the company knew about but failed to address. The speaker also mentions a case involving a pharmaceutical called factor 8, which was infected with HIV and caused deaths. They criticize Johnson and Johnson for declaring bankruptcy to avoid liability. The speaker concludes by stating that Congress allows such behavior to continue.

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Pharmaceutical companies like Merck, Sanofi, Pfizer, and Glaxo have paid billions in penalties for dishonest practices, resulting in harm and deaths. The opioid crisis and Vioxx are examples of collusion between pharma and regulators, leading to thousands of deaths. Regulatory agencies have become puppets for the industry, depriving the public of informed consent.

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The individual under investigation by the DOJ and SEC for $15.1 million in insider trading also paid $22 million in ransomware due to inadequate security in the healthcare sector. A lawsuit against UnitedHealthcare claims the company knowingly used faulty artificial intelligence to deny legitimate claims, prioritizing profitability. This AI tool, with a 90% inaccuracy rate, particularly affected elderly individuals in care homes, forcing them to liquidate assets for survival. This situation reveals a troubling side of UnitedHealthcare, suggesting a deliberate strategy that goes beyond typical corporate profit motives.

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A health insurance CEO was murdered, sparking a surprising reaction among younger people, with 41% expressing support. This reflects a deep-seated anger towards insurance companies, which many believe contribute to America's chronic disease crisis by prioritizing profits over patient care. The discussion highlights the profit-driven nature of health insurance, particularly through pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs), which inflate drug prices and create barriers to necessary care. The system favors medication over preventative measures, leading to widespread chronic illness. Advocates emphasize the need for a shift towards proactive healthcare that focuses on prevention and transparency, rather than a reliance on prescription drugs. The conversation underscores the urgent need for reform in the healthcare system to prioritize patient well-being over corporate profits.

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Patients are being harmed and dying due to gross negligence in medical care. Examples include incorrect intubation, inappropriate defibrillation on stable patients, and mismanagement of blood transfusions. Staff are failing to provide basic care, such as monitoring vital signs and addressing acidotic blood levels, leading to preventable deaths. Despite being aware of these issues, management and other staff are unresponsive, dismissing concerns about patient safety. There’s a lack of accountability, with patients often receiving inadequate treatment, particularly in a facility serving marginalized communities. The situation is dire, and there is a desperate need for intervention to prevent further loss of life.

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I worked in the Medicare department at UnitedHealthcare for nearly 10 years and witnessed shocking events. A colleague was terminated, then committed a violent act, yet the company offered no increased security or support, only threats against speaking to the media. Women's safety was disregarded; I faced harassment from my trainer, who was not punished but promoted. I dealt with a threatening caller, and despite my distress, I was reprimanded for disconnecting the call. Drug use among employees was rampant, and management ignored serious incidents, like an attempted abduction outside the office. When I helped a caller find affordable medication, I was punished for going against company policy. My relationship with my boss led to retaliation, with management closely monitoring my attendance. The environment was toxic, with many employees relying on substances to cope. There are many more troubling stories to share about this company.

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The speakers discuss a concerning situation in a hospital where patients are being given unnecessary medications to hasten their death. One nurse shares her experience of witnessing this practice and how it made her more vigilant about patient safety. The conversation also touches on the denial of certain treatments and the financial incentives for hospitals to label patients as COVID cases and potentially profit from their deaths. The speakers raise questions about the coordination and ethics behind these practices.

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UnitedHealthcare hired Clairlocks, a firm known to threaten journalists. Doctor Elizabeth Potter publicly called out health insurance, going viral after she stepped out of surgery to deal with a United rep. Potter alleges UnitedHealthcare is retaliating against her, potentially bankrupting Redbud Surgery Center, which she opened in 2024 to reconstruct living breast tissue using patients’ own skin and fat. The center is not in network with them. Potter says United's communication stopped after her viral video. She says being out of network would be 'a huge deal' and financially devastating, and that 'they demanded she take down her viral video and apologize.' United claims the decision came before the video. The story notes other actions against media: The New York Times, The Guardian, and Bill Ackman; Potter raised over $500,000 to keep Redbud open.

Breaking Points

UnitedHealthcare Whistleblower: Claim Denial 'QUOTAS' Exist
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A whistleblower from United Healthcare claims employees felt pressured to deny claims to meet quotas, similar to police ticket quotas. This aligns with reports of high denial rates at United Health Group and a lawsuit alleging a faulty AI algorithm for claims denial. The political landscape is shifting, with some bipartisan support for reforms targeting pharmacy benefit managers, seen as unnecessary middlemen driving up drug costs. Meanwhile, New York Governor Kathy Hochul's response to a CEO's murder includes creating a crisis hotline for executives, highlighting priorities that favor corporate interests. Healthcare has surged as a top issue for Americans, reflecting a growing demand for reform, which has been largely neglected by political leaders.

Keeping It Real

Luigi Mangione's Secret Motives EXPOSED and the Dark Side of Healthcare Power
Guests: Brigham Buhler
reSee.it Podcast Summary
The episode centers on the escalating outcry over healthcare’s structural failures, catalyzed by the case of Luigi Mangione and the broader critique of United Healthcare’s leadership. Brigham Feler, founder of Ways to Well, argues that the crisis is less about individual villains and more about a system that monetizes illness through opaque pricing, aggressive insurance practices, and monopolistic control by Pharmacy Benefit Managers and big insurers. He details how long approval times for surgeries like spinal procedures forces patients toward opioids, creates dependency, and exposes chronic pain patients to a brutal, dehumanizing process that prioritizes profitability over healing. Feler connects the patient experience to high-level incentives and incentives in the pharmaceutical and insurance sectors. He accuses United Healthcare of deploying AI denial programs that rejected up to 90% of claims, notes a DOJ probe into monopoly practices, and highlights how stock-driven decisions can deprioritize patient welfare. The conversation expands into the mechanics of price manipulation— rebates, middlemen, spread pricing, and the influence of PBMs owned by the major insurers—arguing that these schemes drive up costs for individuals, employers, and taxpayers while masking profits behind complex, opaque billing. The guests discuss real-world consequences: delayed care, debt, and bankruptcy amid a system that discourages preventative measures and suppresses alternative, lower-cost care models. The dialogue culminates in a practical call to action: regain sovereignty over health through cash-pay clinics and proactive, predictive care that looks “under the hood” at more than a handful of biomarkers. The hosts advocate for a shift away from sick-care to prevention, critique the incentives that discourage comprehensive testing, and present Ways to Well as a model aiming to democratize access to thorough blood work, personalized nutrition, and AI-assisted health planning. The episode closes on an urgent reminder that meaningful reform will require individuals seeking better care, as well as broader changes to how drugs, doctors, and insurers interact in a system widely perceived as prioritizing profits over people.

Breaking Points

Bill Burr GOES OFF On United CEO Killing
reSee.it Podcast Summary
The cultural reaction to the CEO's murder has been significant, with comedian Bill Burr labeling him a "gangster" amid revelations of a $121 million lawsuit against him and his associates. Following the incident, healthcare companies have removed executive bios due to fears of targeting, and there was a surge in interest in executive protection. Anthem Healthcare planned to deny claims if surgeries exceeded anesthesia time limits but reversed the decision after public backlash. The profit-driven motives of health insurers lead to care denial, exacerbating issues within the U.S. healthcare system. United Health Group's CEO advised employees to avoid media engagement amid scrutiny. The reaction to the CEO's death highlights widespread dissatisfaction with healthcare executives profiting from patient suffering.

Breaking Points

Assassin GUNS DOWN Health Insurance CEO In Apparent Retribution Attack
reSee.it Podcast Summary
Good morning, everyone. Today’s show covers several major topics, starting with the murder of the CEO of United Healthcare in Midtown Manhattan, which is under investigation. Surveillance footage shows the suspect executing a premeditated attack before fleeing on a bike. The NYPD is seeking public assistance, offering a $10,000 reward for information. In political news, Trump is reportedly filling his cabinet with billionaires, while Rah Emanuel is making controversial comments about his future in the Democratic Party. Emanuel Macron's government has collapsed, leading to uncertainty in France. Biden is considering pardons for various officials, including Liz Cheney. The reaction to the CEO's murder has sparked widespread discussion online, with many expressing anger towards the healthcare system, particularly regarding United Healthcare's high claim denial rates. The words "deny, defend, and depose," found on shell casings, suggest a motive linked to the insurance industry. This incident has drawn parallels to historical acts of violence against powerful figures, highlighting deep-seated frustrations with the healthcare system and its impact on American lives.
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