TruthArchive.ai - Related Video Feed

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker discusses the relationship between profits and cancer treatment in the United States. They mention a study that found chemotherapy to be ineffective 97% of the time, but it is still used because doctors profit from it. The speaker explains how doctors receive financial incentives for prescribing chemotherapy drugs. They argue that the pharmaceutical industry has control over cancer treatment and that the medical system prioritizes drugs and surgery over alternative approaches. The speaker suggests that funding for cancer research should also go towards nutritional, homeopathic, acupuncture, and naturopathic research. They criticize the for-profit nature of the medical industry and its impact on patient outcomes.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
I was struck by how many people around me have died or deteriorated since 2020, and I feel like something happened to their immune systems. My old dears told me my stepdad has prostate cancer that’s spread throughout his body. He’s in his fifties, eleven years younger than my mum. They did 22 biopsies. I’m skeptical about sticking a needle into a tumor and pulling it out through surrounding tissue without encouraging spread, and I’m not convinced it would help. McGran went about two weeks after her third [dose/incident], and something happened to her bowels; they don’t really know what. Starvation was the main cause on her death certificate. What a brutal way to go in this day and age. My grandad died three months after his third cancer diagnosis, pancreatic cancer—fucking aggressive. I stayed with him as he went. A mate of my old man, down the boozer, had lung cancer and died about two weeks after his second; another aggressive form. The landlord and my old man’s mate in the pub had a heart attack and dropped dead on the floor in the middle of the pub. People said it wasn’t that; he was already fucked, weren’t he? At least three or four other wider family members have died within three or four months of a cancer diagnosis. My cousin has blood in his sinuses and says it started coming on after his third [dose/incident]. Friends, mums, dads, friends, grandparents—I’m hearing about them all the time. I had just finished studying drug design and development as part of my medical sciences degree at UCL, and I remember thinking that it takes twenty years to develop a drug. I went straight to the clinical trial reports, AstraZeneca and Pfizer, downloaded the PDFs, and read them cover to cover. I realized this is a load of bollocks. I sent it to all my close family and friends and said, “watch out.” None of them opened the message, let alone took notice. The only people who did were my dad, my sister, and my brother-in-law. Lo and behold, the four of us are healthy as a horse and haven’t had so much as a sniffle since them lots started getting on it. It breaks me fucking heart. As much as I had mentally prepared myself for this over the last five years, it’s still absolutely brutal to watch my mum, stepdad, close family, and friends leave prematurely because they fucking fell for it.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Chemotherapie werkt maar in 30 tot 40 procent van de gevallen, en soms is het zo zwaar dat patiënten er vroegtijdig mee moeten stoppen. De farmaceutische industrie zou mee moeten betalen aan onderzoek om te bepalen of iemand baat heeft bij chemotherapie. We accepteren dat chemotherapie voor 20 tot 30 procent van de mensen werkt, maar 70 tot 80 procent wordt er alleen maar doodziek van. Als dokter is dit frustrerend. We moeten proberen hier iets aan te doen. Bij alvleesklierkanker overlijdt het merendeel van de patiënten binnen afzienbare tijd, vaak binnen 6 weken tot 3 maanden, gemiddeld een half jaar. 80 procent van de patiënten kan niet geopereerd worden en krijgt chemotherapie, terwijl dit maar voor een beperkt aantal werkt. Een grote groep krijgt chemotherapie voor niks. Ik ben verplicht te kijken of we dit anders kunnen aanpakken. **Translation:** Chemotherapy only works in 30 to 40 percent of cases, and sometimes it is so severe that patients have to stop early. The pharmaceutical industry should contribute to research to determine whether someone benefits from chemotherapy. We accept that chemotherapy works for 20 to 30 percent of people, but 70 to 80 percent only get sick from it. As a doctor, this is frustrating. We must try to do something about this. With pancreatic cancer, the majority of patients die within a foreseeable time, often within 6 weeks to 3 months, on average half a year. 80 percent of patients cannot be operated on and receive chemotherapy, while this only works for a limited number. A large group receives chemotherapy for nothing. I am obliged to see if we can tackle this differently.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
I'm watching patients get murdered. They aren't dying from COVID. They are medically mismanaging patients, and nobody cares. I've seen an anesthesiologist incorrectly intubate a patient, a resident defibrillate a patient with bradycardia, a nurse put an NG tube into someone's lungs, and another nurse give a deadly dose of insulin. Basic standards of care are not being met, like replacing blood in patients who desperately need it. They let patients rot on vents, and residents undo the work of day shifts by maxing out sedation. No one assesses patients properly, and they let them get acidotic until their kidneys shut down. I've seen a doctor rupture a subclavian vein and a patient bleed to death, and another patient choke on his own blood because of an incorrectly placed ET tube. These are minorities in the hood, and nobody cares. I need help to save these people.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
I am literally telling you that they're murdering these people, and nobody will listen to me. These people aren't dying from COVID. They don't care what is happening to these people. They don't. I'm literally coming here every day and watching them kill them. It's like going in the fucking twilight zone. Like, everyone here is okay with this. The only way I can kind of put this into context for everybody is an extreme example: He's like, if we were in Nazi Germany and they were taking the Jews to go put them in a gas chamber, I'm the one like, they're saying, hey. This is not good. This is bad. We should not be doing this. And then everyone tells me, hang in there. You're doing a great job. You can't save everybody. But these people aren't dying from COVID. Let me give you several examples here. An anesthesiologist intubated the patient’s right bronchus and of a patient, and they couldn't get the stats up. For about five hours, we were waiting on a chest x-ray to confirm that the placement was wrong. In the meantime, while we're waiting for that, and we've told the anesthesiologist that it was placed wrong because, like, literally only one side of his fucking chest is inflating, he dies. A patient had a heart rate of 40, and the resident starts doing chest compressions on him, which is not what you do. You just externally pace them or you give him some atropine. Then I run in there to stop him from doing chest compressions on somebody with the fucking pulse. And then he decides to push epi. He throws some pads on him to defibrillate the guy in bradycardia. Okay? He has a heart rate of 40 and a stable, you know, bradycardic rhythm. We just need to give him, like, somatropine and pace him. He fucking defibrillates him and kills him. I ran out of the patient’s room to get the director of nursing who was standing out there. And I’m like, can you stop him? He’s going to kill that patient. He’s going to kill that patient if he defibrillates him with bradycardia and a heart rate of 40. The director of nursing just shook his head, and I turned around, and he killed the dude. There was a nurse who placed an NG tube into some guy’s lungs and filled his lungs with tube feeding. There was a nurse who confused a long-acting insulin with a short-acting insulin and gave thirty units of a fast-acting insulin and killed the guy. It’s just here they’re just gonna let them rot on the vent. They’re medically mismanaging these patients. And, like, I’m not a doctor, but there’s basic standards of care. When somebody’s low on blood, literally on the brink of a critical low blood level, we should replace the blood. I asked the residents, and they’re like, does he have internal bleeding? And I said, no. Then they’re like, well, we’re not replacing the blood. In these COVID patients, they all eventually need a blood transfusion. Their blood—if you don’t have enough blood to oxygenate your body, the vent settings don’t fucking matter because you have no oxygen carrying capacity of your blood. We have a nurse who fell asleep at the nurses’ station while we were all in rooms, and her norepinephrine ran out. And the guy had no fucking blood pressure and didn’t perfuse his brain, and I’m pretty sure his brain dead. That same nurse is now running a CRRT machine, a dialysis-like machine, that she has never done before. She said she’ll figure it out. I’m pretty fucking smart, and I figure a lot of shit out, but I would never attempt to try and figure out a CRRT machine on the fly. We are adequately staffed. There’s a shit ton of staff in there, like, and we have a nurse who does CRRT in there. She has a different patient load. We told them, swap these nurses so the one that knows how to work this machine can work this machine, but they didn’t wanna do that. So I’m pretty sure that patient will be dead here in a couple hours. Nobody is listening. They don’t care what is happening to these people. They don’t. I’m literally coming here every day and watching them kill them. I mean, we’re not gonna save everybody. That’s fine. Like, come on, guys. We’re not God. Some of these people are just on sedation to keep them on the vents. Nothing else. I have a lady on a tracheostomy on a vent, and she’s not even fucking cognizant. She’s not even on sedation. You know what we give her every day? I give her breathing treatments, albuterol, and she gets insulin. And that’s it. We’re not treating the COVID, guys. For real, we’re not treating the COVID. You know, every day, we try and get these guys off the vents. Right? Because there’s criteria for weaning. Every day, the day shift nurse will wean them down to minimum sedation. Every night, we come in and we get the same two residents and they fucking max out all the sedation again and undo all the work from the day shift. Then the day shift attending will come in, and they’ll all do rounds. And they’ll be like, he wasn’t synchronizing with the vent. So we had to turn all the sedation on. And I’m like, he wasn’t synchronizing with the vent because it’s in the wrong vent mode. I even tried getting a hold of Black advocacy groups here. They just put me on hold or hang up on me. Tried talking to management. Now I got new units. And someone come up with some type of a solution for me because I’m kind of out of ideas. You know, I try and talk with some of the other nurses here, and they’re like, well, you can’t save everybody. And they all know what’s happening. They all agree with me and they all just shake their heads and I’m like, am I the only one who is not a sociopath to think that this is okay? I mean, guys, they literally don’t even know when they’re dead. Like, how many times have I told you they’ve assigned me a dead person? Like, how long have they been dead? Nobody knows. Like, how is anybody assessing anything without a stethoscope? Normally, we have disposable stethoscopes, but I brought my old chunky one. Nobody has listened to anybody’s lungs as long as I’ve been here. Even with disposable stethoscopes. I keep telling them that, you know, the guys are like, my patient’s going acidosis. We need to do something about this before his kidneys shut down. Then they run five liters of bicarb into a person who’s gained 20 pounds of water weight and completely throw him into heart failure, and he dies several hours later. That was one of my patients. So I let them know. They had me start the bicarb before I left one night. And by the time I came back the next shift, he was dead. And they assigned him to me, and he was already in a body bag. Like, guys, they’re not dying of COVID. I am literally telling you that they’re murdering these people, and nobody will listen to me. My lead at the other hospital warned me I’d have a problem and advocate for the patients too. They moved him to a completely different hospital. I tried reaching out, but he hasn’t texted me. I’m going to the unit. Let’s see how they kill him there. Okay? Stay safe. Stay out of NYC for your health care.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
This is a particularly interesting one; 'X rays are known to cause look at that. Not solve it.' They also claim, 'Also, they weaken the patient, and the patient often dies from the X-ray damage rather than from the statistics show that the patient who no longer receives the treatments live just as long or longer than those who subject themselves to all of this.' The approach proposed is to 'Treat the symptom of the tumor rather than the actual addressing the root cause.' The speaker concludes: 'This is a very powerful book that I highly recommend everybody look into.'

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Cancer is not a disease but a survival mechanism to house toxins. The tumor is created to protect the body by containing toxins. Biopsies are unnecessary as treatment remains the same whether the tumor is cancerous or not. People often die from cancer treatment rather than cancer itself. The healthcare system profits from sick individuals, leading to unnecessary procedures like biopsies that can worsen the situation.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
"We get sick because of three things primarily. We get sick because of electromagnetic radiation, because of poisons that they put into the environment, and because of parasites." "I found about about five or six years ago, underground group of people that were using Fenbendazole in these things for cancer, and it was working." "He had throat cancer." "So his wife searched around the internet and found this story about the Fenbendazole and started treating him using the protocol." "Isn't it interesting that parasitic medication also treats cancer?" "I think it's not that it also treats cancer, it's that cancer is parasites."

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0 recalls a case: “patient, he was sick. He looked like he was dying, but they just, like, pushed morphine. He had no pain. You know, they do a pain score, so zero to 10. This guy had zero pain.” Then, “they pushed insulin to drop his sugar, and his glucose was fine. And then he died three minutes later.” He says he “turned him into medical board. I reviewed this chart and turned him into medical board. Nothing.” “But, yeah, they definitely that definitely went on during COVID.” Speaker 1: “Jesus. That is such a terrifying thought that someone would just decide so many people are dying. This guy's definitely gonna die. Yep. This is 100% real?” Speaker 0: “Yeah. Definite. Definite.” Speaker 1: “It's It seems like something” Speaker 0: “they would call it tell euthanasia. They don't call it euthanasia.” Speaker 1: “It seems like something I would tell me, and then I would have to ask you. Like, this is something someone told me. I'm sure this” Speaker 0: “is send you the record that I read to you.” Speaker 1: “It seems like something I would be bringing up to you as a ridiculous thing, and you'd shoot it down.”

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Every early cancer detection is customer creation and fraud, with no proof that it cures anyone. The cancer industry is a $300,000,000,000 industry driven by money, with each patient bringing in between $3,000,000 and $7,000,000. If a patient doesn't have cancer, they may be given it. Cancer is not an illness but an accumulation of symptoms. Cancer rates have increased from seven percent in 1900 to fifty-six percent today, and including "the thing we cannot talk about," it's ninety-two percent. The speaker claims to have cured 66,000 cancer patients.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
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.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Oncologist Dr. Tullio Simancini wrote the book "Cancer is a Fungus" and discovered that all his tested patients had Candida in their bodies. He achieved a 90% success rate by injecting sodium bicarbonate, an alkaline mix, directly into the cancerous area. Cancer cannot survive in an alkaline environment. A friend of mine, Dr. Emma Fields, took a patient to him in Italy, but he was under investigation and later jailed for manslaughter. My husband believes that if he had used chemotherapy instead, he wouldn't be in jail. Is it possible that some patients came to him in advanced stages and would have passed away regardless?

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
- Chemotherapy prolongs life about two to three months. Two to three months. That's the sum benefit. - For some cancers such as gastric cancer, it actually reduces life expectancy. - Chemotherapy is a hoax. - It's a hoax perpetuated by big pharma to make money at the expense of, people who suffer. - There are a few cancers, maybe five to eight percent in which chemotherapy actually cures the cancer. - But the vast majority of cancers, know, the common cancers, breast cancer, prostate cancer, pancreatic cancer, lung cancer. - The performance of chemotherapy is appalling, but it generates billions of dollars.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
I participated in an mRNA-based immunomodulatory medication trial back in 2013. It was meant to alter how T-cells produced antibodies, and it worked phenomenally for lupus, ulcerative colitis, Crohn's, and multiple sclerosis. There were over 200,000 participants in the trial, and every one of us had our hearts stop. Less than five of us are still alive today. The medication was a series of injections over a year, and complications like cancer, heart attack, stroke, and myocarditis took two years to appear. If a medical trial doesn't show what the pharmaceutical company wants and the drug doesn't pass FDA testing because it killed over two percent of participants, the company pays everyone involved to sign an NDA. They bury the data because pharmaceutical companies kill more people than wars. Since 1920, doctors have killed over 200 million Americans. I had open heart surgery, lost my colon, and suffered three strokes.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Kristen, my daughter's twin, developed a brain tumor that had spread through her spine, and she died. The doctors gave two options: 'take her home, let her die or bring her in for massive dosages of chemo and radiation simultaneously.' The treatment burned her skull and urine; six months later she survived, though she 'still had cancer.' We were told, 'We've done everything we can. Now she's going to die.' We read Brzezinski. I believe he 'does what he does out of earnest belief that his medicine works' and that 'it's well established by the FDA that it's nontoxic.' Eighteen months later she was cancer free off 'the anti oneeoplastin'; within a month cancer returned to her brain. After restarting Brzezinski's, it was gone within nine weeks. She died July of necrosis from radiation; autopsy showed cancer free. I swore an oath to uphold life: 'life right in the beginning.'

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker describes a medical situation in which cancer had spread extensively: “In my neck, my liver, my bladder, my pancreas, and in my bones from head to toe.” He notes that when small cell lung cancer metastasizes this far, the prognosis is extremely poor, stating that “Life expectancy goes below one percent.” Shortly after, he received a call from a large animal veterinarian who shared a remarkable anecdote involving cancer research at Merck Animal Health on the veterinary medicine side. The veterinarian explained that a scientist working there had been implanting cancer in mice for research, and as a result her entire mouse population developed intestinal parasites. According to the story, the scientist administered fenbendazole, the drug commonly used to treat parasites in animals. Remarkably, not only did the drug save the mice from dying of intestinal parasites, but weeks later it appeared to cure the mice of cancer as well. The speaker recounts this as a concise answer to the question at hand about possible treatments. Motivated by this anecdote, the speaker began taking fenbendazole himself, starting the day after receiving the veterinarian’s account. He reports that “three and a half months later” he was all clear of cancer. In summary, the speaker connects a dire prognosis for widespread metastasized cancer with an anecdotal account from a large animal veterinary context: fenbendazole, used for parasitic infections in animals, purportedly cured cancer in mice in that story, and the speaker credits starting fenbendazole with achieving an all-clear status several months later.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Chemo drugs are the only ones doctors profit directly from. They buy it for $5,000, sell it to patients for $12,000, and insurance pays $9,000. Doctors keep $4,000. Chemotherapy is used because it makes money, not because it works (97% failure rate). The pharmaceutical industry controls us. Money raised for breast cancer doesn't go to alternative treatments or research, only drugs and surgery that don't work.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
A parent shares their experience with their daughter's cancer treatment. The doctors offered two options: let her die or undergo intense chemo and radiation. They chose the latter, but it caused severe burns and other complications. After six months, the standard treatment didn't cure her cancer, and they were told she had only a few months to live. Desperate, they discovered Dr. Brzezinski's treatment, which the FDA deemed nontoxic. They took their daughter off the standard treatment and tried Brzezinski's, and within nine weeks, the tumor disappeared. Sadly, she later died from radiation damage, but the autopsy showed she was cancer-free. The speaker questions why the bureaucratic process for accessing this treatment is so difficult, preventing many patients from receiving a potential cure.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
In early 2013, I participated in a medical trial for an mRNA-based medication that aimed to change how T cells produce antibodies. The trial had over 200,000 participants, including myself, and unfortunately, all of us experienced our hearts stopping. Only a few of us survived. The trial lasted about a year, and complications like cancer, heart attacks, strokes, and myocarditis appeared two years later. When a medication doesn't meet the pharmaceutical company's expectations or fails FDA testing, they often pay the participants' medical bills and have them sign nondisclosure agreements. This information is usually buried because pharmaceutical companies have caused more deaths in America than wars have. Since 1920, doctors have killed over 200 million Americans. Personally, I've undergone open heart surgery, lost my colon, and had three strokes.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker shares the story of their 7-year-old daughter, who was an identical twin. The sister developed a malignant brain tumor at the age of 4, and the doctors gave two options: let her die or undergo intense chemo and radiation. Despite the treatment causing severe burns and side effects, the sister survived. However, the cancer returned and she eventually passed away due to radiation damage. The speaker believes that a doctor named Brzezinski's treatment helped their daughter, and criticizes a government institution for spreading false information. They mention their oath to uphold the constitution, which emphasizes the value of life.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Chemotherapy can kill any cell, not just cancer cells. If those handling chemotherapy must wear hazmat suits because it's toxic, why give it to someone already sick? It's like using napalm for an ant problem; you might kill the ants, but you'll destroy everything else, including the healthy cells. Radiation, like chemotherapy, is dangerous. X-rays have warning signs because radiation damages DNA, which can potentially cause cancer. The speaker questions why a therapy known to create cancer is used to treat cancer.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Many cancer survivors who undergo standard treatments like radiation and chemo suffer immensely, paying a high price for their survival. They may experience ailments and debilities resulting from toxic treatments, surgical mutilations, high-dose poisons, and radiation. Cancer survivors may face psychological and neuropsychiatric problems, hormonal imbalances, microbiome issues, and metabolic homeostasis problems that they didn't have before treatment. Some newer treatments can kill patients faster than the disease itself, with the hope of a positive response. Many people suffer chronic problems for the rest of their lives or don't live as long as they could have without the treatments. The speaker believes that managing cancer doesn't require such toxic treatments, viewing the situation as a massive tragedy.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Rick describes chemotherapy as a lot of work, expensive, and painful. He visited the Mayo Clinic, went into rooms, introduced himself as Rick, and asked patients a quick question: “Would you do this again now that you've started your chemo?” He states that, to a person, the patients said, “I am so sorry I started this. This is crazy. You know, the collateral damage in your body is enormous. I have none of that collateral damage.”

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0 argues that medical procedures can cause death or spread disease: - A colonoscopy in elderly people (60–70, completely healthy and fit) can lead to death three days later because “they poke a hole in the colon, the bacteria goes in and they are dead.” - In mammography, when something is found, the medical profession proceeds with a needle biopsy, and “pokes into something that's there to save your life.” A tumor is described as there to save your life, yet the procedure is claimed to spread illness. - The body builds a bag to store toxins in its lymph nodes; “so now they come and poke into the lymph node and what will happen is they now spread the poison that the body is collecting for ten-twenty years in the entire body and twelve days later these women are dead.” - Mammography is described as applying “50 pounds of pressure on a woman's breast.” The analogy is made: if you have a lymph node or a pimple ready to burst, applying that pressure would “burst it to give the patient the cancer.”

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Although I am not a doctor, I’m a nurse. On the front lines we knew what was happening. When we asked for ibuprofen, they said no. When we asked why we weren’t giving steroids, the answer was “we’re just following orders.” Following orders has led to the sheer number of deaths in these hospitals. I didn’t see a single patient die of COVID. I’ve seen a substantial number die of negligence and medical malfeasance. When I was on the front lines of New York, I became globally known as the nurse in the break room sobbing, saying they were murdering my patients. Pharmaceutical companies had gone into those hospitals and decided to practice on the minorities, the disadvantaged, the marginalized populations with no advocates, because the very agencies that should protect them were closed while we were sheltering in place. While I was there, pharmaceutical companies rolled out remdesivir onto a substantial number of patients, which we all saw was killing the patients. And now, it’s the FDA-approved drug that is continuing to kill patients in the United States. As nurses, we’ve collected a descriptive amount of information that you may not get from the doctors. Doctors do quantitative data; we do qualitative data with a humanistic, phenomenological approach in nursing research. We’ve collected data from patients across the country for which we’ve helped patients through the American Front Line Nurses and the advocacy network so nurses could advocate for these patients. This data pool shows that as these patients get remdesivir, they have a less than twenty-five percent chance of survival if they get more than two doses. Now they’re rolling it out on children as well and into nursing homes or skilled nursing facilities as early intervention, even though doctors Pierre Corre and Merrick have demonstrated that there are cost-effective medications out there, and we are going to see the amplification of death across the country. We haven’t even touched on vaccines, which our expert panels have described; I won’t touch on that since many are far superior to me. Two days ago I flew out my first 10-year-old with a heart attack and had to fight the ER doctor because he said, “ten-year-olds don’t have heart attacks.” I argued for thirty minutes to force his hand to get an EKG and found a STEMI; the 12-lead EKG lit up. He said it wasn’t possible, and I said, “was just vaccinated yesterday. It is very much possible.” People contact me and the nurse advocates at American Front Line Nurses to help advocate, because there’s victim shaming—“it’s anxiety,” “it’s this.” But if they acknowledge it as a vaccine injury, the physician, the corporation, the hospital, the clinic may not get reimbursed, so it’s labeled as anxiety, neuropathy, or Guillain–Barré syndrome, when it’s very realistically a vaccine injury. I’ve traveled to South America, India, and South Africa, working in hot zones, stopping the spread of the virus and doing early intervention. Nowhere in developing nations do I see these issues that we see here in the United States. I’m a very proud American citizen from a family of immigrants. Our level of health care has deteriorated to substandard third-world-nation health care. You are better off in South America in a field hospital than in level-one trauma designer hospitals in the United States. As nurses, we are getting reports across the country from American frontline nurses about patients not getting food, water, or basic care. How come a patient hasn’t been fed in nine days? Why do I need a court order to force a hospital to feed a person who isn’t intubated and who would like food? If they’re on a ventilator, they’re not given water or basic care. We’re not allowed to take a BiPAP mask off to help someone eat. I’ve had patients who haven’t been bathed, haven’t been fed, and haven’t been given water, or been turned. This isn’t a hospital; this is a concentration camp. Nowhere in the United States do we isolate people for hundreds of hours with no human contact; it’s not allowed even in prisons. In hospitals, we isolate patients from their families for days, and you have to say goodbye over an iPhone, or you have to shuttle people in to see them. I was fired for sneaking a Hispanic family in to say the last rites to their family. Thank you, Senator Johnson, for giving nurses the opportunity to represent our patients, because we’re not often thought of as leading professionals, though we are the missing link between the doctors and the patients. Thank you for this time. Thank you for being a nurse.
View Full Interactive Feed