Wednesday, March 4, 2026
Microplastics
Plastics that break down into particles as tiny as our DNA-small enough to be absorbed through our skin-are released into our environment at a rate of 82 million metric tons a year. Plastic pollution threatens everything from sea animals to human beings. More than 20 percent of plastic waste is mismanaged and ends up in our air, water, and soil. Plastic pollution is a chemical remnant of petroleum with other chemicals added in to change the durability, elasticity, and color. The astounding level and types of plastics, many with unknown health effects, should be a wakeup call for everyone. Beyond Plastics, an advocacy group for policy change, warns that new research indicates plastic could be leading to an increased risk of heart disease, stroke, and death. Studies have found microscopic plastic particles affect every system of our bodies. Microplastics in human artery wall plaque were recently linked to a 350 percent increased risk of heart attack. A study published in the New England Journal of Medicine following 257 patients over 34 months discovered 58.4 percent had polyethylene in carotid artery plaque and 12.1 percent had polyvinylchloride. Polyethylene is the most common plastic found in bottles and bags, including cereal box liners. Advocacy groups are pushing for legislation that would reduce this use. The BreakFreeFromPlasticPollutionAct, first introduced in congress in 2020, remains stuck in committee. And plastics and petrochemical industries benefit from grants, tax breaks, and incentives. The Environmental Integrity Project issued a report last year that found 64 percent of 50 plastics plants built or expanded in the United States since 2012 received nearly $9 billion in state and local subsidies. Only 4 percent of plastic is recycled in the United States, but recycled plastics present additional hazards because they are made from a blend of products and a more uncertain chemical makeup that could be toxic. The International Pollutants Elimination Network, after an investigation in 24 countries, found hundreds of toxic chemicals including pesticides, industrial chemicals, pharmaceuticals, dyes, and fragrances. They suggest shopping with reusable shopping bags, use metal or glass snack containers, straws, cutlery, etc. And never use plastic in the microwave.
Wednesday, February 25, 2026
Conversation
I have always preferred to do things by myself. Definitely introverted. I remember one of my teachers in elementary school would try to pull me out of the sandbox or swings and get me to play ball with some of the other boys. I just wasn't the least bit interested. I would dream of someday owning a little cabin up in the mountains where I could go and be alone. And I definitely wasn't interested in talking to anyone. If the phone rang, I would run the other way yelling at someone else to answer it. My teachers frequently gave me low marks for participation in class.
When I got into academy, I would check out of the dorm Sabbath afternoon and go for walks my myself. Life gets boring sometimes and I was happy to get married and share my life with one other person. But even here, some of my greatest memories were when my wife took the kids shopping and left me to do chores areound the house by myself.
In college, I didn't have any idea what line of studies I wanted to pursue, but I thought I should learn to do something besides working in a machine shop with my dad the rest of my life. I eventually settled on teaching and graduated with a degree in industrial education. The worst class I was required to take was speech. I'm okay answering questions before a group of people, but to stand up with a lot of eyes just staring at me while I keep talking just doesn't go good. I finally passed the class with a C grade. By the time I graduated, the idea of talking in front of a classroom to a bunch of students, not to mention church functions and board meetings, made me feel sick to think about it. I mean, I could do it for a few weeks maybe, but certainly not for a lifework.
So, I thought, maybe being a colporteur and selling books door to door might be a possible way to serve the church and accomplish some good. Once you memorized a canvass, you could just repeat it all day and see what happens. Well, I soon learned that people buy something from you because they like you and they like you because of something you said to them. The colporteur leader of the district would visit homes with me about once a week. When we would come out of a home he would frequently try to explain to me that if I had said such and such or responded thusly to their comment, it would have meant so much more to them than what I said. Unfortunately, I was a slow learner. After a year and a half, I was sinking further and further into debt with three children, so I asked my dad if he could use some help in the shop and I was soon busy operating a milling machine again.
Working in a shop was something I loved to do. It was usually just me and a machine and hopefully the phone didn't ring. The Grass Valley church felt a need to find something I could do and they soon had me taking up offerings, running the PA, or recording the service.
I believe being an introvert runs in families. My parents were never interested in visiting with people. I remember hearing them tell about the time a car drove into the driveway and someone got out that they recognized as one of their classmates from Lynwood Academy. They quickly ran into a back bedroom until the person got tired of knocking and went away. I'm not that bad. But, I seldom went to the church potlucks, because having to visit with people while I ate made the food less attractive. I was talking with one of my friends at church and explained to him that when I read about the "great multitude which no man could number" in Revelation, I wasn't real interested in being in their midst. I dislike crowds at fairs and ball games and try to avoid them. My friend explained to me the he was sure God would fix me at the second coming and make me normal.
When another good friend of my parents asked me why they seldom attended church, I explained that they were getting old and being around a lot of people caused them stress. He let me know that one of the main reasons he came to church was to visit his friends and get inspiration from them.
When I was young, I attended a church that held "stress seminars" as a means to get the public to attend some meetings. I often thought it was certainly appropriate for the church to have stress seminars since the church caused much of the stress I experienced in my life. Sabbath often becomes the most stressful day of the week and I can't wait to be alone and running one to the machines in the shop or go off by myself and read a good book. I've been told it's good to get "out of my comfort zone" and expand my horizons and abilities. But it causes stress that increases epeniphrine and cortisone. And with me it causes an upset stomach. When I was attending second grade at San Fernando Valley Academy, my teacher didn't show up one morning and I and my classmates stood around outside the locked door wondering what would happen. While the other kids were whooping and hollering about no school without a teacher, I through up my breakfast under some nearby bushes. While I've learned to control my reactions since then, still any change in my schedule or doing something in front of others can greatly upset my digestive system.
Every cell in your body swims in a biochemical/hormonal ocean. Stress alters that aquatic environment. There are thousands of receptors on and in every cell so every emotion, thought or action releases a cascade of neropeptides which bind to the receptors and change the structure and function of every cell in the body. Continued stress can cause a range of physical disorders including heart disease, cancer, arthritis and mental disorders. Stress also damage the mitochondria, the energy producing part of the cell. This can lead to the accumulation of toxic by-products and the resulting reduction of energy, or even cellular death. So, for me the goal is to reduce stress in my life as much as possible and still fill my responsibilities to my friends and family. This can cause stress in itself and it becomes quite a conundrum.
Right after I declared bankruptcy and moved to Oroville, Ca., so Shawna and Thad could attend Paradise Adventist Academy, my former roommate from Lodi Academy, David Zimmerman, called and asked to visit and show the "the plan". He said it would solve all my financial problems. When he arrived, he explained how to become an Amway dealer. It was so simple. Just provide my friends and family with soap and other nutritional supplements that they were buying anyway and they would love the personal service. I would profit from the sale instead of the store. And if they decided to get in on this good deal and sell to all their friends, I would get a percentage of everything they sold. It sounded like a foolproof solution. The only problem was my friends and family were stuck on the brands and sources of these items and didn't want my personal service. Oh, I found a couple people to sell to, but the solution was to approach people at gas stations, grocery stores, church events, etc. and engage them in conversation and ask to show them "the plan". This is great for someone that loves to talk. And there are those kind of persons running around. But I wasn't one of them. Just the thought of finding people and talking to them every chance I got caused my to have indegestion. Amway is a lot like a religion. I'm told that is how I should witness about my faith to everyone I meet. But, I don't have any more success there. Everything in life seems to boil down to how good you are at talking.
People are certainly different. I've tried to analyze why some people love to talk. Because they do. A pastor told me once that when he was a boy, he would go out to the barnyard and preach to the chickens. In a sermon, I heard Conrad Vine talk about filling preaching appointments when he was a boy and how he enjoyed it. Marc Lombard, writing in Insight Magazine, said, "When I was 14 I began preaching at small churches around Texas. I enjoyed it so much that I did it whenever I could." And women who compete with men to be ordained as ministers are certainly on a different wavelength than I'm on. I've had to talk to groups of people. I was valedictorian of my eighth grade class and had to give a speech at my graduation. I've been asked to call for the offering in church. Many times I have read the Mission Story for my Sabbath School class. And I hated each time and was relieved to be done.
The National Quartet Convention
Yvonne has always wanted to attend the National Quartet
Convention in Tennessee. When she mentioned it this year, I decided
there was no better time to do it than right now. It was during
September this year in Pigeon Forge. It lasts exactly a week.
We got our tickets and airline bookings to fly out of Spokane at
6am on the morning of September 21. Then we had one hour to
change planes at Dallas, Texas, to put us into Knoxville, Tennessee
around midday. Well, we were all aboard and ready well before 6am,
but the pilot announced he had some paperwork to take care of before
we could leave, and after a half hour he again came on the public
address to say he was still working on the paperwork and it would be
just a few minutes more. So, we didn’t get off until after 7am and there
went our next connection in Dallas.
We landed in Dallas just as our connecting flight was taking off.
The gate personnel had already realized our problem and tried to
rebook us on the next flight out, but it was already full so they booked
us on a flight for that afternoon. We sat around for several hours and
every 45 minutes or so I would get a message on my phone that the
flight had been delayed half an hour to an hour. This continued into
the evening with updates at 7:07, 7:27, 8:32, 9:32, 9:47,10:27, 10:42,
11:27. We were getting very frustrated by this time and lost all faith in
the airline that they knew their business.
We finally arrived in Tennessee about 3am Monday morning, but
now all the rental car offices were closed, but one had opened for
someone else and they agreed to rent us a car at a horrendous price.
It was quite foggy out and I didn’t have any idea how to get to Pigeon
Forge from Knoxville and started out going the wrong way, but finally
got turned around and found myself on google maps and arrived at
the motel just as the sun was rising. We ate breakfast at the cafe
across the street and went to bed.
It was a great week of singing and visiting with all the different
groups that show up to these things. Our motel was just half a mile
from the convention center and most of the week the weather was
okay for walking. Pigeon Forge is a tourist spot full of arcades,
giftshops, entertainment venues of all kinds and even had a small village
that reminded me of Disneyland.
So, now it’s a week later and we were scheduled to fly out Sunday
at 7am. We figured that surely the bad luck we had flying in wouldn’t
hound us flying home. But, when we got to the airport there was one
flight on the board that was delayed two hours. It was ours. They said
the pilots were on mandatory rest, which means they hadn’t gotten
enough sleep last night to be ready to fly. This meant we wouldn’t
make our connection again. They rebooked us on a flight for that
afternoon. Well, we would still get home by dark. The plane we were
scheduled to take landed a couple hours late, and we watched the
passengers deplane while we lined up to get aboard. But, wait. The
attendant was making an announcement. He said there was a
maintenance issue and it would just be a few minutes to find a
mechanic to check out one of the wheels.
A half an hour later, he said they couldn’t find the equipment they
needed at this airport and the flight was being cancelled. This caused
a big commotion as everyone had to find a different flight to get to
their destination. There were no more flights that would get us to
Spokane Sunday night and they finally booked us on a flight through
Chicago for Monday afternoon and agreed to pay for a motel room
and $12 a piece for a meal until then.
The flight on Monday turned out to be on schedule and we made it
to Chicago. Chicago is a busy place with airplanes landing and taking
off every few minutes. We couldn’t get to our assigned gate right away
because other planes were in the way. We were getting quite anxious
about making our connection here. When we finally got off the plane
we had just ten minutes to begin boarding our next flight. It was after
dark when we got into Spokane, but it was sure good to see our car.
We never plan to fly American Airlines again.
Home in Orofino
Now that we live closer to Shawna and Roland, they invite us to
accompany them on their vacations. In 2024, we went to Yellowstone
with Dan and Laurie and Roland’s dad Don Bais and his wife Alice.
We spent several days in Yellowstone and then went to Cody,
Wyoming with Laurie and Dan. We attended the great rodeo there and
the western museums. There is a gun museum that had a sample of
every kind of gun ever made in the whole world. It was amazing
Then in March, 2025, we went to Belize with Shawna and Roland
and Christina and spent several days at resorts along the shore and
went boating and swimming. We stopped at the MOVE Institute and
visited Jeff Sutton and saw how they finished up the buildings I had
helped the Grass Valley church start to build.
And in July we went with them to the Olympic National Park. We
took a ferry over to the peninsula and drove up to Hurricane Ridge,
over 5,000 feet elevation. And then, camped at a hot springs and
enjoyed swimming in hot water. It’s an amazing place with big cities
and lovely beaches and hiking trails and lakes.
In August we went with them to Lake Chelan, about two hours drive
from Wenatchee. The lake is over 50 miles long and the town of
Stehekin, at the northern end, is only reached by boat or airplane.
Stehekin is an Indian word meaning “the way through.” There are 27
active glaciers in the surrounding mountains that feed the lake. It’s a
beautiful place with many hiking trails and campgrounds.There are
also restaurants and gift shops and you can rent bikes and ATVs.
Several weeks later found us all meeting up at Glacier National
Park for several days of enjoying the mountain scenery and driving on
the “Going to the Sun” road.
And next August, Shawna has us all booked for an Alaskan
adventure that we are looking forward to. Life is never dull.
Kidney Failure
And, so, things continued about the same Through 2022.
Lockdowns and masking slowly eased up and things looked like they
might get back to normal. In March of 2023, we got a snow storm that
lasted about a week. We live on a private road that is down hill to my
driveway and I couldn’t get up it even with chains.
I thought this would be a great time to catch up with some things
that needed doing around the house and spend some time with
Yvonne. But she was staying in bed most of the day, claiming she just
didn’t feel well. After consulting with Laurie and Shawna, I called her
doctor the next week when the snow had cleared up enough to get out
and made an appointment for her.
The doctor ran some tests and told me she needed more testing
than they could do in the office. The nurse said they could send her to
some lab, but the fastest thing would be to just take her next door the
the hospital emergency room and they could do it all immediately. So,
we spent the next couple hours at the emergency. Finally, a nurse
came into the waiting room and told us she was in acute kidney failure
and they were admitting her to the hospital right away.
Thus began a couple weeks with Yvonne on an IV to flood her
kidneys and get them working again. She got so bloated she could
barely talk or move. So, they gave her a diuretic for a couple days and
then right back on the IV. Laurie came the second week and began
monitoring her food and applying charcoal patches to her kidneys.
Finally, they said her numbers were improving and she could go home
and continue treatment from there.
Shawna came down from Wenatchee, Washington to check on her
and she and Laurie tried to convince me it was time to retire so I could
stay home and take care of their mother. Laurie decided to take
Yvonne back to Idaho with her since I was too busy to take good care
of her, and I told them to look for a house we could buy. The next day,
Laurie called me about a house in town that sounded interesting. I told
Yvonne to go look at it and she thought we could make it do, so we
put in an offer. We found there were two offers ahead of us, but they
each had contingencies and we ended up getting it after a couple
weeks.
I went up and brought Yvonne back so we could put our house in
Grass Valley up for sale. We had a home inspection and the inspector
said the deck had dry rot and needed to be completely replaced, along
with several other things. I said I wasn’t doing that and we dropped the
price instead.
Of course, I had a business to sell, too. I advertised it for a couple
months in the Recorder and on Facebook and Craig’s List with no
interest being shown at all. Our house sold right away and was in
escrow and I decided to park my motorhome at the shop and move
Yvonne to our new house as soon as it closed and come back and
operate my business until I could sell it. This was July, 2023. We made
one trip to Orofino the sign the papers on the house there and haul up
a trailer load of household stuff. Our house in Grass Valley closed
escrow in August and we rented the largest U-Haul truck we could
get and spent a couple days loading it.
We got off around noon and made it to Winnemuca, Nevada, late
in the evening. We rented a motel room and after eating supper at a
restaurant we returned to the motel. Yvonne wanted something out of
the truck and I climbed over boxes and furniture looking for it and
finally found it. Climbing back out, my foot slipped on the bumper, and
I was off-balance with my arms full of stuff and ended up falling back
and sitting on the cement. When I tried to get up I felt a sharp pain in
my hips, but finally managed to get up and lock up the truck and
hobble into the motel.
I told Yvonne I must have broken something from all the pain I was
having and she wanted to find a clinic to check me out, but I told her I
wasn’t stopping for any treatment until the truck was home. I tried
soaking in a tub of hot water to ease the pain, but it didn’t help and I
spent a wakeful night unable to find a good position to sleep.
The next morning I managed somehow to carry the suitcases out
to the truck and climb into the cab. Once I was seated in the cab, the
pain wasn’t bad and the cruise control helped a lot. Climbing out to put
gas in was quite a chore, though.
We made it to Orofino around 6pm, and Laurie and Dan were
waiting to take over unloading the truck and take me to the hospital to
get checked out. They x-rayed my hips and determined that I had
broken the ball of my right femur right off clean. Surgery was was the
only option, but they didn’t do that in Orofino. The closet hospitals
where I could get that done was Lewiston or Moscow, but they were
booked up for the next several weeks. The hospital in Coeur d’Alene
said they could do it the next day, so they insisted in calling an
ambulance to take me there, a three hour trip. As I suspected when I
first broke it, once they got me down they wouldn’t let me up again. All
the ambulance drivers had gone home for the day and I offered to
drive myself, but they soon found someone and I was in the hospital in
Coeur d’Alene by midnight. The surgery at 6 the next morning went
well and I was back home 5 days later. I couldn’t put any weight on
that leg for the next six weeks, so it was interesting when I returned to
Grass Valley with Laurie a month later to try and operate the
machines.
When I was getting ready to move from Grass Valley, I had been in
touch by email with a guy in Corning, California, who saw my ad, but
just wanted to know if I would machine a transmission for some
modifications he was making. I told him when I got back from moving
Yvonne I would meet up with him and see what I could do. He said he
wasn’t really interested in buying the shop, but I showed him how to
set up the milling machine to do what he wanted done and kept urging
him to buy the shop from me. He finally said he would think about it
and after several weeks I finally talked him into buying it. It was
November by this time and by the end of the year Darrin was the new
owner.
Dr. Fauci
Beginning in 1968, Dr. Anthony Fauci occupied various posts at the
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and served as it's
Director since November, 1984. His $417,608 annual salary makes
him the highest paid of all four million federal employees, including the
President. During the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic, Dr. Fuaci, who
turned 80 that year, occupied center stage in a global drama
unprecedented in human history. Other nations looked to Dr. Fauci to
competently direct US health policies, and develop countermeasures
that would serve as state-of-the-art templates for the rest of the world.
Throughout the first years of the crisis, Dr. Fauci's personal charisma
inspired confidence in his prescriptions. He encouraged his own
canonization in a June 9, 2021 interview, pronouncing that Americans
who questioned his statements were anti-science. He said "Attacks on
me, quite frankly, are attacks on science." Blind faith in authority is a
function of religion, not science. His acknowledgement to the New
York Times that he had twice lied to Americans to promote his
agendas, on masks and herd immunity, raised the prospect that some
of his other assertions were, likewise, lies to a credulous public.
In August, 2021, CNN's television doctor, Peter Hotez, published
an article in a scientific journal calling for legislation to "expand federal
hate crime protections" to make criticism of Dr. Fauci a felony. He also
said that Vaccine skeptics should be snuffed out. As the world
watched, Tony Fauci dictated a series of policies that resulted in by far
the most deaths, of any nation on the planet. The US, with 4% of the
world's population, suffered 14.5% of total deaths. By September 30,
2021, mortality rates in the US had climbed to 2,107 per 1 million
population compared to 139 per 1 million in Japan. Dr. Fauci's
remedies are often more lethal than the diseases they pretend to treat.
300 million humans fell into dire poverty, food insecurity, and
starvation. It put 58 million Americans out of work.
Dr. Peter McCullough can't understand why Dr. Fauci did virtually
nothing toward developing repurposed medications effective against
COVID. He recommended no outpatient care, not even Vitamin D
despite the fact he takes it himself. He should have created an
international communications network linking the world's front line
doctors to gather real-time tips to develop the best early treatment
practices. He should have created hotlines for medical professionals
to call in with treatment questions to consult and propagate the latest
innovations to prevent hospitalization. Dr. Fauci's treatments
strategies began once these patients were hospitalized. It was insane,
perverse and unethical. Instead, doctors who wanted to provide their
infected patients with early treatment were ostracized. Says
McCullough, "Never in history have doctors deliberately treated
patients with this kind of barbarism." Doctors who attempted merely to
open discussion about the potential benefits of early treatment for
COVID found themselves heavily and inexplicably censored. Dr. Fauci
worked with Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg and other social media sites
to muzzle discussion of any remedies. In September, Dr. McCullough
used his own money to create a YouTube video to teach doctors the
miraculous benefits of early treatment. His video went viral, but
YouTube pulled it two days later. Dr. Kory, Medical Director of the
Trauma and Life Support Center at the University of Wisconsin
Medical School Hospital, said "Dr. Fauci's suppression of early
treatments will go down in history as having caused the death of half a
million Americans in the ICU.
Remdesivir
From the outset, hydroxychloroquine(HCQ) and other therapeutics posed a threat to Dr. Fauci and Bill
Gates' $48 billion COVID vaccine project and particularly to their vanity drug remdesivir, in which Gates
has a large stake. Under federal law, new vaccines and medications cannot qualify for Emergency Use
Authorization if any existing FDA-approved drug proves effective against the same malady. Dr. Fauci has
invested $6 billion in taxpayer money in the Moderna vaccine alone. His agency is co-owner of the
patent and stands to collect a fortune in royalties. Most African countries authorize HCQ as an over-thecounter medication. Millions in Africa take it religiously as a malaria prophylaxis. That is probably why
these nations enjoyed some of the world's lowest mortality rates from COVID. In the US, the FDA has
approved HCQ without limitation for 65 years, meaning that physicians can prescribe it for any off-label
use. Dr. Fauci's sudden revelation that the drug is dangerous was specious at best.
Pharmaceutical interests launched their multinational preemptive crusade to restrict and discredit HCQ
way back in January, 2020, months before the WHO declared a pandemic. The French government
quietly changed the status of HCQ from over-the-counter to poisonous substance. Canadian health
officials removed the drug from pharmacy shelves. A physician in Zambia reported organized groups of
buyers emptied drugstores of HCQ and burned the medication in bonfires. South Africa destroyed 2 tons
of it supposedly due to a violation of import regulations. The US government ordered the destruction of
more than a thousand pounds because of "import violations". On March 13, Dr. James Todaro tweeted
his review of HCQ as an effective COVID treatment. Google quietly scrubbed his memo. Google has
lucrative partnerships with all the large vaccine manufacturers. Facebook, Pinterest, Instagram, YouTube
and virtually every other Big Tech platform began scrubbing info demonstrating HCQ's efficacy,
replacing it with industry propaganda generated by one of Dr. Fauci's public health agencies.
Anthony Fauci needed to use all his bureaucratic maneuvers to win FDA's approval for his vanity drug
remdesivir. It has no clinical efficacy against COVID, according to every legitimate study. Worse, it is a
deadly poison and expensive at $3,000 per treatment. It's wholesale cost is roughly 1,000 times more
costly then hydroxychloroquine or ivermectin. But, if the FDA recognized either of those as effective, it
would kill the need for remdesivir. Why would Dr. Fauci care? The CDC and NIAID had just spent $79
million developing it for Gilead, a company in which the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation owns a 6.5
million stake. In 2018, Gilead entered remdesivir in a NIAID-funded clinical trial against Ebola in Africa.
However, six months into the Ebola study, the trial's Safety Review Board suddenly pulled it from the
trial. It was hideously dangerous. Within 28 days, subjects taking remdesivir had lethal side effects
including multiple organ failure, acute kidney failure, septic shock, and hypotension and 43% taking it
died. Nevertheless, on February 25, 2020, Dr. Fauci announced with great fanfare, that he was enrolling
hospitalized patients in a clinical trial to study remdesivir efficacy. Remdesivir was an IV remedy,
appropriate only for use on hospitalized patients in the late stage of illness. It would therefore not
compete with vaccines, allowing Dr. Fauci to support it without compromising his core business. And
while HCQ and IVM were off patent, remdesivir was in the sweet spot of still being on patent, The
potential profit was impressive. By granting Gilead an Emergency Use Authorization, regulators could
force private insurers, Medicare, and Medicaid to pay around $3,120 per treatment. Gilead predicted
remdesivir would bring in 3.5 billion in 2020 alone. Gates and his foundation had large equity stakes in
Gilead. On April 24, 2020, Gates announced "For the novel coronavirus, the leading drug candidate in
this category is remdesivir from Gilead."
The Lancet had just published a placebo-controlled Chinese study that showed remdesivir utterly
ineffective at keeping hospitalized patients alive or reducing the duration of hospitalizations. The study
also confirmed remdesivir's deadly toxicity. All the data was available to the incurious press and the
uninformed public. But Dr. Fauci never accepted this. He responded to the crisis with savvy and bold
action that would miraculously salvage his sinking product. He appeared at one of his regular White
House press conferences, this one in the Oval Office. Seated on the couch next to Deborah Birx and
opposite President Trump, Dr. Fauci made a surprise announcement.
With great fanfare, he declared victory. The data for remdesivir shows "quite good news,"
he said, glossing over the drug's failure to demonstrate any mortality
advantage. Based on Dr. Fauci's representation, President Trump purchased
the world's entire stock of remdesivir for Americans.
FDA's recognition of remdesivir as the new "Standard of Care" for COVID meant that Medicaid and
insurance companies could not legally deny it to patients and would have to fork over Gilead's
exorbitant price tag. Doctors and hospitals that failed to use remdesivir could now be sued for
malpractice, leading some medical experts to believe the use of this worthless and dangerous drug on
COVID patients most certainly cost tens of thousands of American lives.
COVID-19 vaccines have caused cardiac arrest, blindness, and paralysis in American children. Some
86 percent of children suffered an adverse reaction to the Pfizer COVID vaccine in clinical trial and it's
estimated 600 have died from the vaccine as of September, 2021. A recent Lancet study shows that a
healthy child has zero risk for COVID. Why are we vaccinating children? How can we justify forcing a
healthy child to take a vaccine that is dead certain to injure many and kill some while bestowing no
benefits? Teen deaths among 15-19 year olds have increased by 47% in the UK since they started
getting the COVID-19 vaccine, according to official data. Vaccinating this age group is highly unethical,
and any physician who inoculates a healthy child is committing serious medical malpractice.
In July, 2021, the CDC found that fully vaccinated individuals who contract the infection have as high a
viral load in the nasal passage as unvaccinated individuals who get infected. This means the vaccinated
are just as infectious as the unvaccinated.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
