Trump vs Musk, HHS Mandates Nutrition Classes in Med School

Mine was similar in that regard, but in six years of meeting 50 or more mins a day it could have been so, so much more.

I ran into a Pharma influenced cardiologist over 9 years ago. I had a 90% blockage that required a stent. After the procedure the Dr told me I had other smaller blockages, 30%ish, that were too small to deal with at the time, but that I would be back in a year or two as they grew and became a problem.
He tried to put me on a statin for high cholesterol, I refused.
I contacted a local homeopathic doctor, she drew blood and when we reviewed the results, she said my cholesterol was right where she wanted it, around 190. She said my blockage was a result of my Fibrinogen level was sky high and that was what caused my blockage. She recommended Nattokinase to treat this. I took it for the following 2 years at 4 times the recommended dosage, then over time reduced it down to 1 a day. I take it still today and will for the rest of my life.
This supplement is a natural blood thinner and will dissolve the existing small clots. I has been nearly 9 1/2 years since my one and only stint. I was not surprised when Chris started talking about Nattokinase as part of the FLCCC protocol for covid.

6 Likes

Great information–thanks for sharing!

I have to agree with this doctor’s take.

My daughter wanted to be a nurse, so started
taking the nursing classes at the community
college here in California. The time she
was there, the college wanted her to take
the COVID Jabs.

I helped my daughter file her Title 4
religious objection to avoid the Jabs, as
the Publicly funded community college had
to obey the Federal Title 4 Law.

Title 4 is for Publicly Funded Schools
and a Student/School relationship.

Title 7 is for Employer and Employee relationship.
My wife and I had to file Title 7 for our employers.

The next year, the college removed the
Jab requirement, but my daughter was able
to attend jab free along with the other
poor jabbed students.

When she started her second year of community
college classes, she ran into another brick
wall. There was a class and seminar on the
next step for the nursing students, where
after the college, they would be going to
the medical clinics.

She would not be allowed into any of those
medical clinics without documented Jabbing.
There was no exception or acknowledgement of
the Title 4 / Title 7 Religious Exemption at the
medical clinic level of Nurse training here
in California. The clinic Nurse rep,
said you must take the Jab.

So the California Nursing industry LOST
another potential Nurse, and my daughter
dropped OUT of that career path. She now
works with Kids in a school, and is still
JAB FREE. Maybe the medical industry will
someday GET THE HINT and wonder WHY no one
wants to be a Doctor or Nurse anymore.

One should NOT need to subject their body to
Experimental Emergency Use only Gene Therapy
to simply get a job. I am glad my daughter
stood her ground, and personal body sovereignty.

5 Likes

I know several who left the medical community to avoid forced jabbing.

3 Likes

Good for you. When you realize what we sell are mostly products based on lies and manipulated data, you cannot unsee that truth. I didn’t practice medicine for 2 years due to my refusal to get the jab. Before that I had immense loyalty to the medical system as well as to patients. Now I understand that those two things have basically become mutually exclusive.

5 Likes

She made a choice she will NEVER regret. I couldn’t practice for over 2 years (due to the jab) and thanks to my years of following Chris and my “rudimentary resilience” I was able to weather that storm pretty well. The medical system is in absolute freefall right now. Hospitals can’t hire, staff are dropping dead, and public trust is at an all time low. I am currently working my way out because I can’t ethically be part of such a broken system.

3 Likes

It’s such a shame we are losing good docs like you. I hope you can get into a concierge situation and that RFK Jr. addresses alternatives to the current federal insurance options—maybe like a voucher system as some states allow for public schools (an alternative to the standard fare).

1 Like

Is there any form of medicine - mainstream, western, alternative, or other - that has a fairly decent practice at its core? Or is all of it bad?

1 Like

My medical school did teach some nutrition. However, it was taught by the same PhD who taught our biochemistry class. So it was a lot like biochemistry. It was about the reactions that occur and how the various vitamins drove those reactions. There was no practical information. Plus, once we got the clinical years nobody was applying any nutritional principles to actual clinical practice.

Mandating nutrition classes is a hoop medical schools can find a way to jump through. But there are bigger concerns in medical school
 teaching enough information that’s on the 3 exams we are required to get a license, for example, is much more important. Passing those exams is essential. Schools with lower pass rates have more trouble attracting good students.

As for PE classes, well
 I grew up in the days of mandatory PE. It SUCKED. I was slow and clumsy. The PE classes focused on ball based team sports (except for a unit of gymnastics, which isn’t good for a tall, slow, clumsy kid). I HHAATTEEDDD PE. I was always made fun of by the other kids. Was always the last one picked for teams. Got hit in the face with the ball at least once a season. Got blamed for my team losing. Got yelled at by the teacher "you should be able to run faster because you have long legs! You should be able to jump higher because you have long legs! You’re not trying! Plus in NY at the time it was graded and counted in your GPA. I was a mostly A student and the C in PE drug my GPA down which pissed me off royally. The whole experience made me hate the idea of any physical activity at all. If PE classes are going to make a difference, they are going to have to be a LOT different than they were in the 1970’s

1 Like

Boy do I hear you! Not only did we have to wear VERY unflattering one piece uniforms, but I was never graceful and did poorly at PE. Once, in middle school, while running in place, I sprained my ankle so badly it still gives out time to time, even with strengthening exercises!

I have nightmares about these uniforms!

2 Likes

Interesting development for me late in life. There was ZERO sports I was good at. Until I discovered water volleyball. At 67, it turns out, I’m really really good at it. The technique and planning are actually easy, but I’m deadly accurate. It’s kind of funny, people that play with me all the time will go out of the way to keep the ball away from me. You hit the ball to me 3x in a row, and I can guarantee I will get the point
 100% of the time. When I play at other campgrounds, I have to seriously tone it down. One time, a former member of the home campground and I met up at a different campground. He was better than I was. We were POUNDING on each other. I finally looked at him and said, we have to remember where we are at :slight_smile: . There is zero in my sports background that prepared me for finding something I’m actually good at.

1 Like

Maybe they should have two tracks. One for jocks and sports loving kids and another for those who prefer a health oriented track based on learning nutrition, exercise and fitness. Schools could save a fortune because less land would be needed to house a fitness room and, the coaches, albums and jocks would love this, the non jocks would not be touching their prescious grass and courts.

2 Likes

That is lovely compared to what we were forced to wear.

1 Like

Oh man–that’s bad! It looks like a truncated prison uniform!

Fantastic. We need more providers to abandon the current sclerotic system and build a new system centered around patients instead of profits. I am an anesthesiologist so it may not cross over as easily but I will check out the World Council for Health.

2 Likes

There are pockets of light in mainstream but you have to do your due diligence and not be afraid to fire your doctor if you don’t vibe. If you need surgery, mainstream is still the best place to go, but if you need medical management (primary care, allergy, etc) you are likely to get a bunch of drugs prescribed by most mainstream docs. My strategy is if I get hit by a car I’m going to the hospital. But for general health and maintenance I go to a Naturopath. In an attempt to avoid any medication I mostly eat a keto diet and exercise regularly. The best thing to do is find a practitioner that you trust and resonate with.

4 Likes

Appreciate your reply! Thank you.

Mark Brody, MD
Health Freedom Practitioner