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Regarding the pending execution:

There is a viral thread on this topic here: https://x.com/VigilantFox/status/1846755851450638693

Today, two pro-freedom Republican lawmakers are using an unprecedented subpoena to overturn the conviction. Please consider reaching out to both of them directly about this or indirectly on Twitter here to support their efforts and create legislative pressure to overturn this execution.

https://www.texastribune.org/directory/brian-harrison/

https://www.texastribune.org/directory/jeff-leach/

(or through this twitter thread: https://x.com/VigilantFox/status/1846944807392104920)

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found on twitter thread: MyMadSide🇺🇸

@MyMadSide1

22m

A Temporary Restraining Order has been issued. The execution is delayed for now. 🙏

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Oct 16Liked by Pierre Kory, MD, MPA

“Thus, I maintain that the vast majority of those currently working in the system are vaccinated, and heavily vaccinated at that.” Agree 💯. Indoctrinated into maintaining the lie.

Among my 💉’ed family & friends, there is 0 intellectual curiosity as to what was injected into them, coupled with avid cognitive dissonance ascribing any new ailment as simply the expected event due to aging when previously they were in great health, they had been in cancer remission for 6+ years, etc.

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All my life I've been shocked and amazed at how little intellectual curiosity there is about nearly everything, how smug the vast majority of people are and how they apparently think they know everything. The ones with papers "certifying" their "smarts" are the worst in my experience.

Pitiful.

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I've been meditating on this thing: Curiosity.

Why am I so driven, motivated by curiosity? Curiosity helped me survive some very strange health adventures coming off of psych drugs. Be curious (instead of be alarmed). Also works very well for altered states (think "psychosis" if you don't want to think about "psychedelics")

So is it inborn? Or created? I have memories of my mother taking me to the park - and we weren't about the swings & slides (though those were fun). We were about the insects & trees, plants & birds. I believe that Mom did spark my curiosity about the world around me.

But it didn't stop there. Perhaps what she set in motion - learn, learn, learn, teach yourself - is why I'm so curious, and everyone around me isn't. But it feels like there's something more to it.

Why aren't people more curious? Even when it directly affects them? Is it just the overwhelming complexity of our civilisation? That our brains aren't just wired to handle it all?

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I used to be one of those lacking curiosity but since 2019 I have become much more curious even suspicious, I vett nearly everyone even dental personnel. If I cant figure out what action to take, I just sit tight until I feel its safe.

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I too find it shocking.

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We must have the same family, Renee Morris!

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I got lucky in that my whole family (by "blood") is unjabbed though a couple of "in-laws" have been jabbed. The jabbed ones are cock-sure ultracrepidarian to the max.

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Agreed. I find that my friends who are nurses or in the medical field are the least curious and informed, even those who have suffered numerous health issues since their covid “vaccines”. The “plandemic” had the opposite effect on me; led me to so many courageous, brilliant doctors, researchers, attorneys, etc who challenged the narrative and bucked the system at great personal sacrifice. Odd and disturbing how few the independent thinkers are, relatively speaking, among those in medicine.

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With both my parents 2008 and in 2021 one of us would stay in the hospital 24/7. Thank goodness the hospital allowed this in 2021. I always wondered how someone without help could manage. Nurses would demand that my mother not get out of bed without a nurses help but they would not come quickly when called. We would just help her ourselves. She would have been a statistic if not, I’m sure of it. People should not be left alone in a hospital ever! I know some don’t have a choice and/or their family don’t want to be bothered. I’m sure there are a lot of people making decisions to just stay out of the hospital at all costs. That’s where I am.

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And, of course, during “COVID” families and friends were barred from the hospital. Intentional, I am sure, for so many reasons.

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it was a horrible nightmare.

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Denise Lewis, I agree that a family member needs to be with their people in the hospital! June 2022, no vax, my husband became very confused and had to have someone with him. We were down a hall from the nurse’s desk. Finally got moved. Then I had to go home for a while. When I came back, the nurse was sitting in the room to keep him in bed. Reading all of this and remembering our experience, I agree that we need to keep our family at home as much as possible! Thank you, Dr. Kory and AMD. Oh! This really bothers me as a retired RN with a retired license on purpose!!

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Very smart to keep vigil on your loved one while in a hospital. Never realized it was needed but I do now. Thanks for telling us this.

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Many of the engineers I work with can not remember specific tasks we worked on together developing various radar procedures. Myself, I elected to be pfizer jabbed in early '21 thinking I would be left alone to travel for work. After 20 yrs in military I was under the impression that jabs are a good thing. Also, they had medical, first responders go first---had to be safe right? Anyhow, I had seen Dr. Kory's testimony and had been on Zelenko protocol...my adverse reaction was BP and Brain Fog/motor skills adjusting resistors on circuit boards lacked. Months later I started detoxing with World Council for Health tips, and switched from HCQ prophylaxis to IVM protcol initiated by FLCCC. It took a year a so, but back to normal. Took a break with IVM and detox protocols and had 2 bouts of pancreatitus. So far not turbo cancer, but thanks to the FLCCC I am confident I can take care of myself. I only wish the "System" would catch up so insurance would cover, can't afford direct care just yet. P.S coworkers that boosted more progressively worse..."mysterious clotting", a few dead quick from cancer they beat or new onset, or sick all the time. Its going to take generations to fix this, especially due to cogntive dissonance of what they have done to themselves.

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Given that sperm is affected, and women are affected, birth rates are dropping, miscarriagesa and still births are high, along with neonatal defects and increasing co-morbidities, AND that this vaccine sheds to unvaccinated, the chances of fixing this are slim.

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Man, that sucks. Hope you are able to detox. Just curious; what did you know about the jabs before you took them? Did you know they were new technology and had not been through the 5 years of testing? And did you know anything about Fauci from his AIDS days?

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Oct 18·edited Oct 18

I only learned about Fauci and his heavy involvement with AIDs after I started getting curious about everything going on that I never paid any attention to. Thanks to TELEGRAM posters who opened up my eyes on the real Fauci but on who and what were behind the 9-11 slaughter. If you don't have TELEGRAM you are missing out on a huge source of information altho you still have to be discriminating.

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Oct 16Liked by Pierre Kory, MD, MPA

Now imagine if the Spike-injured (MCI) are in charge of the nuclear button.

Related: Kamala requires her campaign staff to be "up to date".

A bug, or a feature?

Is there a brief (informal) cognitive test we can give a prospective provider in order to rule out MCI?

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I have wondered the same thing. Harris has a lot of staff turnover. Could be partly due to her being hard to work for or vax injury. It could also be a factor in her speeches and interviews if she is also "up to date."

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As a woman Ms. Harris should be outraged by the revelations in Naomi Wolf's new book: "The Pfizer Papers: Pfizer's Crimes Against Humanity." Starting at the 19 minute mark she outlines how Pfizer's own documents seemed to indicate they are more interested in reproduction than respiratory issues. She also mentions that woman had far more adverse events than men.

https://thehighwire.com/ark-videos/dr-naomi-wolf-reveals-shocking-details-in-the-pfizer-papers-2/

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My impression of Harris is that she does not really identify or empathize with anyone else at all, or any group at all. A bizarre political creature. Sort of like Hillary - IMO - only sees other people or groups as steppingstones or obstacles.

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Not a bizarre political creature, but a typical one, save her ability to fake empathy is lacking. In that she is rare.

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I see and take your point, thanks!

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100%. She's a masochistic, sociopathic whore.

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Did women respond worse? Myocarditis was much more prevalent in males.

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I personally know two women, one 30, the other 40, who had some heart trouble after getting jabbed. No previous heart trouble. Statistically, for me, that's a lot. I can believe it might affect men more. Maybe I have read about so many male athletes keeling over that my perception is skewed. At the end of the day, the jab is evil, and it is helpful, IMO, to be aware of problems known so far.

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It’s one of the few things very well-documented, one would have to assiduously avoid the increased myocarditis in boys and young men with the jab to miss it.

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Friend just shared that Tucker interviewed a former employee of Harris' from California and the hard to work for issue. Apologies as I don't have a link. Maybe cackling is a new, yet to be identified vax injury? 😊

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You can look at their eyes to determine injury, is my understanding. Simple eye scope, because damage to blood vessels of eyes shows potential microclotting in brain.

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Oct 16Liked by Pierre Kory, MD, MPA

Will cognitive impairment affect voters as well as the candidates for whom they vote? (Rhetorical question, sadly.)

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As a nurse who was once "volunteered" to be our critical care unit's representative for the "Falls Committee," as well as the Quality Assurance representative for the entire critical care division - I understand the seriousness of patient falls. (I also find that I can no longer walk past a puddle of water in the grocery store - without ensuring that it is immediately attended to.) I wasn't working during COVID - Post Concussion Syndrome following a MVA meant I no longer felt safe caring for patients. However, I followed the healthcare situation during COVID with great interest and concern. Yes, I do believe the COVID vaccine has adversely affected many, and I am grateful that the majority of my family, as well as myself - avoided the vaccine. As nurse, I would like to offer a few additional thoughts on the reasons for increased patient falls:

1) The decreased staffing and staff turnover during COVID, causing more difficulty with vigilance/following protocols.

2) Increased use of travel nurses who were unfamiliar with the units/protocols/access to supplies.

3) Depending upon state/area, families/friends weren't allowed to visit the patient (I was kicked out of my son's ER room Oct 2023) - which meant that the patients had fewer eyes on them, and fewer people to assist them. A very wise manager told me early in my career - to never underestimate a patient's desire and will to get to the bathroom. I found that THAT urge was a HUGE potential fall risk, and family could be very helpful in alerting us about potential problems. (When my dad had stroke -like symptoms from a brain tumor, I told the nurses that my dad probably wasn't going to call for help, so they put his bed in the hallway during the night.) The COVID rules banning visitors deprived patients of an advocate by their side, as well as the close support from friends and family. They also handicapped nurses, because when nurses are short staffed, a helpful family member is a godsend.

4) I read a few studies on how wearing masks for extended periods of time could potentially affect cognition, and they were concerning. If nurses were already cognitively impaired from being vaccinated, then wearing masks for a 12 hours shift would only make the situation worse. I would hope that at this point mandatory masking has ended at most hospitals, but I know that it has continued at some locations - like my pulmonologist's office.

So, while I agree that cognitive issues related to the vaccine are likely a major cause of the increase in patient falls - I also believe that there likely other factors involved. It will be interesting to see how the number of falls look in 2024 and 2025, as hospitals return to a new normal post-COVID.

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Thank you for this - confirms much of what I think and yes, it isn't just the impacts of the jab but also staffing/training/travel nurses etc..

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And still, most of these problems are related to the Covid response.

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I can confirm from the Nursing Assistant side. Understaffed wards in a SkNF (2/19 - 24) with multiple fall-risk, multiple cognitively-impaired patients, made falls a constant problem, especially on Q-shift. BYW, while quality could vary wildly, some of our travellers were godsends, though.

Add the lockdown supply-chain issues and inflation to the quality of materials, and rationing of basic supplies like trash-can liners, ancient mechanical lifts, malfunctioning beds, call lights, etc., the time required to provide patient-care increased even as available staff were reduced.

It was a frightening place to work.

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The main things I have personally witnessed have been: Calls to clinics being short staffed and being on a list for a call back that never happens. A hospital that says they are very short staffed in the surgery department. An appointment with a surgeon who did my hernia repair in 2022 (Failed now) who just referred me to the main hospital because she didn't want to do it. (Could have been handled with a phone interview). This all was in mid August, I now have the surgery scheduled in December, because they are short staffed as well. The other thing that shocked me with these appointments was how fat so many of the staff have become in both hospitals and the clinic I have been to. That makes me think there is a lot of stress eating.

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Overweight hospital staff is not new, though it may be worse now. I’m steering clear of hospitals and so are many people I know. No trust. No competency. No compassion.

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I hear you. I am not looking forward to this surgery but I feel I need to do it now or never.

My initial appointment was in my way o thinking, more an interview of this surgeon than it was him examining me. I came away feeling somewhat confident in him.

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Food luck on your surgery. Be sure to keep a family member or friend close by during your hospital stay. We wish you all the best.

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where are you that you have to wait until December for an operation??

This is terrible

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Central Wisconsin, but the surgery is in La Crosse on the west side of the state. Laproscopic surgery that can't be done in my area. First time was traditional surgery. There is supposed to be much less recovery time with this one, but it is general anaesthesia which has more risk.

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hmmmm. I wish you all the best. be sure they seal up the wounds on your belly properly. Both recoveries are about the same really. Laproscopic they just blow your abdomen up with air, and that is pretty rough recovery. Best wishes. Take good care of your abdominal muscles

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Thanks for the advise.

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Oct 18·edited Oct 18

Thanx for the additional info. I'm needing a hernia repair too but am leery of the docs in my Humana insurance network....and I don't want to get an operation that could fail later.

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How did the hernia operation fail? I developed an umbilical hernia a year ago and have chosen not to risk surgery for now, as I don't trust the system for the example you give.

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Starting four months post surgery I would get up from a chair or turn and feel little stabs in the area of the surgery. Bit by bit a lump formed again until this year it developed into the full hernia size I had repaired in 2022. It wasn't because I pushed with too much lifting or didn't follow the recovery protocol. I was quite careful. I wonder if it is just my age and weaker tissues. This is not uncommon. I know a chiropractor that had surgeries 3 times 2 for the one side then on that developed on the other. Stats: 1 in 4 men world wide live with hernias.

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Have you ever tried castor oil packs? They are very helpful for healing/repairing tissue in the gut area and probably DMSO would alsio help. Moxa can also help. If you are vegan you may be short on collagen.

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My dad had back surgery in early 2022. Fell multiple times going to the bathroom (he refused a catheter). He was mentally confused (is normally on top it). I called the nurses station multiple times throughout the night and spoke with him as well. At one point he said he thought they were trying to kill him. I went early the next day to be with him and they had a "sitter" assigned to watch him. He was given morphine (who knows how much) and has had negative reactions to it in the past. The fact that he had to be assigned a sitter is concerning, and that he might have been over medicated by something he's had bad reactions to in the past. Glad I could go be with him as my siblings think doctors/nurses walk on water and will do no harm.

About six months ago we had a 53yr old patient that was physically unstable and manic when she got to the OR. Had a very difficult time transferring from gurney to table. The surgeon discovered the anesthesiologist had given her three doses (not sure how much) of ketamine. This was overkill as she was tiny. The anesthesia care during her surgery was suspect as well. Be careful out there! Question everything.

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yes, you have to advocate for your loved ones. Do not take any care for granted.

My hubbs had open heart surgery in 2021 at Inova Fairfax Hospital. They would not allow me to come in, they said he was too drugged up to speak on the phone. Well, after two days, I demanded to speak to my husband, I was getting panicked. Someone had called me the day before saying that my husband needed to step down from ICU and two facilities called me later to ask me to decide which facility to transfer him to!!! what? Hell no. I called the next day and asked for a discharge process, called my husband and asked him to please get out of bed. No one had helped him. It was the nuttiest thing ever. They filled all of the prescriptions at the hospital, what a MESS, their printing of instructions were a mess, paper problems, illegible to read! for post op heart surgery! and the med doses and instructions were different. Nearly gave me a heart attack. This was such a horrible thing, as you feel like you require the information and the understanding and get wrong dose meds, wrong drugs, no communication. I am an RN retired but this was just shocking. Back in the days we wore those white shoes, proper attire and a simple badge without clutter hanging from it. We were alert and proactive.

I was pretty disgusted, just sloppy all around.

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Rosemary B! How unacceptable! I worked Open Heart as we called it for 15 years. Never would that have happened before Covid. Transfer to another facility when that unit is all there for all 3 phases! Oh my!

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That's the kind of hospital 'care' that worries me and keeps me from getting my hernia repaired.

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Don’t let them use mesh. Good luck

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Could you please share why you recommend not using mesh. I have a family member that might need to do second hernia surgery that might require mesh to be put in. Thank you.

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Given how many medical errors my own family has experienced BEFORE Covid, this notion is terrifying

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Oct 18·edited Oct 18

Agreed. I had already lost trust due to multiple errors prior to Covid.

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Thanks so much for the in depth coverage of breakdown amongst hospital staff. it helps explain what I went through in March , 2023 recovering from surgery in a nursing home. My very large dog had thrown me down on the cement floor in my sunroom and the top of my femur snapped and sheered off. I had a nine inch pin and two large screws inserted in my right thigh. The surgeon had written a script for pain meds, and the attending physician at the rehab facility was supposed to write a new one, but didn't. On Friday, my pills ran out and my leg started to ache. The nursing staff largely ignored me. No physican. On Sunday he came by and offered to give me an xray to see if there was a problem, but refused to give me the pain pills I needed. I was 76 and not in danger off overdosing. Finally on Monday morning I called an ambulence and was taken to the hospital where I had my surgery ( about five minutes away) they admitted me, placed me on a gurney and shot me up.I was in heaven I also got a new script.Late in the day someone from the nursing home came to fetch me. But I was able to enlist the help of a caregiver at the nursing home to buy me cannibis gummies which killed the pain and allowed me to sleep very well. He risked his job to do this.

The nursing staff did try to prevent me from leaving when the ambulence came--are they all brainless? Elderly seniors are very badly treated and that is why I have been labelled medically uncooperative. I had to fight them to prevent Covid jabs, a TB injection based test and to stop trying to inject me with blood thinners that caused massive bruising to my inner thighs. Thank god Uber brought me boxes of food from a local health store-- the cafeteria food was extremely low in protein, fresh fruit and served tons of sugary desserts three times a day.🥴

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Thanks Eunice for being persistent and stubborn. It may have saved your life!

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I had the experience five years prior after suffering a massive stroke from a dental overdose of anesthesia. The hopsital where I wads taken kicked me out of rehab because I refused to take statins..My LDL was around 100, trigylicerides around 150.. Anyway,I wound up staying in a nursing home in Missoula for almost a month where the staff thought I was crazy because I used to go out every morning in my wheelchair to the grounds that ran along the Clark Fork River, take off my shoes and do grounding (it was in the 30's) the locked me outside more than once,hid a delivery of supplements UPS brought me( good thing I could track it on my cell phone) and let anorher patient harass me it was the closest thing to prison and the only reason I didn't press charges was because 100 year old mother was also à patient

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Quite separately to the direct cognitive impact (of both vaccines and masks), indirect mechanisms are also likely to contribute.

Iatrogenic harm ranks towards the top of morbidity and mortality tables and has long represented ‘systemic harms’ manifesting through individual (and cumulative) mistakes.

As Camus elegantly described in ‘The Plague’ - ‘organisations are compassionless’. When a system fails to care about its individuals (such as mandates), psychologically the individuals ‘take less care’ and not deliberately. When a health workers autonomy is not valued by the ‘system’ the law of reciprocity means less care exists in the system - even though the individuals themselves remain compassionate.

You can’t systematize solutions (checklists) for compassion.

Organisations also prey on the false virtue that health workers are only valued if they ‘make sacrifices’ at their own expense

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Sadly, hospitals in U$A (and probably everywhere that pHarma is the dominant medical system)

- have become killing fields .. a veritable hospital holocaust in the wake of "covid"

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Yes, many experience cognitive decline from the covid vaccine. Some thought it was average process of aging. I remember reading about Terry Wahls and she had decline in memory with the MS and was able to begin reversing the extreme fatigue and brain fog. I still experience the brain fog and fatigue. Trying to work the stuff out of system.

I had a friend 80yr male broke hip the medical care at the hospital was ok had someone else there. The problem when he was transferred to subacute rehab care. With the hip fracture used an average bedpan and didn't put it backwards for hip fracture. Did not allow outside communication his cell phone was broken fed a diet of puree that was loaded with sugar which was inappropriate. Put him on psych meds when he wasn't in need of those meds to keep him quiet. Not able to reach the male patient after they told him he was worthless and didn't need to walk demeaning him isolating from human contact, I heard someone hitting him from the staff The alleged diet coordinator was the speech person allegedly never got any services. I contacted the local law enforcement for a welfare check the man is on dialysis patient and cannot reach him. Please send someone out as soon as possible his life could be in jeopardy. The healthcare person with power of attorney told me I couldn't call the agency that licensed the facility to lodge a complaint until he was out of the facility. Even today he still has nightmares and flashbacks of the place in 2024. This all occurred this year 2024 did some research on the place and they had prior fines for patient care $7,000 per day while not in compliance by Medicare and Medicaid. I don't know if it was medical negligence or impaired neurological thinking memory brain fog this place was under. The patient care needs a great improvement in my opinion.

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We have physicians/nurses graduating who are saying "men can have babies" so is it no wonder we're seeing incompetency sneak in?

When you rig the system so more can graduate that shouldn't, so more can go to college then should, so more can look good then actually being good at something, you're going to get a slow increase of incompetency that will be radical and sporadic at first but with each new instance it will pick up speed and frequency. Right now there are bridges being designed/built/reviewed that won't go online for a year or more and so it's going to take a little more time to start seeing these events is large numbers but it will happen. You can not hire people based on anything other then meritocracy and expect to win. At best you may accidentally not loose.

It started with Affirmative Action which gave women special/preferential treatment over men for jobs and more recently it's been expanded to DEI so this incompetency isn't reserved exclusively just for women anymore but to any/all who are not straight white men; that literally is the requirement.

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Sounding like a get out of jail card for future indictments.

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