Showing posts with label — Michael Malice (@michaelmalice) January 12. Show all posts
Showing posts with label — Michael Malice (@michaelmalice) January 12. Show all posts

Sunday, January 19, 2025

ROBERT BARNES critiques America's medical care system

The best asset protection is people.  If you know a lot of people in a lot of places . . . think of how smugglers operate.  If you have people connections, that is one of the best assets you can possibly have to get from A to B to C to D if you have to, if you feel the heat around the corner . . . from an illegitimate government actor.  --Robert Barnes

A critique of medical care in America's hospitals. 

23:40  

#1 Piece of Advice: have people there with you in the hospital.  

My comment:  Absolutely.  If you don't have a friend or loved one looking out for you, the hospital will put you through procedures you'd already completed earlier in the afternoon.  They're double dipping.  They're not there for your well-being; on the contrary, they are using you for their well-being, their financial well-being.  

#2 Piece of Advice: have your network . . . it's what I often argue for asset protection.  The best asset protection is people.  If you know a lot of people in a lot of places . . . think of how smugglers operate.  If you have people connections, that is one of the best assets you can possibly have to get from A to B to C to D if you have to, if you feel the heat around the corner . . . from an illegitimate government actor.  For example, I've represented victims of domestic abuse, and I helped the woman get out of the country and stay out of the country.  Her ex-husband, her abuser, was a bounty hunter, so he had unique skills to track and trace her.  We found ways to underground railroad her completely out of the country.  He was so creative that he went to the IRS to report her to the IRS, hoping that the IRS would disclose to him where she was currently living.  But yeah, have people that you know in your network--that's critical--and have somebody there with you. 

24:45  Unfortunately, you can't trust them at all.  I mean COVID kind of proved that to more people than used to be the case.  These doctors are totally unaccustomed to having anybody pushing back on them.  Whenever I'd be like, "Nah, I'm not sure about that," they get angry, they get irritable, your bad doctor.  Your good doctor is totally chill.  "Hey, it's your life.  It's your freedom.  There's always a risk.  Whatever you do, I'm just here to give you the risk/reward analysis."  Then there's the bad doctor who uses fear and power, "I have the white lab coat, not you."  They're going to do a live Milligram Experiment, a live Stanford Experiment, and you just have to push back.  The one in Philly was my favorite.  (It was a teaching hospital.  They're teaching to young would-be doctors.  They were great.  They were going behind their teacher and protecting me from what the teacher was trying to do.  But the teacher, when she realized that I was not going to go forward with the surgical procedures they wanted.  She looked at me and asked, "Are you COVID vaccinated?"  And I was like, No.  So now we know where both of us stand, where I come from, where [she comes] from.  But I think the hospitals don't appreciate how much . . . I mean I have nurses who are whistleblowers coming out everywhere talking to Warner Mendenhall, my co-counsel, in the Brook Jackson and future other cases, talking about, for example, the hospital repeatedly witnessed vaccine adverse events.  Under federal law, they have to report that to the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System, VAERS.  It's a precondition for their reimbursement for any government agency.  Pretty much every hospital in the country has been lying, because they were told from the top down, "Don't report that."

26:28  Even aspirin, allergy medicine, chocolate, almonds, literally anything you put in your body some people are going to have an adverse effect. 

32:50 Are you familiar with the book, And the Band Played On, by Randy Shilts?  It's written by a gay journalist who later died of AIDS.  it's basically a year-by-year account of how AIDS rolled out, and you read it and it's one of the best books I read in 2024.  It's absolutely brutal.  First of all, you have the activists who were refusing to modify their behavior to stop spreading the disease.  They were saying, "Oh, you're a Nazi.  You're anti-sex.  It's puritanical.". The activists were like, guys this is how it spreads. "Well too bad. I'm not stopping." It was very dark.  Well, Fauci is in there. Fauci, in the 1980s, and he goes on some show and he goes, "Well we don't know if it's spread by sneezing or handshakes."  They did know that at that point that it wasn't, so you had this entire population who are already dying alone now being completely marginalized and the doctors were like, why would you say this?  And the level of irresponsibility from him . . . I didn't realize that this was 40 years in the making with this guy.  I thought okay maybe, this is my naivete, that maybe people are just getting too worked up, he's just making innocent mistakes.  This guy is shameless.  And I know Bobby Kennedy wrote a book about it [The Real Anthony Fauci, 2021].  I have not read the book. I didn't realize to what extent this guy has blood on his hands, and with AZT as well as the COVID vaccines.

Kennedy's book, he spent a year researching that.  I was part of it, and other people were part of it, making sure every possible statement he had was backed up on multiple levels.