Friday, August 16, 2024

DR. CARNE ROSS: he has invariably treated influenza with cinnamon, patients have generally been perfectly fit to return to their avocations . . . within three or four days

Do you have a concern about the flu? Vaccination has shown itself to be a failure. Maybe you should try cinnamon! 
In 1907, Dr. Ross reported on his use of cinnamon oil for 16 years to help patients quickly recover from influenza. Weeks of illness from the flu were reduced to three or four days. “Ross states that for nearly sixteen years he has employed cinnamon in various forms in treating this [influenza] disease, but for many years now he has always employed the oil of Ceylon cinnamon bark... We all of us have heard only too often of bad cases of influenza where the unhappy patients have been confined to their beds or their rooms for a fortnight, three weeks, a month, or even longer... he has invariably treated influenza with cinnamon, his patients have generally been perfectly fit to return to their avocations, whatever they may have been, within three or four days, and that in no single case has a patient suffering from influenza been on his hands for more than a week.” 
[“Cinnamon Oil in the Treatment of Influenza,” Joseph Carne Ross, M.D. Edin., The Kansas City Medical Index-Lancet, vol. XXVIII, no. 1, January 1907, p. 92.

DR. C. KILLICK MILLARD: with improved sanitation (using the term in the widest sense) smallpox will be completely banished from this country as has been the case with plague, cholera, and typhus fever

They use the name “pox” to elicit a fear reaction because most people have been brainwashed that smallpox was defeated by vaccination.

In 1914 Dr. C. Killick Millard wrote in The Vaccination Question:

“For forty years, corresponding roughly with the advent of the “sanitary era,” smallpox has gradually but steadily been leaving this country (England). For the past ten years, the disease has ceased to have any appreciable effect upon our mortality statistics. For most of that period, it has been entirely absent except for a few isolated outbreaks here and there. It is reasonable to believe that with the perfecting and more general adoption of modern methods of control and with improved sanitation (using the term in the widest sense) smallpox will be completely banished from this country as has been the case with plague, cholera, and typhus fever. Accompanying this decline in smallpox there has been a notable diminution during the past decade in the amount of infantile vaccination. This falling off in vaccination is steadily increasing and is becoming very widespread.”

[Harry Bernhardt Anderson, State Medicine a Menace to Democracy, 1920, p. 84.]

C. HENRY KEMPE on SMALLPOX VACCINES: Vaccines are more dangerous than Smallpox

The government and vaccinators have always thought that if you are injured or die for the “greater good,” it is all worth it. Of course, they don’t ask you if that’s ok with you or your family. “The mortality and morbidity from routine infant smallpox vaccination in this country is now truly appalling when compared to the risk of smallpox. Analysis of data obtained from a review of questionnaires received from 19,616 physicians surveyed by us suggested that the estimated number of complications in 1963 was approximately 3,000, with ten to eighteen deaths among a total of fourteen million persons vaccinated… The last smallpox death in the United States following an importation occurred in 1948, but since that time there have probably been 200 to 300 deaths from smallpox vaccination… The majority of workers in the field of public health sincerely feel that the current morbidity and mortality from routine vaccination is “the price we have to pay” for keeping our country free of smallpox.” – C. Henry Kempe, Professor and Chairman, Department of Pediatrics, 1968 [C. Henry Kempe, “Smallpox vaccination of eczema patients with attenuated live vaccinia virus,” Yale journal of biology and medicine, August 1968, pp. 9-10.]

DR. JAMES MILLER: The medical school I went to there's a statue of the Good Samaritan in front of it, and suddenly with this pandemic we're told that the Good Samaritan turned away and walks on the other side of the street

The way that it was done was through a very cynical euphemism of saying "we are doing this to protect staff and other patients," and therefore we're not delivering care to these people who are not thought well of [in other words, the unvaccinated].  In the Substack that you mentioned that I was able to get published through the midwestern doctor, I describe how that came to be, how I ended up starting that I was starting a free clinic through my church to start helping people.  And one of the patients who came into the clinic was just too sick for outpatient care.  She she needed inpatient care.  But she was unvaccinated.  When I sent her to the hospital, they had available monoclonal antibodies and things that she needed but she was sent home inappropriately and with such disrespect that she ended up not to seeking healthcare from anyone, including our free clinic until she was moribund.  She couldn't be saved and went on to die.  After that, our church or clinic we bought an oxygen concentrator and we kept multiple people out of the hospital by just treating them t our clinic and at home for the people who were unvaccinated would not have received reasonable care at the hospital. 

Why do you think the hospital and the administrators who led that hospital did this?

I can't mind read. There was just this universal madness that went on and I watched it fall to pieces in front of me.  I mentioned a few of the details in the sub stack that was submitted that was published.  It was just very hard to explain being a rational person and somebody who wants to deliver healthcare I was really at a loss.  What was so hard about it was made it hard to speak of because everyone around you is participating in something that you know is wrong and your friends and colleagues you've trusted each other for years, it was very difficult to watch.  I can't say motive but it seems like there was just this group loss of reason, but the cruelty to it and that was the part that really struck me was just the cruelty, how we collectively as a medical community and in our oath to care for people, particularly the vulnerable.  You know, as a trauma surgeon as I was previously employed as, is that we would take care of people that we disagreed with.  We would take care of drunk drivers, we'd take care of smokers, whatever the issue is, and we discipline ourselves to not be afraid of infectious disease.  You know, I can't tell you how many thousands of times I've been covered in HIV and hepatitis C blood, but I had to be disciplined not to flinch.  So now we have this virus and now we're supposed to flinch, we're supposed to avoid these people, we're supposed to invert reality we are supposed to not care for them.  The medical school I went to this there's a statue of the Good Samaritan in front of it, and suddenly with this pandemic we're told that the Good Samaritan turned away and walks on the other side of the street.  We are told it's unethical, it's unChristian to visit the sick.  You need to let your grandma die, that's the ethical, the Christian thing to do.  It was all inverted.  Unfortunately, most of my friends, most of my colleagues went along with it.

Quickly, you lost basically everything there in Washington state.  You moved to South Florida.  You were abandoned by a lot of your colleagues in light of that, Dr Miller.  Would you do it all again?

100%.  I just wish I would have done it earlier.