Was it COVID or was it Midazolam?Highlights from the Healthcare Revolution: APRIL 28, 2024
In this edition: Excess deaths and strange clots; Big Pharma’s drug problem; school lunch with a side of contaminants; shady dealings at American Diabetes Association; and FLCCC’s new Allergy Guide
Welcome to this week's wrap up of insights, discussions, discoveries, and debates that have sparked curiosity and fostered understanding this week.
In this edition, we discuss the evolving issue of excess deaths and strange clots; Big Pharma’s drug efficacy problem; How Lunchables are highly contaminated; FLCCC’s new Allergy Guide; and we shine a light on the shady dealings of The American Diabetes Association.
Was the anesthesia drug “Midazolam” responsible for excess deaths seen in 2020?
“It looks like a lot of people died as a direct result of being given Midazolam.”
That’s what Dr. John Campbell said in the opening of his recent video covering a new study released in the UK. If the study’s findings are correct, it means that thousands of people’s deaths that were attributed to COVID were actually because they were given the anesthesia drug. The study is titled: “Excess Deaths in the United Kingdom: Midazolam and Euthanasia in the COVID-19 Pandemic” and Dr. Campbell does an excellent job of highlighting all the important details. WATCH NOW
Big Pharma’s cancer drugs have a problem: They don’t work.
Recent research from the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) shows that after doctors received payments for marketing from pharmaceutical companies, there was a 4% uptick in cancer drug prescriptions over one year. However, this did not significantly enhance patient survival rates. The study, drawing from Medicare prescription data and federally reported marketing payments, shows an increase in drug spending but no corresponding improvement in patient survival. This points to concerns that financial motivations are trumping actual medical benefits for patients. READ MORE
Do your children have enough “contaminants” in their diet?
Lunchables - yes, the meals designed for and marketed to children - have been found to have “dangerous levels of contaminants,” including heavy metals like lead and cadmium, as well as phthalates. Lunchables are now in school lunch programs - meaning millions of children eat this unhealthy, dangerous “food” routinely. In this clip, Russell Brand discusses the absurdity of all of it, including the fact that taxpayers are being forced to pay taxes that go to feeding children dangerous items like Lunchables. WATCH NOW
Less “achoo!” more “woohoo!” with FLCCC’s NEW Allergy Guide
If you’ve ever dealt with allergies, or even if you know somebody who has, you know how frustrating they can be. FLCCC’s Allergy Guide is here to help! Written and compiled by the fabulous ‘Double K’ duo (Dr. Kristina Carman and Kristina Morros, CRNA), this guide has everything you need to better manage allergies in their many forms.
For more information on supplements, low histamine diets, and lifestyle tips, visit the FLCCC Tools and Guides section on the FLCCC website. There you’ll find resources like this:
READY TO PUT ALLERGIES BEHIND YOU?
Why are embalmers (still) finding unusual blood clots?
The story of COVID and the unusual amyloid-like blood clots continues in the latest episode of FLCCC’s Weekly Webinar. While our usual hosts take a well-earned break, we were excited to have Joyce Kamen fill in for Betsy and Dr. Ryan Cole step in for our resident doctors. We also welcomed two incredible guests, both of them experts in the blood clot phenomenon: Major Thomas Haviland, Ret. USAF, and embalmer Richard Hirschman.
If you aren’t familiar with what these clots are and where they come from, then you need to watch this webinar right now. This isn’t simply an uptick in the usual blood clots people deal with. This is something new:
“In medicine, especially in pathology, we have food descriptors. So you know, historically we would see clots that were grape jelly-like or chicken fatty… and these [white blood clots] aren’t those.” - Dr. Ryan Cole
So what are they? Watch the webinar and find out: WATCH NOW
The American Diabetes Association may have some explaining to do…
Journalist Neil Barsky has started a new series in partnership with The Guardian titled “Death by diabetes: America’s preventable epidemic.” The series takes aim at the powerful forces that seem to be negatively influencing the actions of The American Diabetes Association.
In the article, “Low-carb diets work. Why does the American Diabetes Association push insulin instead?” Barsky asks why The American Diabetes Association isn’t promoting lifestyle interventions over pharmaceutical solutions. Great question, Neil!
Neil also wrote a piece telling the story of one American Diabetes Association employee who was fired after refusing to approve recipes with one special ingredient: Splenda. That’s interesting because Splenda happens to be a big donor to the association. READ MORE
In an Austin, TX hospital , my brother (sick with COVID during the Delta variant)was convinced to allow them to give him some Morphine "just so you can rest a little," after many days of fighting to stay off the ventilator. Guess what? His O2 sat went down (no surprise there), and the hospital was on the phone to get permission from his wife to put him on the ventilator, while my my brother was yelling in the background, "No ventilator! No ventilator!" They told her he would be dead within 24 hours if they didn't intubate him. So she gave them the go-ahead. (And the hospital received yet another COVID vent patient financial kick-back) Thus began almost a month of their dire warnings of my brother's imminent death. Fortunately, he survived this hospital's COVID protocol - unlike all his other Delta ventilator/Remdesivir/COVID protocol predecessors. This hospital, as do many others - have a lot to answer for. They chose to follow money and conformity instead of the simple old oath of "do no harm."
This is very easy prove. Compare UK, US & Australian Covid hospitalization deaths to countries that did not use medazolam and or remdezavir.