synopsis?
Especially since it’s long
TL;DW version?
Executive summary, please. ;-)
Can you boil it down for us?
Could you describe each scene and paraphrase the dialog?
Condensed milk version please?
Herman Cain, is that you?
In a nutshell? ....
bookmark
ping
Ping
I am a covid nurse. Every patient has vitamin deficiency. I take vitamin C, vitamin D, zinc and NAC every day.
P4L
Do cigars prevent Covid 19 ? Cause I haven’t gotten the flu. I think there’s a connection.
A summation of replies to your OP, please?
wtf
My wife and I several days ago had a sudden unexplained onset of extreme fatigue. Usually described as, The Blahs. Very low energy levels. We felt the need to sleep several times throughout the day for two days. Some slight wheezing when breathing and sinus and chest congestion.
I’m 62 she’s 61. Slightly overweight. Our doc tells us “you should lose 10 pounds”, every visit. She’s Type II diabetic but, on the low end of that scale and in complete control with meds.
She was low on her Type II meds and called our Primary Care Physician. He casually asked her how are you feeling? She related the above info. He asked us both to come in to get a Wuhan Virus test. We both tested positive.
No fever. Just the symptoms stated above and it was over in two days.
bump
Very informative. Worth a watch.
Get lots of Sunshine, Vitamins D, C, A and preferably eat foods that produce these vitamins. Iodine + Iodide.
https://patch.com/texas/across-tx/anti-vax-doctor-north-texas-draws-controversy-billboard
Mitchell, who graduated from Texas Tech’s medical school in 1987, had his medical license revoked on Aug. 26, 2005, due to evidence claiming he was “a continuing threat to public welfare,” according to medical board documents obtained by Patch. On May 25, 2012, the Texas Medical Board filed a cease and desist order against Mitchell after he treated a patient with metastatic melanoma, medical board documents state. Mitchell prescribed a course of what he described as “colostrum bovine treatment” that involved drawing blood from the patient and injecting it into the udder of a pregnant cow, documents state. The patient was then supposed to drink the milk of the cow.
“The patient paid $2,500 to Mr. Mitchell and $2,500 to the farmer with the cow,” the Texas Medical Board wrote in its findings. “The patient died in hospice before he had the opportunity to drink any of the milk he paid for. The farmer wired back to the patient’s family $2,500; Mr. Mitchell refused to provide a refund.”
In January 2017, Mitchell was found guilty by a Randall County jury of making a terroristic threat, the Amarillo Globe-News reported. The guilty verdict stemmed from a Facebook post Mitchell made in May 2015 about Dr. Robert Kauffman of the Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center. Part of the Facebook post read, “Make no mistake that my desire is to put a bullet into the head of Robert Kaufmann MD and all of his flying monkeys,” the Globe-News added.
Mitchell told Patch that he no longer practices medicine and now focuses his time on drfitt.com, which sells vitamins and weight loss products, among other items. The website also includes links to articles Mitchell has written. Some of the article titles include “How to Cure Breast Cancer” and “Your Immune System’s Response to the Flu Virus.” Under drfitt.com’s about page, it states that Mitchell “specializes in educating people to adopt lifestyle changes that prevent and reverse consequences erroneously called ‘disease.’” The website also has the following disclaimer at the very bottom: “While www.drfitt.com provides tools to educate and equip individuals with information to make informed decisions concerning their personal health, the articles and information provided on www.drfitt.com are not medical advice, diagnosis, treatment or care, and should not take the place of a one-on-one relationship with a qualified healthcare professional. The articles and tools are provided for informational purposes only and nothing on this website establishes a physician-patient relationship between you and any healthcare professional.”
Mitchell believes that part of the reason why he lost his medical license was because the Texas Medical Board is “another arm of the pharmaceutical industry and their mission is to keep things as they are.”
“It wasn’t a matter of them taking the license, I rescinded that on my own because I couldn’t buy into their philosophy of continuing to practice medicine in a way that’s doing more harm than good,” Mitchell told Patch.
In regards to why Mitchell continues to refers to himself as “doctor,” he said “if you go through the curriculum and receive an M.D. and Ph.D. degree, you always have that. There’s no rescinding that.”