Posted on 01/02/2019 5:44:33 AM PST by SJackson
She should not lose her license because of evil social media posts.
The State should not take speech on social media posts into account for official actions.
This is an extension of using "hate speech" to isolate and remove from society those people the left wishes to remove, without appeal or due process.
The Left is actively pursuing removing anyone who is seen as conservative from society. They are working hard to disallow anyone who expresses a conservative opinion from using a credit card. They are working hard to limit what conservatives can purchase.
This is a slippery slope we do not want to go down.
Yes, this can be published. Yes, most institutions will shun this woman. That is allowed. It is also freedom.
The apparatus of the State should not be used for this.
Why wouldn't they?
Given a medical degree by a fine university founded and funded by Jews. Tragic waste - and yes its time to stop trying to reach out to and helping Satanic savages
All those years to become a dr, and you piss it away w this stupid tweet.
Liberal anti-Semite honoring an oath? You’ve got to be kidding. Next you’ll tell me the Pope is Catholic.
There is a very short distance from being an anti Zionist to being an overt anti Semite. Since Obama made anti Zionism a position to be held by Democrats in good standing and leadership positions, many overt anti Semites posture as anti Zionists. In the case of young Dr. Lara suspect she is a hateful, foolish, unsophisticated person who was working with and supervised by Jewish peers and physicians. She no doubt realized she was not up to standard, became very intimidated and resentful. Yet the politically correct power structure at Cleveland Clinic will not fire her. After some “counselling” and a phony apology she will be allowed to finish her training. Ultimately she will treat patients.
Never heard of anyone joking about harming a person by deliberately hurting a patient. I don’t even remember a student back in my college days of anyone saying they wished to harm a patient. Medicine is serious life and death work. Not as many years as you but if anyone said or wrote something like that it would be taken to the highest levels. This is a very disturbing story.
Free speech is one thing. She has every right to write about nefarious thoughts and ideas but if there is intent to harm or kill and the person is in a position to harm and kill should not the person be held to the ethical standard of their profession? After reading such words would you if Jewish take a chance on having this woman as your doctor?
wanna bet this is the proverbial tip of the iceberg?
Probably because the quotes quoted are hers, she's the source.
Today and in the future. I'm not sure about pulling her license over an old quote with no followup action. But I wouldn't trust her, my guess most people wouldn't and from a liability perspective, who would want to defend a complaint from any nonpalestinian, much less a Jew.
Yes.
They did fire her. Whether she’ll find another place to continue her career, we’ll see, I suspect she’s largely unemployable in a patient treatment context, and maybe uninsurable.
I’m not sure about pulling her license over an old statement, though I don’t know the standards that apply.
Apparently she did not meet the standards of the Cleveland Clinic
who employed her. As she no longer works there.
Let her practice her terrorist medicine in a Arab $hit hole.
Not in the U.S.
Don’t know either. Once a person called an awry out of control patient a retard. That was all it took. Twenty-three years on the job and the nurse was gone. There were no lasting affects on the patient because patient was indeed retarded/developmentally disabled. I’m afraid to say I laughed.
I haven’t researched her, but she was only at the Cleveland Clinic since September or so. I suspect that means she was a medical student and not actually employed prior to that, and a college student before that. It sounds as if the medical school didn’t monitor social media, and honestly I’m not sure that they really can do that. I do know that employers now frequently will check out job candidates’ social media. Social media will sometimes show things you really don’t want in an employee, such as saying nasty things about an employer.
This would come under the area of ethics, maybe “moral turpitude” if that’s still included in the standards. Even if her license doesn’t get pulled, I don’t see her being employable nor insurable in the US.
Her friends and followers who never expressed concern about what she said? I expect that they are people who have the same sort of beliefs. I actually doubt that many of her fellow physicians would be found in that group, or would consider what she was saying acceptable.
She was a relatively new resident. Clearly they didn’t check social media, which is fine. Seems to me that at any company statements like this would impact the companies reputation in a negative way, which in most states would be enough to terminate her. However a threat to mis prescribe medication goes to the core of her job responsibilities. Like a teacher posting his/her intent to molest students. Yes I think she pretty much blew her career in this country. She was born in Cleveland, I wonder how long here family has been here. It seems to take awhile, generations, to outgrow the hatreds of their native land.
The doc who posted such things does not sound like a joke. as she has a little bit of history and the words written are a warning sign? Don't know how anyone can laugh it away unless she keeps her license. Then I'll laugh at the irony.
A lot of younger people still don't seem to grasp that there should be no expectation of privacy when it comes to social media. Anything you put out there, is out there, somewhere, with the possibility that it can be found and made public. At least, that's the way it behooves one to behave.
I've read of nurses losing their jobs for posting things relating to patients in social media. I've heard of other people not getting jobs they've gone after due to pictures and comments they've posted. If you are in a medical field, the best thing to post, regarding your job, is nothing at all. A HIPAA violation need not include someone’s name, if there is sufficient detail to identify anyone.
The young woman in question might be allowed to practice medicine somewhere like the Middle East, but I suspect she would not enjoy the experience. I can't think how she would be employable here in the US. Sometimes people with medical training can get jobs in research or medical sales, but I doubt anyone would be willing to trust her under these circumstances.
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