The COVID circus exposed how broken both the government and healthcare are, and to their credit, some states are attempting to address the wrongs and stop them from recurring. But it is a piecemeal process.
Ivermectin and Hydroxychloroquine are so well tested and safe that they ought to be over the counter, but even if half the states, nay – all the states – had this accessibility, it wouldn’t fix what’s broken.
Detaching regulators from those they regulate is a step in the right direction. Detaching regulation from free-thinking people won’t either. The more significant issue is the public health triad. Big Pharma, Big HealthCare, and The Insurance companies work together to control everything within the public health establishment and as much as outside, as they can manage. State licensure boards are typically staffed by individuals from the cartel and control who get licensed, where they can practice, how they can practice, and for what fees.
Legislatures and activist groups that support healthcare freedom are doing good work, nibbling at the edges, but until they can break up the cartel, healthcare will never be truly free.
Gary Brecka did a great job of explaining the core of this problem on Rogan last week – the center of a lot of problems with current thinking on health, food, and healthcare – but this one in particular struck me as a foundational, root of the situation, sound bite. For anyone to be able to practice and make a living in public health, they have to follow the standard of care.
Insurance companies control what’s covered, from malpractice to procedures and medications. Hospitals set standards to optimize their profit within the model. Doctors are bound by all of the above, with oversight by stakeholders whose responsibility to patients is to ensure the care provided does not create a situation where they may get sued.
So, what’s the answer? How do we free up trained health care professionals to put patients’ best interests ahead of the restrictions placed on them? These limitations are created by licensure and review boards run by the cartel, and protected by politicians to stifle competition. This preserves market share and keeps prices high while giving them the power to keep everyone in the box and the ability to publish anyone who dares to operate outside it.
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