If you want to know why Americans no longer possess the strength and will and character they once had, think about this:
America is one giant hospital.
I’ve explained that the explosive growth of modern medicine stems, in large part, from a century of Rockefeller medicine:
Thousands
of SO-CALLED diseases, each one SUPPOSEDLY the result of a germ. Each
germ must be killed (by a drug) or prevented (by a vaccine).
Each
disease has a catalog of symptoms; therefore, from the moment a person
rises in the morning, he is experiencing, for the rest of the day,
ordinary twitches and little aches and sneezes and blinks and odd
sensations that, voila, can be diagnosed as MEDICAL. There is hardly
anything he can do that isn’t within the purview of doctors. He’s
thoroughly conditioned to medical reality. He’s been seeing doctors all
his life.
This
was reflected in the recent Supreme Court decision to uphold Biden’s
vaccine mandate for health workers---press reports mentioned there are
10.4 MILLION of those workers in the US.
That should rock you back on your heels.
But on checking, I found this 10 million number is only part of the overall health worker demographic.
Take a deep breath.
The
US Census Bureau reports: “There were 22 million workers in the health
care industry, one of the largest and fastest-growing sectors in the
United States that accounts for 14% of all U.S. workers, according to
the Census Bureau’s 2019 American Community Survey (ACS).”
That’s right. Boom.
Roughly 1 out of every 7 workers in the US is employed in the health care industry.
But it gets much worse than even that.
I
made a list of some of the health-related jobs that were NOT included
in the 22 million Census number. Here is what I came up with:
* Health insurance
* Medical-device manufacturing and sales
* Research labs
* Companies that sell animals to research labs
* Medical school staff
* Hospital and physician office non-health workers
* Outsourced workers who handle non-medical functions of hospitals and doctor offices; e.g., IT jobs
* Federal and state government health agencies; e;g, FDA, CDC, NIH, state public health departments
* Pharmaceutical companies and their sub-contractors
* Biotech firms
* Military non-medical health-associated employees
* University medical research departments
* Pharmaceutical advertising agencies
* TV and print pharmaceutical ad salespeople
* Medical journal employees
* Medical foundation and charity employees
* Mainstream medical reporters and associated staff
* All legal personnel who practice and assist in the area of medical lawsuits
* Middlemen, distributors, street dealers who assist pharmaceutical companies in trafficking pharmaceutical opioids
* All drug store employees who work in the area of selling prescription and over the counter medicines
*
All employees of companies involved with the selling, charting,
analyzing, and tracking of health-related stocks on trading markets
* Anthony Fauci
You can add ALL those people to the 22 million who work in health care industry. It’ll be a big number.
Here’s
another blockbuster. According to Business Insider, healthcare-related
institutions are the largest employers in 23 states. I’m including
university systems that obviously have huge medical research
departments, facilities, and budgets.
My
best estimate of the number of drug prescriptions filled in the US
every year is 4.2 billion (statista.com). That’s roughly 13
prescriptions per person per year, for the population of 330 millon.
In a real sense, “COVID” is viewed and experienced as an acquired infection which has spread INSIDE the hospital called America.
If
you think about that, you’ll understand why it was so easy to convince
Americans to go along with all the COVID restrictions. They were already
patients in that hospital.
“Mr.
Jones, hi, I’m the head nurse on this floor. Just wanted to let you
know we’re having a situation. An infection has spread to some
patients. We have standard responses. You’ll be given a mask to
wear. When you take your daily walk down the hall, stay at least six
feet away from other patients. All rooms will be closed to
visitors. We’re working on a vaccine, and when we have one, everyone
will get it. We want to make sure no one is left out. We’ll also make
sure to test you on a regular basis, to see whether you have the
infection. So don’t worry about that. We’re tracking all the
patients. Those who are infected will be transferred to a more secure
area. Here’s the server with your dinner. Chicken and dumplings. Smells
good. A nurse will look in on you later.”
What’s
a person going to do? He’s going to follow orders. He’s been a chronic
patient in long-term care since he was in the womb.
Or:
“Sure, sure, I understand. By signing these papers, I remove all
liability from you folks and I take full responsibility if I fall down
and crack my head or croak for any reason, from here on out. Fine.
Cancel my JELL-O and potato chips lunch order. I’m checking out of this
joint.”
~~~
(The link to this article posted on my blog is here -- with sources.)
(Follow me on Gab at @jonrappoport)
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