1
BigBadBrutus 1 point ago +1 / -0

No problem, thanks for sharing :D

I found this if someone wants it, but there was another one (and this is on Youtube, which frankly I don't care where the video is hosted, so long as its available to watch).

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hgPVkcLBjK8&feature=youtu.be

1
BigBadBrutus 1 point ago +1 / -0

I'm curious to hear how they're fighting back. Got any info? I'm actually going to change careers soon because of all of this happening. I'm not proud of myself anymore to see how all this has been handled. I feel like I've been living a lie

2
BigBadBrutus 2 points ago +2 / -0

Both of you need to understand that there are bad actors on both sides of the aisle.

Also, you should be more patient with people saying it's fake.

I work at a hospital myself, and even I spent 5 months calling covid fake, because of how over the top the government response has been.

Why did I do it? Pure uncontrollable anger for how over the top it all is.

Plus many people that provide information are either uninformed themselves or waste so much time not getting to the point, making it difficult to parse what's real and what isn't.

Here's another problem that you should keep cool about, it's a real sickness, but how many people have tested positive for the PCR test without an accompanying diagnosis? If the hospitals are testing everyone and a positive diagnosis isn't possible, or if the doctors don't care about double checking, or don't care about being totally accurate, and if flu like symptoms are also diagnosable covid, or unrelated respiratory issues are considered covid (smoking plus sick), then any combination of those issues could lead to a positive covid case that isn't at all covid and is one or two separate things or is perhaps is a completely healthy person, any combination of which could be a positive covid test.

I'm rambling a bit but there's a lot of overlap and it's hard to verbalize unless you understand all the moving parts. I know covid because I had it. But if a positive PCR, antibody, antigen etc test IS covid to millions of people how do you think they're going to act when, according to a test they had it, but were perfectly healthy?

Also, many hospitals still have unused areas. If it's so bad they should be fully open for business but they're not. That's what the whole two weeks thing was about in the first place.

I'm all for good Healthcare, but the media and governments are evil, and the hospitals are playing along, and the doctors really need to get some balls. The world is literally relying on them to save us. It's been a year, at this point they need to act! Because that's the whole thing isn't it? Non employees can't get the real numbers very easily, and aren't allowed inside.

We're reliant on the doctors to be honest, but if they're asymptomatic people everywhere testing positive, angry people exaggerating was always going to be the result!

2
BigBadBrutus 2 points ago +2 / -0

Because he's wrong just not entirely.

I believe it was $13k for covid positive and $39k for putting someone on a ventilator.

Assuming my facts are accurate, the death is not a payment. It's still fucked up though, theyre paid for services rendered and I'm not sure how that is determined.

1
BigBadBrutus 1 point ago +1 / -0

My local hospital allows 24/7 Zoom meetings but no visitors

A family member that was recently admitted into a different hospital system, in a different state, for surgery, is allowed visitation, but it may be because of that, or because she doesn't speak English, the actual reason is something I'm not too sure about.

But she's only allowed one visitor and only her daughter and son in law.

view more: ‹ Prev