Approaching one million allopathic QUACKS in America

Except that it is. The doctor or team of doctors who cure cancer will be heroes. They'll become honorary professors, they'll have speaking engagements booked til they die of heart disease. They'll write slews of NYT bestsellers. For them, it will be EXCELLENT business.

Cancer has already been cured. Believe me, they're not heroes because of it. Your idea of what's going to happen is just propaganda fed to you by the allopathic industry which would have you believe that it's good business to cure people, when in actuality, it's not. The state controls medicine, and they make it unprofitable to cure anything. That's just how it works. The system is corrupt. We all know and yet some of us still have this delusional idea that it works and it's all in our best interest even though the government is running every little damn aspect of it.
 
I like how wikipedia and wikianswers are sources.

Thanks for posting the sources. That is all I need to know about the scholarship of the article.
 
I had to bump this to add this, which I just saw and captured from my facebook feed:

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Nothing in medicine is black and white, including the authors somehow assuming the letters in the back of a doctor's name to denote their degree somehow correlates to how they treat a patient or not. Yes, osteopathics (DO's) are taught the "whole person," approach and go through extra training in preventative medicine/osteopathic manipulative medicine, as well as put a focus on the primary care fields, but there are MD's who wok with DO's, and there are DO's and MD's that work with ND's even (Doctor of Naturopathic Medicine).

Since I'm aiming for Osteopathic school because I love using OMM, here are a few things I learned: because the MCAT requirement is lower in DO schools compared to MD schools, you have DO graduates that will never in their life use their osteopathic training (manipulative medicine) on their patients, because they simply wanted a medical degree. Likewise, you have MD graduates who elect to become primary care physicians, and DO's who elect to go into the more 'one organ' let alone 'whole person' specialties.

Article is completely bogus. Find a doctor who respects you as a person and elects to help you take care of your health, explains things to you in a way you can understand, and takes the time to really understand your ailment and works to correct the problem and not the symptoms - regardless of the degree.
 
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Cancer has already been cured. Believe me, they're not heroes because of it. Your idea of what's going to happen is just propaganda fed to you by the allopathic industry which would have you believe that it's good business to cure people, when in actuality, it's not. The state controls medicine, and they make it unprofitable to cure anything. That's just how it works. The system is corrupt. We all know and yet some of us still have this delusional idea that it works and it's all in our best interest even though the government is running every little damn aspect of it.

If you really have that cure, you can make billions. (There is not "A" cancer, there are many different types of cancer which respond or don't respond to a wide array of treatments). No- there is not "A" cure to "all" cancers.
 
Since I'm aiming for Osteopathic school because I love using OMM, here are a few things I learned: because the MCAT requirement is lower in DO schools compared to MD schools, you have DO graduates that will never in their life use their osteopathic training (manipulative medicine) on their patients, because they simply wanted a medical degree. Likewise, you have MD graduates who elect to become primary care physicians, and DO's who elect to go into the more 'one organ' let alone 'whole person' specialties.

This is entirely accurate. Though I am a pastor, prior to entering ministry full time, I was a clinical coordinator for an Osteopathic Medical Education Program which trained OMS-III's, OMS-IV's, Interns and Residents in Family Practice and Internal Medicine. It was a great job, and I learned a great deal from both the experienced physicians I worked with (DO's and MD's) as well as those in training. The program I worked in placed a high emphasis on OMM and the full body approach. It was made clear to those who might have chosen the DO route as a fallback for not getting into an MD school that this program would not be the right place for them long-term.

Sadly, I've not been able to continue seeing a DO, however I have established a relationship with a fabulous MD who I have great trust in, and get other care elsewhere as well. Still, I'd prefer to see a DO if it were possible in my circumstances. And one who'd take cash up front would be even better! :D

All the best with your aspirations toward Osteopathic training. I actually considered it myself for a time; it's an incredible vocation of service!
 
If you can cure cancer, your competitors lose their revenue sources. That's great business.

Nah- they would rather kill people. Kill them with vaccines. Kill them with prescription drugs. Kill them with food additives. It is a wonder anybody survives to 20.

But wait- that reduces paying customers.
 
Nah- they would rather kill people. Kill them with vaccines. Kill them with prescription drugs. Kill them with food additives. It is a wonder anybody survives to 20.

But wait- that reduces paying customers.


But Zippy, you just don't understand!!!!!
 
You are right- I don't. On one hand, "they" want us all dead. On the other hand, "they" don't want us to die so we can give them money.
 
You are right- I don't. On one hand, "they" want us all dead. On the other hand, "they" don't want us to die so we can give them money.

Yep you don't understand. The term used is soft-kill. They need to bankrupt you first before they kill you.
 
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