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[personal profile] ecosophia
the reason whyAs we proceed through the second year of these open posts, it's pretty clear that the official narrative is cracking as the toll of deaths and injuries from the Covid vaccines rises steadily and the vaccines themselves demonstrate their total uselesness at preventing Covid infection or transmission. It's still important to keep watch over the mis-, mal- and nonfeasance of our self-proclaimed health gruppenfuehrers, and the disastrous results of the Covid mania, but I think it's also time to begin thinking about what might be possible as the existing medical industry reels under the impact of its own self-inflicted injuries. 

So it's time for another open post. The rules are the same as before: 

1. If you plan on parroting the party line of the medical industry and its paid shills, please go away. This is a place for people to talk openly, honestly, and freely about their concerns that the party line in question is dangerously flawed and that actions being pushed by the medical industry et al. are causing injury and death. It is not a place for you to dismiss those concerns. Anyone who wants to hear the official story and the arguments in favor of it can find those on hundreds of thousands of websites.

2. If you plan on insisting that the current situation is the result of a deliberate plot by some villainous group of people or other, please go away. There are tens of thousands of websites currently rehashing various conspiracy theories about the Covid-19 outbreak and the vaccines. This is not one of them. What we're exploring is the likelihood that what's going on is the product of the same arrogance, incompetence, and corruption that the medical industry and its tame politicians have displayed so abundantly in recent decades. That possibility deserves a space of its own for discussion, and that's what we're doing here. 
 
3. If you plan on using rent-a-troll derailing or disruption tactics, please go away. I'm quite familiar with the standard tactics used by troll farms to disrupt online forums, and am ready, willing, and able -- and in fact quite eager -- to ban people permanently for engaging in them here. Oh, and I also lurk on other Covid-19 vaccine skeptic blogs, so I'm likely to notice when the same posts are showing up on more than one venue. 

4. If you don't believe in treating people with common courtesy, please go away. I have, and enforce, a strict courtesy policy on my blogs and online forums, and this is no exception. The sort of schoolyard bullying that takes place on so many other internet forums will get you deleted and banned here. Also, please don't drag in current quarrels about sex, race, religious, etc. No, I don't care if you disagree with that: my journal, my rules. 

With that said, the floor is open for discussion.    

Re: A village surgery lab c 1920, 1930?

Date: 2022-11-01 06:49 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
I’m afraid I can’t contribute anything useful, but I just want to say I’m very glad somebody’s doing this. I can picture circumstances where I’d be very grateful to have such services available. Also, it sounds like it might at be foundational to the alternative health care professions with which we need to displace the medical cartel’s death-dealing sickness hostage racket (thanks to Mr. Kunstler for that apt phrase).

Re: A village surgery lab c 1920, 1930?

Date: 2022-11-02 12:13 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Look up the literature on insulin and diabetic urinalysis. Up until about 1972 the medical journals published very detailed, precise descriptions of small scale insulin manufacture. Sadly there probably isn't enough demand in a rural village to support someone to do all the finicky steps. But in a small city, combined with keto/low carb diets and basic urinalysis to help guide the dosing, you can get enough low tech insulin from 1 large animal pancreas to keep many type-1 diabetics alive. Of course it is fairly allergenic over time and not as flexible as today's insulins but many type-1 diabetics managed decades on the stuff. I think it is worthwhile at least printing out a few recipes and preserving them for posterity. The Survivor Library also has a bunch of titles about low tech medical stuff including things like construction instructions for low tech prosthetics and mobility aids that would probably come in handy. Also think about putting away some early books about industrial recipes for low tech manufacture of chemicals including lab chemicals. You probably can't do that AND be the town's doctor and pharmacist but maybe you interest someone else when supplies get short.

Re: A village surgery lab c 1920, 1930?

Date: 2022-11-02 08:18 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Thank you for this.
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