Fuckin' digits
Physics is THE fundamental science?
So all we have to do is fix physics?
Doesn't seem that hard.
Fuckin' digits
Physics is THE fundamental science?
So all we have to do is fix physics?
Doesn't seem that hard.
If she'd just started throwing the cake on the floor, instead of eating it, 20 years prior…
:fortheclaim/ofthesoul
Godsmack Drum Duel HD
https://youtu.be/teilBW9qQ3U
>treatment of antibiotic-resistant and difficult-to-treat bacterial infections.
She probably helped create these
Now she gets paid to help cure them
The revolving door…
"Future proves past"?
"Drink to me only with thine eyes"
A line from a love poem by the seventeenth-century English poet Ben Jonson. He suggests that lovers find each other's glances so intoxicating that they have no need to drink wine.
https://www.dictionary.com/browse/drink-to-me-only-with-thine-eyes
1-6ing-12
Kek
>Privacy died in UTAH
Makes me think of medical privacy and UT @ H
University of Texas at Houston and the
John P. McGovern School of Medicine
"Pediatric allergist and immunologist"
Got his kicks injecting toxins into little kids.
Sick fuck
"John P. McGovern: A legacy of giving
John P. McGovern, MD
In spring 1956, a handsome and tanned John P. McGovern, MD, made a decision to leave his faculty position at Tulane University in New Orleans and move 348 miles west to Houston and the new Texas Medical Center. He was 35 years old. As a pediatric allergist and immunologist at Tulane’s Charity Hospital, McGovern excelled as a teacher, clinician and researcher on a fast trajectory at the national level as a member of numerous professional organizations that constantly sought his input and leadership. Some of his medical students in New Orleans even went as far as describing McGovern in the mid-1950s as reminiscent of a young John F. Kennedy who was also tanned, charismatic and rapidly on his way to the top of his field."
https://med.uth.edu/mcgovern-info/
moar
He purchased a private practice from a retiring physician and established the McGovern Allergy Clinic. In 1958, he hired a talented office manager, Kathrine Dunbar Galbreath, a native Houstonian who would become his wife three years later. The patient-centered Houston practice grew to become the largest privately owned allergy clinic in the world.
In 1961, the same year he and Kathrine wed, he started a foundation, the Texas Allergy Research Foundation, which was renamed the John P. McGovern Foundation in 1979. “What one earns, he spends; what he wins, he loses; and what he gives, he keeps forever,” McGovern was quoted as saying in John P. McGovern: A Lifetime of Stories by Bryant Boutwell, Dr.P.H., the John P. McGovern, M.D., Professor of Oslerian Medicine at McGovern Medical School.
During his career in medicine, McGovern held 17 professorships, received 29 honorary doctorates, authored 252 professional publications including 26 books – all while serving as president or chief elected officer of 15 professional societies of medicine. He died in 2007, leaving a legacy that his wife carries on today through her work heading the John P. McGovern Foundation.
“One of my patients recently told the medical school’s graduating class of 2015, ‘The biggest gift you can give your patients is yourself and your time,’” Colasurdo said. “Each student at McGovern Medical School will learn these values, ensuring that, every four years, more than 1,000 alumni will enter the health care workforce practicing the Oslerian values that formed the heart of Dr. McGovern’s philosophy.”
What is the Oslerian tradition?
Abstract
Discussants of internal medicine often invoke but seldom define "the Oslerian tradition," which has many meanings. No definition provides clear insight into the issues now relevant to American internal medicine, primarily because, as William Osler knew, the field itself shows definitional ambivalence. The tradition might be best understood as a virtuous approach to medicine and to life as taught and modeled by Osler. If we understand his philosophy and methods, we will be better prepared to use and pass on (tradere, "to deliver") something of greater value: the ability to make wise choices that are in ____society's''' best interest.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/8135454/
NOTE: "Society's best interest", not necessarily the patient's best interest.
Interesting "take" on the Hippocratic Oath for a PEDiOtrician.
Sir William Osler
The "Father" of Modern Medicine
In 1905, he was appointed to the Regius Professor of Medicine at Oxford, which he held until his death. He was also a Student (fellow) of Christ Church, Oxford.
Sir William Osler, 1st Baronet, FRS FRCP (/ˈɒzlər/; July 12, 1849 – December 29, 1919) was a Canadian physician and one of the "Big Four" founding professors of Johns Hopkins Hospital. Osler created the first residency program for specialty training of physicians, and he was the first to bring medical students out of the lecture hall for bedside clinical training.[1] He has frequently been described as the Father of Modern Medicine and one of the "greatest diagnosticians ever to wield a stethoscope".[2][3] Osler was a person of many interests, who in addition to being a physician, was a bibliophile, historian, author, and renowned practical joker.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Osler
"Never trust a man who wears a bow tie."
You're obviously right,
Unless they're being sexually abused, it's not really abuse.
Move along.
Nothing to see here.
Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda Maryland
The largest collection of Osler's letters and papers is at the Osler Library of McGill University in Montreal and a collection of his papers is also held at the United States National Library of Medicine in (coincidentally) Bethesda, Maryland.
Medical Professionals are supposed to be mandated reporters
Weird they don't report the doctors and nurses who are harming and killing kids.
Even Moar from the "Father" of Modern Medicine
Osler said Canada should be a "white man's country" in a 1914 speech given around the time of the Komagata Maru incident involving immigration from India.[34][35] Osler wrote “I hate Latin Americans” in a letter to Henry Vining Ogden.[36][37] Under the pseudonym "Egerton Yorrick Davis", Osler mocked Indigenous people: “Every primitive tribe retains some vile animal habit not yet eliminated in the upward march of the race.” [38] Uncovering this historical context, the journalists David Bruser and Markus Grill and the archivist Nils Seethaler reconstruct the shipment of several indigenous skulls by Osler from Canada to Germany, which were (previously unknown) in the custody of the State Museums of Berlin.[39]
Gerontology
Osler is well known in the field of gerontology for the speech he gave when leaving Hopkins to become the Regius Professor of Medicine at Oxford. "The Fixed Period", given on February 22, 1905, included some controversial words about old age. Osler, who had a well-developed humorous side to his character, was in his mid-fifties when he gave the speech and in it he mentioned Anthony Trollope's The Fixed Period (1882), which envisaged a college where men retired at 67 and after being given a year to settle their affairs, would be "peacefully extinguished by chloroform". He claimed that, "the effective, moving, vitalizing work of the world is done between the ages of twenty-five and forty" and it was downhill from then on.[40] Osler's speech was covered by the popular press which headlined their reports with "Osler recommends chloroform at sixty".[41] The concept of mandatory euthanasia for humans after a "fixed period" (often 60 years) became a recurring theme in 20th century imaginative fiction—for example, Isaac Asimov's 1950 novel Pebble in the Sky and Half a Life (Star Trek: The Next Generation). In the 3rd edition of his Textbook, he also coined the description of pneumonia as "the friend of the aged" since it allowed elderly individuals a quick, comparatively painless death: "Taken off by it in an acute, short, not often painful illness, the old man escapes those "cold gradations of decay" so distressing to himself and his friends."[42] Coincidentally, Osler himself died of pneumonia.
Fuck the Doctors too
Vaccines create immune sensitivity
Which sensitizes the body to the environment
Creating allergic reactions for life
Profit motive
Pretty rough place unless you're an Elite.
The 2021 President of the World Medical Association, and the 2017 President of the American Medical Association has his Primary practice in the Ozarks, Mountain Grove Missouri, specifically.
David O. Barbe
120 W. 16th Street
Mountain Grove, MO 65711
https://www.mercy.net/newsroom/2019-10-31/rural-mercy-doctor-to-lead-world-medical-association/
https://www.mercy.net/doctor/david-o-barbe-md/
https://www.wma.net/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/Barbe-WMA-bio-5-30-19.pdf
"Mercy" must be code for murder.
Physician
Who does the Pope call if he's afraid he's dying?
Probably has a hotline
Who "could" poison the Pope and have him replaced?
The "reality" that is manifested onto the sea of humanity by THEM is all a projection.
Real, but either magnified, minimized, or altered to suit "the narrative".
The magician's tricks only work until the viewers "know" the trick…then they go back to being a simple jugglers and pantomimes.
>What drops do you use to validate this theory?
Spoken like a true theologian whose never spent a single day in practice.
Define: SGP
Sir William Osler's burial tomb and the US National Library of Medicine at the National Institutes of Health is just another fuckin Pyramid.