Anonymous ID: b89162 Sept. 27, 2023, 6:16 a.m. No.19617384   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7429

>>19617338

>2024. Will it be GLORIOUS?

2, 2+4= 6

26

Side note:

While "some" think 3387 literally meant 2025, others think it was more comms.

You decide.

(2025 is also 27)

 

Will we see Justice before the next Election?

Who has it all again?

Who's Timing? Who's in Control?

Anonymous ID: b89162 Sept. 27, 2023, 6:31 a.m. No.19617483   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7494

>>19617463

>When in the Course of human events it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.

 

Welcome to the No Political Party, Party.

Anonymous ID: b89162 Sept. 27, 2023, 7:04 a.m. No.19617645   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7697 >>7757 >>7796 >>7913 >>7996

US surgeons are killing themselves at an alarming rate. One decided to speak out

 

Carrie Cunningham puffed out her cheeks and exhaled. She looked out at the audience filled with 2,000 of her peers, surgeons who were attending the annual meeting of the Association of Academic Surgery, a prestigious gathering of specialists from universities across the United States and Canada.

 

Cunningham, president of the organization, knew what she was about to reveal could cost her promotions, patients and professional standing. She took a deep breath.

 

“I was the top junior tennis player in the United States,” she began. “I am an associate professor of surgery at Harvard.

 

“But I am also human. I am a person with lifelong depression, anxiety, and now a substance use disorder.”

 

The room fell silent.

 

Cunningham knew others in the room were struggling, too. Doctors are dying by suicide at higher rates than the general population. Somewhere between 300 to 400 physicians a year in the US take their own lives, the equivalent of one medical school graduating class annually.

 

Surgeons have some of the highest known rates of suicide among physicians. Of 697 physician suicides reported to the CDC’s national violent death reporting system between 2003 and 2017, 71 were surgeons. Many more go unreported.

 

For years, no one in surgery talked publicly about mental distress in the profession; surgeons have long experienced a culture of silence when it comes to their personal pain. They have a reputation as stoic, determined and driven. They are taught, throughout a decade of grueling training, to dissociate themselves from their body’s natural cues, telling them that it is time to rest, eat or urinate.

 

The patient’s needs always come first – that’s part of what makes a good surgeon. But this approach can have consequences for a surgeon’s own mental health.

 

Cunningham had already lost one friend to suicide. She decided that if her job was to save lives, she would begin with her own and those of her colleagues.

 

She started to tell her story.

 

•••

 

https://www.yahoo.com/news/us-surgeons-killing-themselves-alarming-150036351.html

Anonymous ID: b89162 Sept. 27, 2023, 7:25 a.m. No.19617777   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7786 >>7809

>>19617757

They can choose to go independent. Surgery Centers rent space for Surgeons.

They CHOOSE to stay under that Hospital Umbrella for Job Security.

So which is it? Honor your Oath, or sell out to a Board?

Anonymous ID: b89162 Sept. 27, 2023, 7:43 a.m. No.19617870   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>19617842

Speech, is also not photographs.

It's spoken or written.

Meme-esque (words with photo is speech)

Shills gonna shill for Groomers.

Muh I can post disgusting shit, cause my first amendment…

NOT!

Anonymous ID: b89162 Sept. 27, 2023, 7:47 a.m. No.19617885   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7894 >>7899 >>7913 >>7996

Kek at the Dasting coinkidink

 

>>19617854

>>19617865

Electric blue tarantula species discovered in Thailand

 

A “mesmerizing” electric blue tarantula species has been discovered in Thailand, according to new research.

 

A group of Thai researchers found the spider during an expedition to Phang-Nga province in southern Thailand to research the diversity and distribution of tarantulas in the country.

 

“(We found) a new species of tarantula that exhibits a mesmerizing blue-violet hue, reminiscent of electric blue sparks,” Narin Chomphuphuang, a researcher at Khon Kaen University’s Department of Entomology and Plant Pathology, told CNN Monday.

 

The study detailing the discovery was published in the research journal ZooKeys on September 18.

 

moar

https://www.yahoo.com/news/electric-blue-tarantula-species-discovered-111436689.html