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GENOCIDE FOR HIRE: Doctors Caught Killing C19 Patients w/ Ventilators & Lethal Drugs
GENOCIDE FOR HIRE: Doctors Caught Killing C19 Patients w/ Ventilators & Lethal Drugs
- Category: Uncategorized
- Duration: 02:45:11
- Date: 2022-11-20 00:42:43
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Video Transcript:
I know not everybody's gonna live, but these people aren't dying from COVID. Let me give you several examples here. A patient had a heart rate of 40 and the resident started doing chest compressions on him, which is not what you do. You just externally paste them or you give them some atropine. And then, you know, I run in there to stop him from doing chest compressions on somebody with the fucking poles. And then he decides to push Epi. He throws some pads on them on him to defibrillate the guy. He has a heart rate of 40 and a stable rate of cardic rhythm. We just need to give him some atropine and paste them. He fucking defibrillates him and kills him. The director of nursing was standing out there and I'm like, can you stop him? He's going to kill that patient. And the director of nursing just shook his head and I turned around and he killed the dude. So here they're just gonna let them rot on the bed. They're medically mismanaging these patients. I'm gonna give this short one. I'm gonna put this from the perspective of a nurse who's been working in the hospital here locally. The treatment for this COVID does nothing in the hospital. It does nothing for the COVID. Remdesivir does nothing but this not in the studies proving. If it isn't given within the first three days, it does nothing for COVID. But yet they give course after course after course after course of the Remdesivir. And the patients end up with all kinds of organ failure, kidney failure, liver failure. They're ending up with acute respiratory distress syndrome. They're ending up with no more thoracia ending up with all of these issues caused by the treatment. Not by COVID. They're not dying for COVID. They're dying for COVID. I went under cover. I was a travel nurse in New York during the high to the pandemic. I went under cover because what they were doing in the New York hospitals were essentially murdering people. They were targeting minority populations, the black and brown people, Medicare, Medicaid. I worked at Elmhurst Hospital, which was the epicenter of the epicenter. When I got there, I realized that these people weren't dying of COVID. They were dying of gross negligence, medical malpractice, medical mismanagement. So I ended up going undercover with IWR spy glasses. I went through an attorney and I recorded them essentially murdering these patients. They weren't coding full coded patients. They were putting everybody on ventilators knowing that ventilators were killing 100% of these people. And nobody was saying anything. Nurses were making $10,000 a week. Some doctors were making $50,000 a week. Financial incentive is hush. Let's look at the Ebola study. This is what I did in May 2020. I've been in the media ever since to educate you guys the current jidicidal attempt, in murderous attempts of Anthony Fauci, the NIH, the FDA, the CDC are all using Remdesivir, the same way that they used gas chambers to destroy people in Germany. This is how they're doing it and perpetuating those deaths using a drug in hospitals. This is the actually Ebola study that Anthony Fauci quoted in May 2020 proved, he said, we're going to use this non-FDA-approved drug. It's been approved since, but it wasn't before the pandemic. We're going to use this non-FDA-approved drug called Remdesivir, because it was shown to be safe and efficacious against the Ebola virus in 2018 and 2019. This is the study. Ebola virus inside of Africa, they took four regions, gave them all Remdesivir and three other experimental drugs. Anthony Fauci said it was proven to be safe and effective against the Ebola virus. So now in this novel virus of the coronavirus, we're going to use it there also. We're going to mandate this one drug you can't use any other ones. So what did the actual study find? They found that Remdesivir in six months, the safety board pulled Remdesivir from the study of one year study, because it killed more people than any of the other three drugs. So six months into the study, they pulled Remdesivir because it killed more people. How many people did it kill? Remdesivir killed 54% of all people in the study that got the drug. Do you know what they're treating all of your loved ones with and those you care about in this country now? Look up here. I'm not lying. This is from the study. Look at the second column from the right Remdesivir. Look below there. 54%. You see that? Mortality rate. All right, next slide please. He then quoted a second study in May 2020, Anthony Fauci did, that supported the use of Remdesivir in the treatment of coronavirus. The Ebola study, by the way, was a lie. No one clicked the link to look at it. I did. This is the other study he mentioned. This was actually done by Gilead Sciences, who makes Remdesivir. In early March 2020, they took 53 patients from Japan, Canada, and America, who had COVID-19. And they put them on the drug for 10 days. What's the drug? Remdesivir. This is the maker of Remdesivir's own trial study. 23% in 10 days had serious adverse events. The most common serious adverse events were multiple organ dysfunction, syndrome, which is defined as the number one cause of death in all ICUs, by the way. Second, septic shock, acute kidney failure, and high potension. Look at the next part. Eight percent had to be discontinued because Remdesivir treatment. It worsened pre-existing kidney failure and multiple organ failure. Eight percent had to be taken off by days five because they were dying as a result of the poison of Remdesivir. That's what they found from this study. All of you. This was going to be the drug choice. Why? Because it would actually make COVID-19 look more deadly than it really was. One other disgusting thing, Anthony Fauci and our federal health agencies, bought up all of the reserves and stock of this experimental drug in 2020. We didn't even let another country have it till the end of October 2020. Do you want to know why America had the most deaths during 2020 in this pandemic than any other country? We were the only country treating people with Remdesivir proven to cause acute kidney failure, multiple organ failure, septic shock and high potension, all of which are lethal. This was the great setup. They set this up so that they can murder people and convince you people were dying of COVID-19. They didn't die of COVID-19. They actually died from Remdesivir poisoning causing acute kidney failure if you just listen to the media. The New York press conferences of all the doctors when Ebola or sorry when Corona was going throughout New York early on, they were reporting we've never seen a virus ever attack the kidneys like this one is. You start treating this virus and it attacks the kidneys and shut it down. Not only are we finding that we have limited supply of ventilators, we don't have enough dialysis machines for their kidneys. These doctors had no idea it was never the virus to begin with. Remdesivir was proven in 30% of all people to cause acute kidney failure. Do you know what happens when you shut down the kidneys and somebody? Your kidneys release water from the body. Guess what happens when you shut them down? Your body retains water. Your abdomen fills with water. Your heart fills with water. Your lungs fill with water. Do you know what they call that? Paul Monaria Dima, you are drowning these people to death with their own fluids. And they can't breathe. They were calling it secondary pneumonia still today. They are calling it pneumonia from Corona. No it isn't. They are shutting down everybody's kidneys with Remdesivir causing their lungs to fill with fluid and they are drowning to them to death. Do you want to know why it's made me so angry in May 2020? February 2020. I watched the hospital in Dallas, Texas kill my father-in-law with the same protocols. They are still doing it today and they are... I'm telling you right now, anybody who's got a loved one in ICUs, please listen to me. Anybody who's got COVID-19. You're going to be threatened with death if you go into a hospital. They have set this up where they're going to use Remdesivir, 31% of people treated for COVID-19. We'll have acute kidney failure. Their lungs will fill with fluid. Right now they're adding Dexamethasone, which has 4% reported kidney failure for all those who get it. So now you're up to 35%. If anyone listening to this has a loved one in a hospital and they have added to that protocol, a drug called vancomycin, which is an antibiotic. Antibiotics don't treat viruses, by the way. If they put them on there, upwards of 10% of all of those individuals will experience even worsened acute kidney failure. It will stop their heart, pressure on their heart, make them go into a coma, make them unconscious, and they will die. And they will say it was because of COVID-19. This is not true. Yeah, they're doing it to all of them. All right, so this is the mass genocide that they're using Remdesivir. There's a reason why more people died in America than any other country in 2020. We were the only country using Remdesivir. And Anthony Fauci was the one that mandated it. I have never seen such disregard for human life. When my husband pretty much stormed the ICU with my daughter and got me out, it took quite a while for me to recover. It took me longer to recover from the hospital abuse and neglect than it did from COVID, quite frankly. And so the first couple of months, that's what that was dedicated to. But I did tell my story initially to Crusader radio and his glory TV, because they kind of his glory TV actually had connected with my daughter to when I to help. While I was in the hospital to help advocate, get her in contact with people. But I think now there's more people willing to hear it. At the time, there were very few stories coming out. I can remember when we started the COVID Humanity betrayal memory project with former feds. You know, initially there was I think like 10 stories out there. And now there's hundreds and hundreds of stories and hundreds in the queue to be told that our interviewers are working through. It's like something out of a sci-fi movie. And even today, you know, there were so many people that were, you know, right there with us in the beginning. And I have to double check with them. I'm like, they tried to kill me, right? And they're like, oh, yeah, they tried to, they tried to murder you dead. I think people are accepting those stories. They're starting to see more and more of them. You know, they can ignore 10 people talking about a horrible hospital experience or death. And especially, you know, the stories were, where the loved one doesn't make it. The person's child or the person's husband or wife. There's a bit of a pad on the head, you know, a misplaced brief. And if you know the doctors try to do everything they can and they kind of gaslight. And sometimes people don't know that they're gaslighting the victim. They're just, you know, misplaced brief. They didn't really try to kill you. But when you have a lot of survivor stories coming out, they can't, you know, it gives credibility to those stories, right? Because the family only has the view from the outside looking in what they went through. And people like me and many of the survivors that have come forward since the Epic Times article broke. They have the view from the inside. They know what's being said. I know from my own experience, the doctors and the nurses knew what they were doing. They absolutely know what they're doing. There's no doubt about it in my mind. My mom was murdered on October 25th of Baylor Hospital. She was given rim dezevere without our authority. We told them specifically not to give her rim dezevere. Five days later, all of my mom's organs shut down. We showed in the studies. Over 30% of the people that were given rim dezevere in the studies died. We told the doctor, the infectious disease specialist, do not give my mom rim dezevere. Guess what they did? They gave her a five day cycle. And my mom is dead. She's dead. She died at Baylor Hospital. Tied to a bed with a ventilator, stuck to her face with her hands tied to the bed because she was ripping it off. They wanted to ventilate my mom as soon as she got there, while she was walking and talking in the hospital, they wanted to ventilate her. Because they get a $39,000 federal funding every time somebody is on a ventilator. And now my mom is dead, given an experimental drug. And so now I have to live with this pain every single day for the rest of my life. So I'm on a COVID unit in Anderson. I gave her a disavvy to this guy. And he was Hispanic. They don't complain. They're very stoic. So this guy within an hour, he starts crackling. I could hear him from the doorway. And I knew that was flash pulmonary demon. I can't say that. I'm a nurse. But I can go to the nurse practitioner in this case and say, you might want to look at him. He's looking bad. And she got to the doorway and could hear it. And she come out and she said, 40-alasics stat and push him to the ICU. I didn't know why. I just give him room disavvy. It's an antiviral. It's supposed to make him better. I just thought, well, he just, he's just turning bad. I didn't understand what room disavvy could do as far as flash pulmonary demon, increasing your inflammation and your response to inflammation. I didn't connect the dots. I'm still new with this. But I can tell you whether it's lawnmower dust, whether it's anything you inhaled that would irritate your lungs, they're going to swell up. Any reaction that your lungs are feeling, whether it's viral bacterial or environmental, it's going to be an injury to your lungs. Your body's natural response is to swell up. That's all the fluid. And it's the perfect breeding ground for bacteria. And then I started asking, well, what are you doing? You know, just sedatives, paralytics, multises, cellular death. And then I started asking more questions. And I realized that there was a financial incentive for all these patients to be admitted. And it was $13,000 just to admit them through the door. And then when I got through the door, usually in the emergency room, they'd be dosed with some sort of sedative, usually held out and then shipped up to the floor and popped on a ventilator, whether they needed it or not. Right. And that was another $39,000. So that was a financial incentive to do that. And at that point, Cuomo was wanting more ventilators, right? Right. I remember. And he got them. And they knew by the time I got there, it was early April, 100% of the patients had died on ventilators. So I asked, like, if you know it's not working, then why are we continuing to do that? That makes no sense. And they pretty much just told me, you know, to shut my mouth or I'm going to go home. And we were, we did have to sign like gag orders when we got there, which I thought was bizarre, especially in a pandemic, right? Because the hospitals were liability-free. And then they kicked out the family out. So what did they have to worry about? Unless they knew that they were doing something wrong. So tried going up my chain of command there, nobody cared. So I ended up calling an attorney to attorneys. And they shipped me a pair of spy glasses. And I'm like, you know what? No one's going to believe it. They already didn't. There was a, I had a nurse proxy. Her name was Sarah, that kind of spoke out about my story. And keeping me anonymous. And she got death threats. And everyone said that she was lying and that would never happen. So that's why I'm like, you know, I need to just record it. And that's the only way that we're going to actually ever be able to prove that, you know, this genocide was, was occurring. And so that's kind of what I did until I ended up getting kicked out of there. The doctor came in and said, you only need to put your daughter on a ventilator in the next two hours. We know what the heck happened here. So I asked her, what is that based on? And he said, well, we did a blood gastro last night. And it shows that she needs to be on a ventilator. He says that we, you know, we did this blood gastro last night. So I asked him what time he said 1130. And I said, well, at 1130 last night, Grace's blood pressure was 235 over 135 and her heart rate was 150 beats a minute. So I said, I don't think those numbers are objective. And I want you to retake the numbers. So they did and Grace was fine. So at that point, I asked him, what is, you know, this idea of ventilator, what's the prognosis? And he said, only 20% of people walk out alive once they're put out of ventilator. And so then I had my laptop in the room. I started researching ventilators and found out he told me part of the truth. The real number is about 15%. And for those who do walk out that 15% to walk out alive, most of them died in the first year because the damage it did to the lungs. So I started feeding her and one of the nurses came in. She ran into the room and said, you can't do that. I said, what's the reason? And she said, well, Grace's oxygen saturation is only at 85%. Because I was suspecting I would get COVID while I was in the room with Grace, I had all of my COVID materials in the room, including my own oxygen pulse ox. So I put that on Grace's finger and it read 95%. So I called the nurse back in and said, is my finger meter accurate? And she said, yes, it is. I said, well, why is my meter reading 95% while your machine is only reading 85%. And she said, it's because the leads get sweaty. So then I responded to that saying, if you know that that's the case, why don't you proactively change out these leads? Every three or four hours or whatever it takes, you have accurate readings given that this is the primary tool. You're using to manage my daughter's care. And she's not only responded, you should just be thankful you caught this. Ultimately, after Grace died and I did a lot of research on what's going on with ventilators, I found out that the push for ventilators for the hospitals are because of the government bonuses to put people out of ventilator in the payday for the hospital approximates $300,000 once they convinced the patient or their family to put their logo on out of ventilator. I was kicked out on the 10th of October. Yeah, I was taken up by an arm guard on the tent. And it was because I was challenging. I was challenging the things that are going on. So she was only in the hospital seven days. She was never on the desibir or events because we refuse those treatments, but they figured out a different way to take her old. And so I was with her from the sixth through the morning of the 10th, I was taken up by an arm guard for challenging the protocols. That's a whole another story. But then we had to hire an attorney to get my daughter Jessica's in as a replacement. And so Grace didn't have advocacy for 44 hours during that 44 hours they increased the dose of a sedation drug called Crescetics seven different times so they sedated my best buddy instead of taking care of her. And that drug they started her on October 9. So by the time her last day came around October 13, she was already on a report. The package insert says specifically to not use that drug for more than 24 hours because it causes acute respiratory failure. They listed the first cause of death on Grace's death certificate as acute respiratory failure, which was directly caused by the hospital using that drug. So that piece of Grace's death certificate is true. And they received a $7,500 bonus for listing that as the first cause of death. They listed the second cause of death as COVID 19 pneumonia. They received a $13,000 bonus for that listing. Of course, that was not true. The second cause of death was in addition to press edX, which now on her last day they ratcheted up to 14 times the original dose. This is in spite of the doctor telling us that morning how great of a day Grace had been the day before our book. We refused the ventilator for the fifth time. My hypothesis is because we rejected that ventilator and that ventilator decision yields a $300,000 payday for the hospital. They had to figure out a different way to take her out because how can she start the morning having such a good day. And then she is dead 11 hours after we have the phone call with the doctor. And you can't make up this sequence of events. I mean, with the press edX, now at 14 times the dose four days earlier, they combined that with the Razor Pam and morphine in order to do that, the doctor had to order those three meds. The hospital pharmacists had to sign on on that order. The hospital alarm had to be overridden because those meds according to the package insert for morphine are counterindicated. So that was the second cause of death. That's the real second cause of death. And that sequence of events got me to the point where I believe Grace was murdered right after eight minutes after they've increased the dose of press edX to 14 times the dose basically knocking Grace out the doctor put a do not resuscitate order on Grace eight minutes later. And then the second thing that we're going to do is we're going to do a reoccurring package insert, which again is the rules there. They've got to follow is posted on Grace's website. It's maybe the most damning document on the website. It says to not combine those drugs because it causes death. You're supposed to have the reversal drug bedside and monitor the patient. No nursing staff came in that room to monitor the patient after they gave her morphine. Not one. The only person who came in was a phlebotomist who was attempting to do a blood gas draw. And I suspect she was attempting to do the blood gas draw because the it was ordered stat by the doctor. So only it stands to reason she is attempting to do that to justify what they already knew was going to have. So in order for those drugs to be delivered. The doctor had to order them. The pharmacist had to sign off on them. The alarm system would have had to been overwritten because of this contraindicated combination of meds and a 14 year ice unars had to deliver them. So now is that premeditated just sometime in this window after 615 senses Grace is getting cold. They killed Grace while we were there. So just think through what they're doing to your loved ones if you're not there. It's at least 10 times worse than when I'm telling you. So then just because she senses Grace getting cold. She asked the ice unars to do a town. She said no, no need. She said that's normal. Just cover it with a blanket. Just call us then at 720 panicking on a FaceTime call. And we're seeing Grace laying there just saying that Grace's numbers are dropping like crazy. I said get the nurses in. She said they won't come in dad. I said, I've been trying. They will not come in the room. She estimated 30 nurses and all the way at this point in time. So we start hollering save our daughter. They holler back to us. She's DNR do not resuscitate. We holler. She's not DNR save our daughter. They would not come in and give her that reversal drug to save her. Just ran out of the wall during this time and a nurse had up on her screen that the doctor ordered a DNR and they couldn't do anything about it. The doctor ordered the DNR and Grace at 1056 that's eight minutes after the Max dose press attacks. So we suspect the reason for that timing was that they thought the press attacks was going to take her out. And they had to have that DNR in place in order to accomplish their dirty deed. So with Grace, they used what's called end of life meds, which are the meds they used to end somebody's life when they're in hospice care. So that's the press attacks, Laraza Pam Warpene. So how we got this one is a lady in Connecticut contacted us because they killed her daughter and her daughter also had done syndrome. And they killed her with these death row meds. And so as I dug into her case, I found some very interesting things. So the first things that you look at the title, it says the white code of bail for state killing. But this was written by Joel Zyvet and I highlighted his name for a reason. You'll see why in a minute back in 2014 eight years ago. So what's the reason? Well, he have visited a state facility, which was an executing by lethal injection and he wrote this article. Okay, so now we fast forward to April 14 of 2020. And this is one of the headlines. There was a few news agencies that reported this headline that doctors were requesting lethal injection drugs. Well, in fact, the doctors requested these drugs on April six. So you look at the drugs listed fentanyl, madezlam, vrconium bromide and vrconium bromide. These are the drugs these. Yes, they requested these. I mean, you can't make this up. So these doctors requested these on April six. The news got a hold of it and reported it on April 14 of 2020. This is only a month into COVID, right. So this is the actual letter written on April six. And so these doctors are writing that they're asking for these states to give up their lethal injection supplies because they need them for patients with COVID-19. Look who the first signer of the letter. This is the same guy who wrote about the lethal injection drugs when he went to visit the. So obviously he learned something he learned where to get these drugs, right. Okay, so now do they actually use them. So let's let's go down. I want to show you these are some some screenshots out of the records from this girl that died using these drugs. So you see they used madezlam. They use fentanyl. Let's keep going down. Now she went into the hospital on November 17. She was there 22 days, which is the average hospital stay with somebody with COVID. If they get them unremdesivir and eventually she was on everything. I estimated they they pulled in 750,000 from her hospital stay. So now you see madezlam fentanyl. Let's keep going. Well, wait, look at this one vent maintenance per day, $2,910. They love us so much the hospitals. They're only there to help. Madezlam fentanyl in Ventum, Ventum, $2,900 per day just in maintenance. Wait till they die to get the big payoff. Well, exactly and it gets it gets worse. Okay, so now we see Madezlam again, multiple now they have the vercronium, which was also referenced. So in you see now we go, this is all the day before she died. So they gave her these the take her out. And then what's really, you know, if you don't think this is about money, take a look at the first line. So you see the fentanyl line there, Sean, but then right above there, it says central nutrition. So $1389.15. They fed her TPN food through her central line as they're killing her to make another 1,400. That's sick. This girl was also put on in illegal DNR and this is so egregious. So the if you look at it, 850, it says the doctor or father states they do not want patient to be DNR. The doctor Fox made aware plan to speak with family again, concerning patients, code status and goal of care. This is what they do it. They try to pressure you into this box. They want to put you in. Okay, so you look at at 850, the father said we don't want to be DNR. So look at what 13 seconds later, they put her in as a DNR code. They ordered an illegal DNR on her just like they did on grace. There's thousands of these cases where they put DNRs on people. One of the guys from church told me that when he went into the hospital for COVID, they made him sign his own DNR order as a condition of entering the hospital. When grace was in the hospital, the COVID expert, the very first day said, I'd like to put grace on taxilism. What I was doing. So this is one of the reasons I got kicked out is because I was challenging all this stuff. So I said spell that please. So I wrote it down and I have my laptop there. I start researching taxilism. I texted a doctor who I know and she did the same research and inside, you know, took us a couple hours and we concluded taxilism. I was a killer. But the placebo group did better than the then the subject group and the drug has umpteen side effects. So I tell him we're not doing this and I said, what's the reason I said, well, look at here. I'll just show you one article. Here's the New England Journal of Medicine that says this drug is no good. And he gets mad at me. You see one dose is $22,000. $22,000 a dose. So one dose is 800 milligrams. That's what the 800 is. It's 22,000 a dose. So you can see why they want to use taxilism. But it has nothing to do with the health and the patient. It has to do with the money. So Scott, is this genocide that we're living in right now with the dark side? I'm 100% convinced it is. Now I would say the government is absolutely 100% corrupt. And this is the way they are using the disabled and elderly are the first to go in this worldwide genocide program. Our United States is the one leading the charge. And I am not afraid to say that I want to show it from the rough times. In the state of New York, we pulled CMS data with attorney Thomas Rins at his CMS whistleblowers, the entire state of New York alone. Every Medicare patient who has received five days of remdesivir treatment for COVID-19 in the state of New York, the entire mortality rate is 26.9% of all of them died. When I say they're targeting the elderly, they know these drugs are going to be toxic to them. So what's the incentive for the United States to do this for the elderly and disabled? Of course, there's a lot bigger agenda. But just to give you the short term incentive is that the elderly are on Medicare, the disabled are on Medicaid. Those two federal programs account for 39% of the federal budget. So it makes sense from a financial perspective. If you believe that in allocation of care that everybody should have a ranking, which is all part of Obamacare, these are the two population groups you're going to take out first. And in fact, they are their number one and number two because we need to be able to trim the budget. This is exactly what was happening. They were shutting down the kidneys of these patients with remdesivir. And then their body, when the kidneys can no longer remove water, their body accumulates water into their abdominal cavity, then it will actually saturate their lungs. And these medical doctors in these hospitals are looking at chest X-rays saying that it's secondary pneumonia. It's not secondary pneumonia. It's pulmonary edema. You are drowning these people with their own water. You are filling their lungs with water and they are drowning to death. This is exactly what happened to my father-in-law. It's exactly what they're reporting. Still to this day, the side effects of individuals with COVID-19 in hospitals. Now, it's the same thing. You're shutting down their kidneys with a poison and their bodies retaining all the fluids you're pumping into them through an IV. It's just what's happening. It's disgusting and immoral. A lot of these patients are really coming in with anxiety because everybody is scared. They're worried and they're breathing fast and then they get all nervous. So this is a lot of people are coming in. And a lot of them are on either Medicaid or Medicare. They're poor. They're from a lower class. We're at a public hospital. They need the funding. So they take them. They take them and they tell them pretty much that if they don't get on a event, then they're probably not going to survive. But the reality is if they get on that event, the likelihood of them walking out the hospital is slim to none. You don't have actual doctors that know critical care. ICU doctors on these floors. There's a dentist and there are residents with these. So residents are essentially students and these people who are in advance are essentially meaning like these residents are like practicing their skills on them. So they're practicing central lines. They're practicing invasive procedures that are really unnecessary. A 37 year old, he came in talking. He was very terrified. He was just like, you know, totally alert. Newer it was going on and they convinced him to be on a event. Now he's dead. I compare this hospital to a third world country. I've been in a third world country hospital in Iraq. The Iraq hospital is better than this one. Many patients died due to the use of improbicettings by inexperienced operators, resulting in blowing out people's lungs. She witnessed gross negligence. I flipped. We were all crying. There's a lot of nurses that were that know that this is wrong. But they're afraid to like say anything publicly. What killed him was being the event kill him? Yeah. Oh, yes. They're so sedated. He had probably eight or nine drips. It's all sedation. It's all sedation and paralytics. So you are asleep. It is essentially like you're under, you know, you're in surgery, you know, and it puts you under like that for a good month. Straight. There's no way you can cover it for something like that. You know what America and the NIH says is acceptable levels of ALT elevations. It's in the remdesivirers EUA. They allow your liver toxicity enzymes to go up ALT to 10 times the normal range. That's acceptable. In the state of New York, we pulled CMS data with attorney Thomas Rins at his CMS whistleblowers, the entire state of New York alone. Every Medicare patient who has received five days of remdesivir treatment for COVID-19 in the state of New York, the entire mortality rate is 26.9% of all of them died. When I say they're targeting the elderly, they know these drugs are going to be toxic to them. Nine days ago, I opened an intensive care unit to care for the sickest COVID positive patients in the city. The method that we program the ventilator, one based on a notion of respiratory failure as opposed to oxygen failure, that this method being widely adopted at this very moment in every hospital in the country, which aims to increase pressure on the lungs in order to open them up, is actually doing more harm than good. And that the pressure we are providing to lungs, we may be providing to lungs that cannot stand it, that cannot take it, and that the ARDS that we are seeing, that the whole world is seeing, maybe nothing more than lung injury caused by the ventilator. Nobody is listening. They don't care what is happening to these people. They don't. I'm literally coming here every day and watching them kill them. It's like going in the fucking toilet zone, like everyone here is okay with this. The only way I can kind of put this into context for everybody is, and this is going to be kind of an extreme example. This is like really the only thing I can come up with. It's like if we were in Nazi Germany, and they wrote taking the Jews to go put them in a gas chamber, I'm the one like they're saying, hey, this is not good, this is bad, this is wrong. We should not be doing this. And then everyone tells me, hang in there, you're doing a great job. You can't save everybody. You know, you're amazing. You're a great nurse. Guys, I know I'm a fucking good nurse. I know I go in there and I give it 500% every day. What I need is someone to help me save these people from being killed. Okay, from gross negligence and complete medical mismanagement. And someone come up with like some type of solution for me, because I'm kind of out of ideas. You know, I try and talk with some of the other nurses here and they're like, well, you can't save everybody. And they all know what's happening. They all agree with me and they all just shake their heads. And I'm like, am I the only one who is not a sociopath? To think that this is okay. They're murdering these people. I'm pretty sure that when you defibrillate somebody with the heartbeat of 40 and a stable rhythm and you kill them, that's murder. And I'm pretty sure that when you put somebody's peep up to like 25 and peep doesn't go past I think like 15, 20 and you blow their lungs out and they die. I'm pretty sure that's murder. I mean, I just watched a doctor drop a central line and rupture like the subplavian vein and the guy led to death. I mean, COVID didn't press that central line. COVID didn't kill that guy. This is non-invasive ventilation here, CPAP or BIPAP. This is a mask that gets strapped on in. We can help you breathe with that. We're not allowed to use those. Since COVID came out, they said absolutely not. You have to let the patient crash and go straight to a ventilator. I couldn't figure out why you're struggling so much. And I guess it's just kind of in my personality to go where the health is needed. They were in desperate need of nurses. So, you know, they were calling it the front lines, the epicenter. This is where everybody was, you know, just dying left and right. Thought you saw the trucks, you know, outside of these hospitals filled with bodies and then like, you know, I can't be any worse than what I've already been through in Iraq. So, you know, put me in the game. So, yeah, I accepted a travel nursing job, packed my bags and was out the door in two days, you know, kissed my family goodbye and hopped on a plane. It was in April. Every single one of my patients still died, you know, it was still extremely packed in these hospitals with pretty much every single person out of ventilator. One of my first red flags is when you're going into wartime, which they consider that, you know, front line war. I expected to get to work immediately and quickly learn that we were going to just sit around for three days waiting for an assignment. There was nurses that got there before me that were sitting around for 18 days. My question is, why weren't they using their, you know, utilizing their resources, complaining that they didn't have enough help. When we got that, I'm not talking 100 or 200, I'm talking like 1,000, 2,000 nurses sitting around in the operating front assignment. So, that was very confusing to me. You know, if, if indeed this was, you know, essentially, you know, a war zone, people are literally dying, option right, why aren't they using us, utilizing us. That didn't make any sense to me, but I finally did get an assignment and they put me at Elmhurst Hospital. It was just completely random. I couldn't want anywhere, but that's where they picked for me to go. And I got there and literally it took me a shift, 12 hours to realize that this is absolute chaos. And not because we didn't have enough staff, we were well staffed. It was because just nobody cared. I literally felt like I was living in the Twilight Zone. So, it's absolute, just negligence. Family was excluded. You had no advocates, other than the staff there. So, why don't you expand on that to get to me? That was probably the worst catastrophe of this that resulted in much of this abuse occurring. Because they had no advocates there. Well, that's exactly right. And on top of that, they created a liability and free environment. Ah, yes. So, now you have a liability free environment where everybody knows that no matter what I do, I'm not going to get in trouble for it. We have no family around putting us in check. You know, on a good day, and I'm sure there's a lot of your viewers that have had their own struggles inside these hospitals on a good day when they're allowed in. I mean, I've seen it, you know, working in these hospitals. So, now you have no family. You've got a liability free environment. You got doctors and nurses that at that point just didn't care because everybody was going to die anyway. So, what's the point? Everybody on a ventilator. So, these patients can't even speak for themselves. They're at the hands of whoever is taking care of them at that point. So, what you sit by and allow this to happen is I don't know how so many people knowingly knew this was going on and just choosing to make quiet. It's just really sad. I mean, you cited some incredible statistics. I think there was only one person. You're four weeks at the hospital that survived being put on the vent and that's because they self-exhibit. It was a kiss of death. I mean, if you were put on the vent, you were dead. And they knew that when I first got there, this was well earlier April. And within the first week I was there. I started videoing after speaking with an attorney in New York. The very first day I was at Elmhurst. Like I said, it didn't take me more than a shift, really, like what was going on. And I got back to my whole tellroom and just broke down in tears. And I'm like, I don't even know what to do right now. Like I couldn't even believe it. And so, I actually have a lot of nurse friends. And I just let it all out. Like I, you guys, I don't know what to do. And one of them is a nurse practitioner. So she ended up essentially kind of being my proxy. She, she did a live video when it went for you viral. For her safety, she cannot come out and say these things. So I am her voice in New York City right now. And some of the hospitals, this is what is going on. People are sick, but they don't have to stay sick. They are killing them. They are not helping them. She used the word murder coming from a nurse who went to New York City, expecting to help patients are left to rot and die. Her words, she has never seen so much neglect. No one cares. They are cold and they don't care anymore. What is happening is that they're putting people on nasal cannula if they require more than six liters of nasal cannula. They get intubated. They go on the vent or they get traked if there's not enough vents. They don't get high flow. No non-rebrither. No non-invasive ventilation. No CPAP. No BIPAP. They are on a closed system, the ventilator, versus a CPAP or a BIPAP, for fear that it will spread the virus. Which by the way I know in nurse in Florida who is fired for exposing that about CPAP and BIPAP and patients being put on the ventilator, like straight away to the ventilator, to be on a closed system. The patients don't know any better. They don't have family with them. There is no one there with them to advocate for them. So they are scared and they give consent. The ventilators have high peep, high pressure, which then causes barotrometer. It causes trauma to the lungs. Dr. Sidel, Cameron Kyle Sidel, a few weeks ago, put out a video. He's in New York City and he put out a video saying something is not right. Like we're not treating this correctly. We're doing something wrong. This doesn't make sense. They pulled his video from YouTube and they took him out of ICU because they couldn't have one doctor going against the grain, going against their protocol. The protocol is probalt fall or some kind of sedation because they're on the ventilator and IV antibiotics. There's no hydroxychloroquine. They're not using that combination with Zytheramax. They're not using zinc, vitamin C, high doses of vitamins, A and D. They laugh. This is what she's told me. They laugh at that. She says this is a nightmare. It's out of a horror movie and I don't want to be a part of this. There are people who are a full code. And yet if they crash, they're not doing compressions because it will spread the virus. Full code, not doing compressions. Family is not there. They have no one to answer to. No one is being held accountable. A code was called and no one came. So sometimes they're not even resuscitating people. Again, left to rot and die. They're not given blood because we know that the blood is not oxygenated in these COVID patients. We know that. Their doctor is all around the world sounding the alarms. These are the drugs that work. This is the pathophysiology of the disease. This is what's happening. And for some reason it's not changing. Even though we know some of us know what's going on, nothing is changing on the front lines. They stay in the same PPE all shift except for the top pair of gloves. So two pairs of gloves. Or I don't know, maybe more than two, but they're only changing the gloves on the outside. Gown mask, whatever else stays the same because all patients are COVID patients. So if it's a COVID floor, all COVID. But it's not because some of them are rule out COVID. So even if they're rule out COVID and they're not COVID, they're going to get COVID because they're using the same PPE all shift and they're carrying that contamination to all the patients. They're not changing their PPE. They're not going into rooms. So they're running long tubing into the room so that they can manage the tubing from outside of the rooms. So if they're not going into the rooms, that means they're not assessing the patients as frequently as you would be otherwise assessing your patients. It's a horror movie, she says, not because of the disease, but because of the way it's being handled. She said, we need help and people are sitting there waiting in the hotels. Money, I guess being paid is being paid for by FEMA. And yet, they're still understaffed and there are hundreds of people, hundreds of nurses in the hotels waiting to be called onto a shift. So there is manpower enough if the goal were to actually save people, but resources are not being utilized properly or to full capacity in a way that maximizes the patient benefit or improves the outcomes. Friends that are working on the front lines nice to you and they are good nurses and some of them are heroes, but we have nurses being celebrated as heroes who are killing people. They're not heroes and they're being brainwashed to think they're doing something great just by going to work because they're brave enough to go to work. Well, what are you doing at work? You're certainly not saving people if you're not even running codes. You're not even going into patient rooms. You're a coward. You're hurting people. You're killing them. You're contributing to the problem. I know I'm going to get hate mail for this and that's fine because people are dying who don't have to die. Again, there's no family there so no one's being held accountable. And once these people get intubated, they're being scared into giving consent to be intubated and then for a lot of them it's over. And there's nobody going to be held accountable and there's nobody looking out for them. They are completely by themselves. This is murder, she says. People are being murdered and no one cares. Horrible care. What happened to her is she got just gasped, gasped, lighted by everybody. She had death threats. Everyone said that she was making it up. So I had contacted at the attorney after a few days of seeing what was going on with her just trying to get my message out. And I'm like, listen, no one's going to believe what's happening here because they don't believe her. There was other whistleblowers prior to me that they didn't believe. And like the only way the public is ever going to be able to even somewhat take this seriously and believe what I'm saying and what others are saying is with actual video. And I had already tried to go up the chain of command and everybody would just tell you to just be quiet or you're gone. You were considered a troublemaker. If you tried to advocate for your patients and you were pretty much shunned. So I contacted in a attorney after I realized that no one was believing my essentially my proxy who isn't a practitioner herself. So even after going up the chain of command talking to anybody that was in charge and it was always we're passing the thought to, you know, well, it's not me. It's the next person. It's not, you know, that's the authority. Like nobody had any answers. And, you know, if you were considered a problem child, you know, you know, somebody that's asking way too many questions, then you were sent home. And there was no such a set home prior, you know, to me getting there for doing the same thing. So why would anybody do that? And I mean, there's maybe a lot of different answers to that, but ethics essentially just went out the window. And my attorney actually ended up getting me a pair of spy glasses in order to video. He's not DNR but what you're doing as you know basically, does his family know? His family knows the situation. I think they called them and told them they were trying to do what they could. All days, I think in the 80s, I heard it. It was this one on the forehead. It was this one where I changed the hood. Oh, it was 90s. So they started playing along with the whole thing. He changed the pulse act. His head just fingering. He was like, oh, that one. He's not a puppet. So what was that? So that was, we were just getting on shift because we were starting the night shift at seven. And that was the nurse from the day shift saying pretty much we shouldn't code him if he's going to the code. And then I turned my glasses on. Where are we being told not to code him, essentially, but he said, I mean, because I'm going to tell you right now, keep on, I'm out. I'm jumping on his chest. Period point blank. It's going to happen. Because until that status is changed in the computer, that's what I am obligated to do. Under my nursing license. Right. I mean, um, because you guys are going to pack me up and protect me. Well, Elmer's does have a policy given like a coded policy, giving the scarcity of dialysis. It can be a can code. It can be whatever it's not. There's not a. It's a difference. Normally the Santa is whatever the family says. Like we just do. So they would say code him for five years. Like you just do that. Right. It's a little bit different now because of the new policy in place. It's a little bit different. But it's not a problem. It's not a problem. It's not a problem. It's not a problem. It's not a problem. It's not a problem. It's not a problem. It's not a problem. It's not a problem. It's not a problem. It's not a problem. It's not a problem. It's not a problem. It's not a problem. It's not a problem. It's not a problem. It's not a problem. I'm not going. He doesn't have anything to sustain going. And I said and who decided this and I said can you put a comfort care order in that? No, we can't do that. Can you put a DNA order and no, we can't do that. I said so what's our plan? Do we have a model? She goes well, he's dying and I'm like I understand that but there needs to be an order indicating that either I'm doing compressions or I'm not doing compressions. Well, I can say that we cannot be an agreements that we will do it. I will definitely. Yeah. Because I'm going to jump on. So why? I'll go right with you. I don't care. That's what we're here for. I'm not planning to make this a big deal. Like, I totally changed his status that he is a DNR and they can do a two-position consent if they've talked to the family. But until they change it and I see it, he's a full coat to me. We know when someone is close, we'll pull the code card up and be ready. You know, we're ready. I had the app be ready. That's one of the first things we do and she wouldn't let me give it. So this was that woman in the entire time this was over his body, his alive body and we're arguing and she's laughing. She was smirking and how this man died was the nurses arguing with the doctors over him as he was dying. And she was smirking the entire time. I was a soul. It was probably one of the worst experiences in my entire life. But all I can think about is that at least he knows that we were fighting for him. When he died, you know. But this was my conversation after what happened and the guy I told you about earlier that had pulled his tube out. He was up at that point. Like he was on the same floor. He had pulled his, he was the one that they wanted to sit at eight. So at that point he was doing better where he could walk this doctor and put a diaper on him and told him to poop in his pants. So after the code, I wouldn't go check on him and he's pooped, he has, he goes, I have pooped in my pants. So I'm like, why do you have poop in your pants? And he said that because the doctor told him that he has to do that and I've just lost it. It was her. This is wrong. It is straight up this, it is wrong. And I have been, I have 37 years old. I have been in a hospital since I've been 16. Military hospitals that well. I don't expect that it was wrong to you. I agree that it referred to that that we're wrong to. Calling a patient a DNR when there's no order for it and telling us, straight up telling us, you're not doing anything. That's wrong. If that was my brother or my father or anybody, I would be furious. And I guarantee you if I called his family right now and told him what happened, they would be furious too. I split, we were all crying. There's a lot of nurses that know that this is wrong, but they're afraid to say anything publicly. She said, when I was talking to her, she said, we don't always get in the orders. It comes from the top down. And I was thinking, that's the exact problem with everything. Where's it coming from? That's the purpose. You guys really try to kill everybody, like everybody thinks. Within our unit, it was a big fight. And ultimately, the kid died with us over his body arguing about this. That was over there. Yeah. And the doctor, the he's like the doctor, and you just break it up that we, that we, you know. I hope that's a no. Because I don't know one. I'm sorry. I'm not doing that. You mentioned earlier that this is a common occurrence where people come in able to speak. And they just have low oxygen levels and then they're put on event. So what's going on there? I don't know. I honestly, I have no idea how they're assuming everybody is just the same. There's no individuality anymore. These residents, I think a lot of them are just stone cold. There's no emotion. And they don't view people as people anymore. And it's really sad. We came a little bit later after the big rush, but there was still a lot of people coming in. And a lot of us were just in shock. Within the first couple days, you could see exactly what was going on. My bigger problem with this whole scenario is when they intimate people, you don't need it. Yeah. And it looks very clear to me that they're just pushing it. You almost feel like you're literally living in the toilet zone. And you feel like you're the only sane one in a bunch of insane people. And it's scary because you're the people that others are trusting to take care of them. And they're really doing the opposite. I'm to the point where I'm afraid that I'm going to start thinking that this is normal. I don't want to ever get to that point because they think that the people I've worked with that are local nurses and doctors don't see anything wrong with us. There are good nurses that work there too. I have made good friends with a lot of the nurses that do work there. There's good people, but they're outnumbered. So what happens? People come in like this 37-year-old and what was he complaining of or what was going on? Respiratory distress. He didn't have COVID either. He did not have COVID. And how do we know that? I took care of him. I have the same type of results from his chart as I do with my other patient. It was like the day before intubation who was fine on their own breather. And then they get to the end and then he got on their mouth and then they got up to him and then they got to the end. And now he's 37-year-old and that's the ****. That's what I'm seeing. Like all these negative tests. And they're putting them on these fans. It hopeful that they'll get it. They'll be put on these COVID-4. It's murder. It straight up is studying these people up for failure based on money. Medicaid is who pays out or who's paying this bonus of 29,000. I believe it's Medicaid Medicare. It's government money. I don't know exactly where it's coming from. But I know that it is. But I know the orders are coming from the above. Someone above. And everybody says that it's someone higher up. I'm like, good. Call them. Like during that DNR when they're telling us or the full code when they're telling us not to do CPR. I'm like, all right, call your higher ups then. Let's talk about it and they wouldn't. Because they're all scared. Everybody's scared. And everybody's scared to stick up on themselves. And I've called a lot of doctors unethical to their face. And they deserve it. I am a nurse. I'm an advocate for my patients. And to be... I'm a little excited, but I totally agree with you. But no, no, no. This way, you were laughing. And you thought it was funny. You were like smirking. You've been really rude to all of us. And I thought that was really... I'm not being rude in that. It was really, yeah, you are. It was very disrespectful. And I don't think that you're going to be a very good doctor. You're welcome. I hope you learned something from this. Was this the dentist or are these her residents you're talking to? This one was a fellow. She is a CCU fellow. Courier. She's a Courier fellow. What killed him? Was the vent kill him? Yeah, oh yes. They're so sedated. He had probably eight or nine drips. It's all sedation. It's all sedation and paralytics. So you are asleep. It is essentially like you're under your surgery when they're pushing under like that for a good month. Straight. There's no way you can recover from something like that. You're being brain dead if you do. So can you list some of the drugs that they're put on on the drips? Yeah, there's propyl, fentanyl, nimbex, bursad. Gosh, here you go. I have a list. I think it lists from, this is one of my patients with on this. Just one patient. So nimbex, 100 milligrams, presidx, 400 milligrams, fentanyl, 2500 micrograms, heparin, 25,000 units, bursad, 50 milligrams, leave a fed, 16,000, neo, 50 milligrams, propyl, 10 milligrams, vessel, presidx, 100 units. This is one person. And they're all these drugs are running at the same time and to them. So in the case of this 37 year old, he comes in complaining of some respiratory distress. Could he have low blood oxygen? Totally healthy guy. And he was sat in like this oxygen saturation. And like 88, 89. So a little low. I mean, yeah, but people do that. You and I probably do that where we're not monitoring our oxygen, you know, all day long. But he felt shortness of breath so he came in. And what was the next step? What would have happened next? He went to a step down unit, among other, what does that mean? It's just a unit that where people aren't quite on the event yet. And I say on the event yet, because that's, I should call it step up unit to the event. So was he, what's the phrase you used? COVID, uh, the COVID rule out. So that's how they admit everyone to the floor that doesn't have a positive COVID immediately. Okay. So he's put in the step down unit, which is a euphemism for step up unit. And what happens to him there? What's going on there? Oxygen, I wasn't in this unit. My friend was, uh, so just normal oxygen, nasal. No, they'll do like a high pressure. So what does that mean exactly? Was it looking like a forced? It's a big, it almost looks like a big thick nasal canyola and you put it in your nose and it forces the pressure in. It can almost be like, you know, it's still causing your lungs to expand, right? But what they really need to be doing is like the non-rebreeder mask, but they just skip it usually. They go right to the high pressure. So they're along with their already, you know? So and tell, just tell us what a non-rebreeder mask is. So that's just the other side of a bag that is on the end of these masks. It's not 14 air down your lungs. Okay. It's more than that. Okay. You know, um, you can put 100% oxygen. And that's what people need. That, okay. So, and that really is not the protocol. It's not the protocol to start people on that. I mean, it should be, but it's not how they're doing it now. I mean, in your prior experience dealing with people with low saturation, would that be what you would do? Oh, yeah. That's what we were doing, you know, in my hometown. And were you having better outcomes there? Yeah, we didn't have this because we treated them properly, you know? What was, what would you say the kind of the case fatality rate was? No, zero. Yeah, by me, zero. And what's, what, what is the likelihood of coming out of the hospital you're in? I'll tell you that the unit that I've been on, the only person that survived ironically is a guy who pulled his own, uh, tubo. So he woke up enough to be able to do that? Yeah. He wanted it out. He should have never been out in the first place. That's another, that's a whole other story. So let's just keep going with this 37 year old. So he's on the step down unit and he's being given semi-pressurized oxygen. It's not a rebreather mask and then what happens to him? They'll start treating them with medications, you know, that will, I think. And are they checking his saturation at this all the time? Does he have? Yeah, he's on the continuous pulse ox, but, you know, the minute that he desacts, like, he'll see like, oh no, he's at 87 now. Or, oh, look at this. Oh, he's going to need more help. And then they go tell them that they need more help, even if they don't. You know, it, it's ultimately what it comes down to is like people being just lazy and wanting to treat. They just want to treat, treat, treat, treat. What are order followers? And the, uh-huh. You know, like, they want to please. That's what they're doing. They want to please. And like the protocol that hospital is to treat. To treat invasively according to this protocol. And do we know where this protocol originates? I mean, because obviously the governor was talking about getting vents, vents, everyone was talking about getting vents. So this seems like this comes from very high up. Yeah, I mean, if you're going to tell somebody they interwelt the entire world essentially, especially the entire United States, and they're like, we need the vents. Like, if you tell people something enough, they're going to start believing it. So that's exactly what happened. Tell me, Juan Cuomo immediately thought two months ago that they need 30,000 heads. How do you just come up with a number of comments that idiot too? Well, I don't think medical is paying them that much. Oh, yeah. 29,000 a bed. So our 37 year old went what happens to him next? So they say, OK, it looks like he's 87. He needs more. And so they did that is that the point at which they would intubate him? Yeah, that's when he went to the, that's when he stepped up. So he stepped up to the ICU. He steps up to the ICU. For more care, right? They stirred off with a little bit of like muscle relaxer. And you know, he's woozy. You have to remember, there's no family with these patients. So they're alone in a hospital by themselves during a pandemic that they're terrified of already. It's probably what brought him in the first place. He's totally healthy. Otherwise. And then you have doctors. They think they're doctors, but they're resident. Technically, they're doctors with absolutely zero experience. I've had to teach residents several like nursing skills. Knowing them that they have a choice, you know, like they could likely die from this, or they can be saved by, you know, getting a tube and that will help them breathe. They don't call it ventilator. You can give you a little help breathing. And that's it. Then they get, then they get the sedation and they went, they go to sleep. And that's it. They don't wake up. He's in a bodyache. And so the drugs have a deleterious effect on the body, on the brain, but there's something about the pressurization of the lungs that is also causing harm. Yeah. They're having the pee. That's the pressure in his lungs, which is causing the sphero trauma of people that is blowing people's lungs out. So when that happens, what are you going to do? Turn it up more. You know, you just, you just keep... Use the membrane expands so that you need, in order to fill them and deflate them, you need more pressure. Yeah, you're going to have to... Max, I mean, we have a guy right now who's maxed on everything. There's nothing more you can do. So then what? You just wait for them to die. I mean... There's nothing you can do. Can you tell us what peep levels are they started on? It depends. You know, they're always... Well, they'll start... There's some good... I can't say everybody's bad. There are some good doctors that'll start them on on five, which people should be at both five. But that doctor goes home and the next doctor comes on checked and cranks it up, then one. It's hard to go back down. And what... What oxygen level are they put on? It depends. I mean, as they start to deteriorate more and more, then the oxygen obviously is going up. Here's a guy right now. I have... I'm on 100 percent and I'll have to come in and, you know, give them a little bit more rush of two minutes of even more oxygen just to keep the stats up. I mean, that's what happens to people. What I'm seeing is that it's the public hospitals. And this is like in other states too, if you look at all the hospitals, most of them are probably like that, or needing money because they're told to stay home. So they're not getting really, really sick and they come in on an emergency status. They waited too long. If they didn't wait too long, they're easily treatable. And, you know, in New York, the governor said, you know, pretty much put a ban on it. So why? Why... What made him... You know, a medical professional now to make these decisions and intrude on the doctor-patient relationship.