And the upwards of 600,000 Americans that die EVERY YEAR, year after year, for decades from heart disease; and the roughly 600,000 that die EVERY YEAR from cancer. Why are these not public health emergencies? Starting before the turn of the century?🧐 Oh, wait, the treatments are a business model. Sorry, forgot. /s
And the upwards of 600,000 Americans that die EVERY YEAR, year after year, for decades from heart disease; and the roughly 600,000 that die EVERY YEAR from cancer. Why are these not public health emergencies? Starting before the turn of the century?🧐 Oh, wait, the treatments are a business model. Sorry, forgot. /s
600,000 people die a year in the US with cancer, not from it. The treatments and/ or the underlying symptoms that created the cancer is what kills people
No argument whatsoever. Two family members have gone down the allopathic medicine treatment path and died. However, the way the numbers are presented, as stark numbers, is enough to contrast with the piss-ant numbers of the emergency that is still in effect for c19. That's my "argument" for a public health emergency. Which I have no illusions will ever be considered a thing. You get my drift.
And the upwards of 600,000 Americans that die EVERY YEAR, year after year, for decades from heart disease; and the roughly 600,000 that die EVERY YEAR from cancer. Why are these not public health emergencies? Starting before the turn of the century?🧐 Oh, wait, the treatments are a business model. Sorry, forgot. /s
600,000 people die a year in the US with cancer, not from it. The treatments and/ or the underlying symptoms that created the cancer is what kills people
No argument whatsoever. Two family members have gone down the allopathic medicine treatment path and died. However, the way the numbers are presented, as stark numbers, is enough to contrast with the piss-ant numbers of the emergency that is still in effect for c19. That's my "argument" for a public health emergency. Which I have no illusions will ever be considered a thing. You get my drift.