Elevators and Emergency Rooms.
You know, elevators are inspected quite often and a lot of them have the inspection certificates posted. When you get into an elevator you'll see the last date that it was inspected and supposedly proven safe. It stands to reason that people would require that sort of scrutiny in order to get in an elevator, being that if something were to go wrong, they would be falling however much distance it is from the floor that they live on to the ground.
Emergency rooms, and the hospitals they are attached to, are required to maintain a certain level of cleanliness and sterility. Doctors and nurses are certified and approved to do their jobs. Those standards were quite sufficient for many years in order to assure that people wouldn't be harmed when they pay for and use the services provided by the hospital.
If the safety checks that are performed on elevators were to somehow begin to fail, I mean if elevators began to fall on a regular basis, then something would need to be done about the standards that were set a long time ago. If not, people would not be able to use elevators with any assurance of their safety.
As far as hospitals go, they still use alcohol and sterilization procedures on all their equipment, but something else has failed as of about 4 or 5 years ago. Doctors have failed to uphold their oaths to "above all else, do no harm" and have taken bonus money to inject as many people as possible without checking if that injection might do harm of some sort. I think they are going by a different oath, a hypocritical oath. Medical system has fallen like an elevator that fails. It is no longer safe to enter a hospital and receive any kind of treatment there. Doing so is like entering an elevator that doesn't employ all of the components that make it safe.
The CDC recently updated their guidance telling people that miocarditis is a side effect of the injections. That organization exists to warn us, and to regulate whether something is or is not safe. In this case, they are 6 billion injections too late! We need to find a new adage to describe slow. "A snail's pace" describes the speed of light compared to how slow the CDC has been in doing their job.
The good news is that we now have a good idea of who we cannot trust. The problem is we do not have anything with which to replace hospitals, news organizations, and the government itself. Each of those is its own poison pill, each with its own strain of venom that people are unwilling to refuse.
Trust is something that is hard fought and easily broken. The saying is true on an individual level. It is easy to cut one person out of your life when they mislead you and then take all you have. It is not so easy to do that at scale. The population cannot adapt or accept that such a holocaust has occurred. They continue refusing to recognize, at a societal level, that the very institutions we relied on have been trying to kill us. Some doctors were deceived, others blinded by the bonus checks, and still others were on a quest to silence, fire, and discredit those who did their homework.
If I am ever in an accident, the last thing I want people to do is call an ambulance! I know where that vehicle takes people. Like the Hotel California, you can check in, but you can never leave, at least not healthy or happy.
It has all been a conspiracy and there is nothing theoretical about it.
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