Words of wisdom and miscellaneous facts by Dr. Wysong and others.
This is an accumulation over several decades and the accuracy cannot be attested to.
Wysong vs Nemos Bible Debate
COSMOLOGY LIES AS BIG AS THE UNIVERSE
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"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false."
—William Casey CIA director 1981
The bigger the lie the greater its acceptance because people cannot believe authority figures would ignore reality.
To find truth we must hate the lie more than love accepted beliefs.
Fraud vitiates everything it touches. (common law maxim) Nudd v. Burrows (1875) 91 U.S. 416.
Fraud destroys the validity of everything into which it enters. Boyce's Executors v. Grundy (1830) 28 U.S. 210.
Fraud vitiates the most solemn contracts, documents and even judgments. United States v. Throckmorton (1878) 98 JU.S. 61.70.
FORWARD
The accepted cosmogony/cosmology (origin and nature of the universe) belief is:
—William Casey CIA director 1981
The bigger the lie the greater its acceptance because people cannot believe authority figures would ignore reality.
To find truth we must hate the lie more than love accepted beliefs.
Fraud vitiates everything it touches. (common law maxim) Nudd v. Burrows (1875) 91 U.S. 416.
Fraud destroys the validity of everything into which it enters. Boyce's Executors v. Grundy (1830) 28 U.S. 210.
Fraud vitiates the most solemn contracts, documents and even judgments. United States v. Throckmorton (1878) 98 JU.S. 61.70.
FORWARD
The accepted cosmogony/cosmology (origin and nature of the universe) belief is:
A Big Bang of nothing created an infinite meaningless universe containing atomic dust that gravitationally accreted into heavenly bodies including our Earthball moving in several different directions at 2.8 million mph and holding an atmosphere next to the vacuum of space while spontaneously forming life from primeval sludge that then evolved into complicated rocks called humans with no free will.
Long ago it became clear to me that the materialistic evolutionary part of that credo was false.
But I was on board with the cosmology part. After all, we see rocket ships going to and fro, there is a "Space Force," pictures of Earth and planets abound, astronauts float around and in the International Space Station, thousands of people and billions of dollars support it, and, of course, "all" the experts believe.
To question this is to be a conspiracy theorist, misinformationist, or even a lunatic. Oh my, we must, after all, follow the crowd.
The idea that we are being lied to about space didn't even enter my mind until a few months ago when what was left of my naive and trusting innocence had been totally demolished with the COVID-19 fraud.
We, the crowd, extend our trust to institutions charged with looking after our interests. But government, Big Medicine, education, media, industry, Big Tech, science, and NASA chase money, their own security, and even power over us.
That should not inspire confidence in beliefs they create, promote, protect with censorship, and even demand acceptance of.
If we want truth, we have to find it ourselves. To do that requires the opposite of trusting in others. It means sleuthing what the powers that be try to hide from us in internet archives, banned videos, censored "disinformation," and what "fact checkers" say isn't so.
Probing into the subject I was stunned to learn that:
That means unproven beliefs, stories, and even fakery are being passed off as science and truth.
This subject may seem inconsequential to everyday life. But that's only true if we aren't being lied to about it. If the truth is being hidden from us, we can be sure of one thing, it's not being done for our benefit.
Truth seekers learn that the scale and ostentatiousness of lies being fed to us means nothing can be tacitly trusted.
Everything of importance from government, media, industry, medicine, education, economics, science, history, religion, and popular society must be assumed to be false unless we prove otherwise by doing our homework and thinking critically.
This series will provide wake-up information to help you discover lies as big as the universe.
But I was on board with the cosmology part. After all, we see rocket ships going to and fro, there is a "Space Force," pictures of Earth and planets abound, astronauts float around and in the International Space Station, thousands of people and billions of dollars support it, and, of course, "all" the experts believe.
To question this is to be a conspiracy theorist, misinformationist, or even a lunatic. Oh my, we must, after all, follow the crowd.
The idea that we are being lied to about space didn't even enter my mind until a few months ago when what was left of my naive and trusting innocence had been totally demolished with the COVID-19 fraud.
We, the crowd, extend our trust to institutions charged with looking after our interests. But government, Big Medicine, education, media, industry, Big Tech, science, and NASA chase money, their own security, and even power over us.
That should not inspire confidence in beliefs they create, promote, protect with censorship, and even demand acceptance of.
If we want truth, we have to find it ourselves. To do that requires the opposite of trusting in others. It means sleuthing what the powers that be try to hide from us in internet archives, banned videos, censored "disinformation," and what "fact checkers" say isn't so.
Probing into the subject I was stunned to learn that:
Nobody, including any scientist, can prove any aspect of the approved cosmogony/cosmology belief using experimentation and the scientific method. |
That means unproven beliefs, stories, and even fakery are being passed off as science and truth.
This subject may seem inconsequential to everyday life. But that's only true if we aren't being lied to about it. If the truth is being hidden from us, we can be sure of one thing, it's not being done for our benefit.
Truth seekers learn that the scale and ostentatiousness of lies being fed to us means nothing can be tacitly trusted.
Everything of importance from government, media, industry, medicine, education, economics, science, history, religion, and popular society must be assumed to be false unless we prove otherwise by doing our homework and thinking critically.
This series will provide wake-up information to help you discover lies as big as the universe.
"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false."—William Casey CIA director 1981
"We know they are lying, they know they are lying, they know we know they are lying, we know they know we know they are lying, but they are still lying."—Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
"We know they are lying, they know they are lying, they know we know they are lying, we know they know we know they are lying, but they are still lying."—Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
12/27/2019
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āAmericans now spend over 2 trillion dollars annually on medical care. There is no end in sight to rising costs.Ā¹ From the medical community's vantage point, they would hope not. If you have a cash cow you milk it for all it's worth. Since expansion is the goal of free enterpriseāand medicine is free enterpriseāwhat else could be expected?
The only protestations there seem to occur when there isn't enough money to feed the monster. The question is not about the rationality of drugs, vaccines, diagnostic machines, lab tests, surgeries, and hospital facilities, but rather, how will they be paid for? The medical behemoth is considered as essential to life as food and water and thus it is petted, pampered, and protected. While it stuffs itself and swells to obscene size, everyone clamors for unlimited access to it by way of insurance and government entitlement programs. Consumers may wonder why modern medicine is getting so rotund, but then, awestruck with its techno-wizardry, continue to feed it by marching right into its mouth. Now then, if the medical system we had in place were truly decreasing disease, optimizing people's health, increasing healthy life span, and decreasing mortality, that would be one thing. But that is not the case. As previously shown, it is arguably the number one killer.Ā² The medical gorging and human sacrifice are ignored because esoteric medical science is seen as our only hope. To the public, sensational successesāseparating Siamese twins, transplanting organs, removing tumors from brains, reattaching limbsāseem like sure proof that medicine is on track. We therefore easily overlook its glaring failings in preventing and reversing diseases and assume that all that will be necessary for everyone to be recipients of miracle cures is more dollars. It's a very modern thing to do. If there is a problem, throw money at it.
āI had to chuckle when a radio announcer recently expressed concern about declining participation by employers in providing health care benefits. He said to his guest, "Do you realize what a devastating effect it will have on hospitals when people don't so readily seek medical care because they don't have coverage? Hospitals, like hotels, need beds to be filled or they go bankrupt." Obviously they are echoing the very American sensibility that business is the greatest good, so what is good for business is good. Heaven forbid that people might increase their odds of being healthy by being more discretionary in seeking medical services, or even staying away altogether.
It is pure propaganda that health solutions are in a pill, on a surgery table, or just around the cornerāif we would just fund more research. Doesn't the outrageous growth of medical expenditure in the absence of proportionate salubrious results speak to the failure of the system, not its success? Health care, by definition, should be moving people in the opposite direction and be self-eradicating. The fact that this is not happening proves that modern medicine is first and foremost a business.Ā³ Nothing is in place to curtail costs. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is the primary watchdog but its only charge is to ensure the safety and efficacy of drugs and devices. It gives no consideration in its approval process to the costs of therapy, nor are comparisons made to existing drugs or to non-drug alternatives. When something is so clearly amok, it's time to take a close look at the philosophical underpinnings. Modern medicine is based upon the materialistic assumption that we are a mere amalgam of data generated by parts and pieces that can be manipulated at will. But we are not a chemical soup held in by a membrane, a sort of test tube made of skin. I will discuss this in greater detail in the companion book, but the evidence clearly demonstrates that health is a holistic affair and can no more be reduced to a number on a lab test than happiness can be explained by the electromagnetic forces in brain cell chemicals. This flawed materialistic explanation of life in turn leads to the quick-fix, life-as-a-machine approach: If a chemical in the body is out of whack, take another chemical to neutralize it; if your gizzard is acting up, get a gizzardectomy; if the medicine you are taking is making you sick, take another medicine to counteract it; if eating fries and pop cause a burning in the gullet, take a pill. We are an instant-gratification society, and a favorite son of materialism and consumerismāmodern medicineāoffers up easy solutions.
āMaterialism is an intellectually simplistic philosophy and eliminates probing into people's lives to see where causes really lie. What could be simpler than to run a test, check a number, give a pill, and send a bill? But this is counter to the way the body operates. We are a self-healing organism, infinitely complex and finely tuned, not just an assemblage of pulleys, pipes, levers, valves, and proton pumps. Modern medicine's attempt to ignore the body's complexity and to force it into submission with drugs and mechanical alterations is about as smart as oysters.
The failure of the approach is most glaring in the face of the epidemic of chronic degenerative illnessesācancer, heart disease, arthritis, and so on. Yes, modern medicine is fantastic at crises such as anaphylactic shock or an operable tumor pressing on the heart. That is not disputed. Successes with such mechanical conditions, as opposed to metabolic and systemic failures, are to be expected. In contrast, the great degenerative disease killers today result from longstanding problems of lifestyle imbalance. They are not simple mechanical problems and are not solved by syringes, pills, or scalpels. The system is closed to change not only because of the torrent of dollars flowing into it, but because people who spend years in costly medical training don't figure anyone else has a right to speak with authority on the subject. So closed medical minds arrogantly puff themselves up like sails on a ship and march millions down the gangplank to their medical end. This is not to impugn the efforts of the many hard working health care workers. But intent does not erase result. Most doctors come to intuitively understand that disease is self-inflicted through improper lifestyle choices. Few, however, have the financial courage to tell people that they need to change their lives, not get another pill or have surgery.ā“ Such advice would just drive patients elsewhere where they will be told what they want to hear. Or the doctor might even be threatened with suit for offending a patient. A recent case in point is a New Hampshire doctor who was turned in to the Board of Medicine and the Attorney General for telling a patient she needed to lose weight.āµ As hard as doctors may try to do what is right, financial pressures and incentives are woven into the way they treat patients. There are bills to pay and the potential for a lavish lifestyle. Doctors also feel entitled. A long and costly education, long hours, lawsuits, malpractice insurance, and putting up with an endless procession of patients who will do nothing to help themselves surely merits more than average pay. More pay comes from doing more to patients. Conveniently, the medical standard of care (what doctors are taught to do to avoid liability) encourages more of almost everything: more lab tests, longer hospitalization, more diagnostics, more drugs, and more surgery. So, although in many cases the best advice to a patient is to go home and make life changes, doctors too often do that which is safe for their career and income. Defensive medicine (an escalation of services to avoid out of control malpractice litigation) just so happens to be what the patient wants anyway.ā¶
Although medical insurance is heralded as a solution, it is in large part the blame for the explosion in healthcare costs. The public sees insurance as a bottomless vat of money that promises cure. If patients were made to pay as they go, out of their own pockets, there would be more shopping and discernment. Facing crippling medical costs, they would decide to stay home with their chicken soup (a statistically good idea anyway). Moreover, if doctors faced the real-life financial circumstances of patients they would be forced to use judgment as well. The net result would be a lot less unnecessary medical care. Putting the responsibility for health on the individual where it belongs would mean more health and a lot less medical injury. One sure way to affect that result is decreasing the scope of insurance so that it covers primarily catastrophes, not increasing it so that people can run to the doctor every time they burp.
Since everything seems to move by the force of dollars, let's shift the rewards. The ancient Taoist doctors were paid only if the patient was well. If they became ill, payment was stopped and the doctor was considered ignorant.6 But that's too rational. There are not only too many money interests fighting tooth and claw to keep things exactly as they are, but it also does not fit the fable that disease is 'just one of those things' to which we may innocently fall victim. Why hold the doctor (or ourselves, more appropriately) accountable for an act of God? As philosophically flawed as modern medicine is, it is by and large an effect, not a cause. Medical commerce is driven by consumer demand. If the market were not there, the business of increased profit for increased health failure could not exist. If people would learn how to take care of themselves and take ownership of their own health, the medical sinkhole would shrivel and the tidal wave of chronic degenerative diseases would dry up to a trickle.ā· Don't wait for things to change. You change. Decide not to participate. Learn to take control and optimize health by giving your mind and body the lifestyle and food it was designed for. Money really has nothing to do with the solution to the problem. In fact, money can spell your demise by not only the unhealthy lifestyle of indulgence it permits, but by making it too easy to obtain the most and best that modern medicine has to offer. If you agree, disagree, have questions, or have a correction please let me know. Comment below or email me at [email protected]
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Introduction
1. We Can Agree 2. Possibility Thinking 3. The Solver Principles 4. Our Owner's Manual 5. We Live in A Unique Time 6. Being Health Smart 7. The Illusion of Youth Health 8. The Good Old Days 9. Timing Life 10. Exercise 11. Hormones and Steroids - A Two-Edged Sword 12. The Female Hormone Problem 13. Growing Older 14. Squaring the Curve 15. Healthy Dos and Don'ts 16. The Medical Profession 17. The Greatest Threat to Health 18. Don't Surrender to Medical Care 19. But We Live Longer Today 20. Dollars Don't Make Health 21. Disease Does Not Strike Us 22. Germs Don't Cause Disease We Do 23. From Where Does Healing Come 24. The Best Food 25. Food Ethics 26. Healthy Weight 27. Healthy Eating Ideas 28. First Things First 29. Hopelessness 30. Depression 31. Memories 32. Addiction 33. Blaming the Parents 34. Surviving Tragedy 35. Touch 36. Music as Healer 37. Humor 38. Pets as Life Savers 39. Pet Keeping - A Serious Responsibility 40. The Myth of 100 Complete Pet Foods 41. Feeding Pets as Nature Intended 42. Industry vs. Earth 43. Population 44. Modernity's Deception 45. Animal Rights 46. Biophilia 47. Respect for All Life 48. Doing Good With Business 49. The Global Economy 50. The Power of Money 51. Financial Affairs 52. Work as Friend 53. Government 54. The End of Civilization 55. Freedom Is Not Equality 56. Sex 57. Being in Love 58. Marriage - The Union of Opposites 59. Divorce 60. The Family Nest 61. Having Babies 62. Children 63. The Empty Nest 64. Experience 65. Education 66. Life Is Uncertain 67. Things Mound Up 68. Murphy's Law 69. Life's Predictability 70. Finding Home 71. Learn From History 72. Shaping the Future 73. The Other Line Always Moves Faster 74. Little Things Add Up 75. Growing Up 76. Alone 77. Hope 78. Paying the Success Price 79. Change A Wonderful Thing 80. Being the Best You Can Be 81. Do Something, Something Happens 82. Change the World 83. Growing Good People 84. Words 85. Genius 86. Listen and Learn 87. Mind Over Matter 88. Looking Good 89. Protecting Yourself 90. Self Sufficiency 91. Life Is Math 92. Ethics 93. Conscience 94. The Long View 95. Being Real 96. Change 97. End and Beginning Figures |
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