Harvesting Patients For Donor Organs

Dr_Keith_Scott-Mumby

I received this newsletter from Dr Keith Scott-Mumby (who wrote the best book in dieting I have ever read, Diet Wise, drop me a line if you want a copy) and I thought it so important a contradiction to what most people are misled into believing that I thought I should share it with you in its entirety. If you are already aware that you are a spiritual being this will come as no surprise. On the other hand, if the evidence presented assualts your sensibilities, remember that old saying, attributed to Mark Twain but unable to be verified, “It is easier to fool a person than to convince them they have been fooled.”

“Brain-death determination requires an arbitrary decision on when someone is dead enough. There will never be zero activity in the brain (at brain death).”

I’m sure some of my subscribers snicker a little at my idiocy when I say we are not a brain. We don’t even need a brain to be conscious and aware. We just need our brain to manage body activity and to communicate with our world.

I’ve mentioned in the past that Professor John Lorber (UK) had a series of several hundred patients who had virtually no brain to speak of. Yet nobody could tell! Their thoughts, memories and emotions were entirely normal. One had a doctorate, another was an accountant. This can’t happen if the brain is such a crucial organ as we are being told.

Well, here’s more compelling evidence that we are truly NOT A BRAIN. What about people who are pronounced “brain dead” and yet wake up? Many cases, such as Zack Dunlap from Oklahoma and Trenton McKinley from Alabama. Trenton woke up just one day before his organs were due to harvested.

He’s alive and well to this day. There are HUNDREDS of cases like these two. Do doctors step back and scientifically question the phenomenon they are observing, to figure out what’s to be learned?

No, of course not. To read their official responses to such cases, you might be persuaded that it was just a simple blunder. The case should not have been pronounced brain dead (they say).

“In virtually all those cases, brain-death determination was not done correctly,” says Robert M. Sade, MD, professor of surgery and director of the Institute of Human Values in Health Care at the Medical University of South Carolina in Charleston. “If you don’t go through the exact protocol for brain-death determination, you’re likely to have patients diagnosed as being dead by neurologic criteria who are, in fact, not brain dead.”

Unfortunately, his B*S* is a complete fabrication. It’s more “thought science” than fact, meaning “It must have been that way, so it was…”

This propaganda is reinforced by pronouncements like the American Academy of Neurology (AAN) committee of experts, after searching the literature, and finding no legitimate “reports of patients recovering brain function when the criteria for brain-death determination was used appropriately.”

Can you spot what’s wrong with that pronouncement? It’s easy! They didn’t search cases, or life, they just searched “the literature”. So unless somebody publishes the truth in a medical journal, they can go on saying there are no “legitimate cases”!

Even if there were legitimate cases, there is no way of knowing how many people recover from brain death because they are usually quickly removed from life support and “harvested” for their organs (follow the money!)

Differing Diagnoses of Brain Death

The high-profile case of Jahi McMath has caused some experts to question whether brain-dead patients are truly dead and move families to legally fight a loved one’s brain death diagnosis.

Jah McMath
Jahl McMath

In 2013, McMath was 13 when complications from a tonsillectomy led to cardiac arrest and an anoxic brain injury. A pediatric neurologist, a pediatric intensivist, and a pediatric neurologist from another institution declared her brain dead, a diagnosis her family did not accept.

Subsequently, two neurologists stated that McMath was not brain dead based on their interpretation of an EEG, an MRI, and an MRA done a year later and observation of video clips from 2014 to 2016 that appeared to show McMath following commands and communicating with finger movements.

So much for “expert” opinion. Listen to this baloney:

“We have high confidence that McMath’s initial diagnosis of brain death was correct,” says Thaddeus Mason Pope, JD, PhD, director of the Health Law Institute and professor of law, Mitchell Hamline School of Law in St Paul, Minnesota. “It’s never happened in human history that someone correctly diagnosed as brain dead is no longer dead.” Oh yeah?

The funny part of all this—that is NOT funny at all—is how the doctors justify their baloney and claim all is p-e-r-f-e-c-t. The system has no weaknesses. Stories are dismissed as unimportant exceptions to their agreed-upon truths.

But that’s really nonsense. HOW CAN THEY KNOW HOW MANY PATIENTS COULD POTENTIALLY REVIVE, if they are immediately taken off life support to harvest their organs? There is no way this phoney logic adds up.

Vested Interest

The thing that worries me is not so much the question of medical incompetence. Or not knowing what are the true boundaries are between life and death.

It’s the fact that patients are pronounced dead and then “harvested” for their organs. There’s BIG money in pronouncing someone brain dead at the earliest possible moment.

Making brain death criteria more rigorous would likely reduce the number of brain-dead organ donors, who are the primary source of transplantable organs, including all hearts. Sade, who previously ran South Carolina’s organ procurement program, stirs the brain death controversy in the opposite direction. He is advocating for potential organ donors who are nearly dead to have their organs harvested, which would make formal brain death determination unnecessary.

In other words: “Kill ‘em. They are likely to die anyway.”

“Once a potential organ donor’s death is imminent, I would like for us to be able to remove his organs even though he is still breathing, and his heart is beating,” Sade says. Waiting until brain-injured patients progress to brain death results in physiologic abnormalities and organ damage from neurologic and hormonal changes.

My God, I hope he never runs for president (just a coincidence he shares the name of the infamous Marquis de Sade, who gave us the word sadism?)

“Any organ donor would want the organs to be in the best possible condition and as many organs used as possible for transplantation.” Sade estimates that as many as 6684 additional organs could be retrieved from brain-injured organ donors who were imminently dead rather than brain dead. “We could wipe out the waiting list for all organs for two or three years,” he says.

How can he define donor death as imminent, when people wake up from a coma all the time… sometimes after decades in a vegetative state? He can’t. The whole point of these dramatic brain-dead-but-not-dead cases is they show us clearly that DOCTORS KNOW NOTHING. It’s no better than guesswork.

The Honest View

Professor emeritus James L. Bernat, MD, is one brain death expert who believes the current neurologic tests leave too much room for error, and, consequently, patients are being declared brain dead who aren’t. He’s not addressing the issue of doctors dishonestly pronouncing someone dead, which I believe happens a lot more than anyone dares think.

But Bernat’s point of view is interesting. “There are a group of people who strongly believe that although McMath fulfilled the pediatric brain death criteria, she wasn’t really brain dead because she retained certain brain functions,” he says. Bernat is an a former chair of the AAN’s Ethics, Law, and Humanities Committee.

“If she wasn’t really brain dead, which I believe to be the case, then it suggests that our tests are not fully accurate. Some of us have argued in response to McMath and other cases that have been published that we need to tighten up the tests to eliminate cases like this getting through in the future.”

Ever since “irreversible loss of all clinical brain function” was proposed 50 years ago (by a committee at Harvard University), there has been heated argument about the issue. “The debated issues were that brain death isn’t the same thing as death, that it is a contrived concept for the purposes of organ donation, that is outdated and antiquated…” Bernat says. “But until recently, those claims haven’t generated much traction.”

So-called brain death fulfills the medical and legal criteria of death in the United States and in about 100 other countries today. Every state in the United States has adopted the Uniform Determination of Death Act (UDDA), which defines death as the “irreversible cessation of circulatory and respiratory functions” or the “irreversible cessation of all functions of the entire brain, including the brain stem.”

Dead Enough?

Again, we are back to the point “irreversible”. How could they possibly know, when it keeps happening that a patient wakes up? How dead is dead?

Even Sade concedes this much: “The Uniform Determination of Death Act is a legal fiction because it requires irreversible loss of function,” Sade says. “There are some patients who meet all the clinical criteria for brain death, and yet they still have cells in their brain that are neurologically active. They can survive for relatively long periods of time, although these cases are very infrequent…”

Ultimately, however, “brain-death determination requires an arbitrary decision on when someone is dead enough,” Thaddeus Pope says. “There will never be zero activity in the brain (at brain death). At some point, you have to make a value judgment of what is meaningful brain activity. There is no objective truth on where to draw that line.”

So, yet again, we are back to my first point. The brain has little to do with being alive! If a “dead” brain can causes an unconscious patient to blink, waggle a finger, or indeed wake up altogether from a long and deep slumber, isn’t there something more wonderful to be learned about life, consciousness and Being, that maybe is being missed here?

I think so.

Here’s a YouTube video that describes much more than I have room for here:

can consciousness extend past death? Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WnoIf2NwaRY

Pray it doesn’t happen to you or your family. Dying isn’t that big a deal—it happens all the time. But to be harvested for profit by greedy and dishonest doctors is an obscenity we can all do without.

SOURCE: Anita Slomski. Another ‘Brain Dead’ Patient Wakes Up Just in Time – Medscape – Oct 16, 2018

To Your Health,

Prof. Keith Scott-Mumby
The Official Alternative Doctor

SOURCE: Anita Slomski. Another ‘Brain Dead’ Patient Wakes Up Just in Time – Medscape – Oct 16, 2018

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WnoIf2NwaRY

Those Who Say It Can’t Be Done

Those Who Say It Can't Be Done

It is good to talk to all sorts of people. From the successful ones you can learn what worked. If you listen carefully, from the non-successful ones you can learn what barriered their progress.

Inclusion and Community Standards

Belgian Health Minister

On 4 December at 13:26 Jason Christoff posted

I asked a government official two questions last week because I know he always gives me the straight truth. I asked, “what is INCLUSION?” He said, “Inclusion is when the 4th place person in a race is given the gold medal and a blind man is permitted to drive a bus down a busy street because the society is now being designed to make everyone happy, so they’ll never rebel or resist the increasing tyranny… …and much more tyranny is coming just around the corner of course. We need to make everyone high, drunk, sedated, brain damaged or extremely disconnected from the truth in one way or another in order to keep this master/slave relationship rolling down the track. What ever you want, we’ll give it to you. You want to identify as a woman one day and a pineapple the next, you got it. You want to come in last place and get the gold medal, no problem. You just can’t be free. That’s the only catch”

I also asked, “what are COMMUNITY STANDARDS?” and he said, “Community standards refers to the standard government lies, which all government employees (and most of the public) are paid to repeat and believe in. If you tell the truth or even smell like you may know the truth, that’s against our “community standards” and you’ll be punished and pushed out. You can tell, believe in and live out any lie you want… …you just can’t be free. You want to believe wine is healthy, you got it. You want to believe we released marijuana to the public because the public’s in control, you got it. You want to believe we took over the poppy fields in Afghanistan because of 9/11…..you got it. You just can’t be free and you can’t tell the truth either. It’s all about using government channels to make the lies the only zone where you won’t be attacked. After that it’s like moths to a flame. If you make the lies cozy and the truth painful, everyone swallows the lies and goes home.”

Just in case some people weren’t aware of the slavery based word magic now destroying our society. Up is down. Black is white. Lies are truth. Debt is wealth. Fat is thin. Insane is sanity. It’s all about cherry picking what ever bullshit suit you want to wear that day because that’s the only freedom you get, the freedom to lie yourself into an illusionary state of contentment.

Tom’s take:

We are always free to create any reality we want – in our own universe. The universe that exists when we close our eyes and imagine.

Insanity is when we expect the universe of agreement between ourselves and others, the physical universe, to operate the same as our own universe, It doesn’t. Never has and never will.

Of course everything we create in the physical universe we first imagine in our own universe. But to say abracadabra and expect the creations we mock up in our own universe to appear in the physical universe without any further effort on our part is a bit above my capacity, and I suspect yours too. We have to perform physical universe actions to make it happen.

My forwarding this post is one physical universe action I am taking to communicate my reality to you so we can see some semblance of sanity restored to the social contract.

People are free to fantacize about whatever they like in their own universe but let’s stop saying that fantasy is reality. That is confusion and it is very down scale.

Vote Them Out

Vote Them Out

I could not agree more with this post! For the last 100 years we have been sold down the river by successive liberal and labor governments and it’s high time we as a populace woke up to the insanity of swapping between those two horse each election race.

We need to ditch the two major parties and start electing representatives who stand for we the people.

Representatives more loyal to their constituents than a party or their political donors.

We need people in parliament who understand the present system delivers the present problems and that to prevent the problems we need to alter the system. The system isn’t broken, it is working as designed! We need a new system! One where corporations with the money to make large political donations do not dictate political, economic and environemental decisions.

I disagree with the violence of the French protestors. Violence is not a workable or sustainable solution. I do agree that we the people need to take a more active role in determining the outcome of decisions made in parliament as we as individuals and as a country are suffering from the way those decisions are being made at present.

“What Would It Take?”

As I was walking along this morning I got to thinking about how to improve various conditions in life. The thought occured to me that one of the most valuable and powerful four word questions in the English language is, “What would it take?”

For several reasons. First, it focuses on the product, what it is you want to accomplish. Second, it demands that one focus not on any old thing you can do, but rather what doingnesses and sub-products will actually bring about the desired result.

So if you are up for some improvement in your life, this week make a list of non-optimum conditions in your job, family, marriage, health, friendships, social groups or society at large that you would like to improve or improvements you would like to see come to pass.

Then ask, “What would it take?” to fix the non-optimum condition or see the improvement occur. May be that will bring to light one or more solutions. Maybe not.

If not, the undercut might be, “What action can I undertake that will start to improve the condition?”

And then slot that action into your schedule for the coming week.

Rarely do major changes happen instantly. Most people are put off when they confront the effort required to accomplish a large goal. And that part of the mind that is set up to trip you up will almost certainly be ready to offer up any number of reasons why you cannot accomplish your goal. So don’t be deterred by the magnitude of the effort involved and all the reasons that will come to you about why you cannot do it. Just keep putting it there that you will accomplish your target.

I read that it takes 10,000 hours of practice to become world class at most things. Sports, playing a musical instrument, painting etc. Sounds like a lot when you say it like that. But many people spend two hours a night chilling out. Probably not most of the people I know, but many do.

Put that two hours a night into a project of your passion and that’s 730 hours a year. 15 years of spare time and you could be world class at a skill of your passion.

Probably most people cannot confront a 15 year plan. But you could confront two hours tomorrow night. And with that success under the belt you could probably confront doing the same the next night. And most things you want to improve won’t take 10,000 hours!

I am told if you do something for 30 days you’ve established a habit that is harder to break than keep.

So this is my “end of year” motivational talk to you to decide how you are going to improve some aspect of your life and not be deterred from implementing those actions that will lead to your success.

So this is a toast from me to you, “To your unbridled success!”

No Such Thing As Bad Weather!

No Such Thing As Bad Weather!

J Blakemore, the guy who posted this on Billy’s birthday wrote: Hands down one of the nicest celebrities I have ever met in my life. I was a background actor for five years and encountered hundreds of actors from A to Z list, but when I was working “House” Billy Connolly came to our craft services table (not his own trailer), hung out with us between takes, traded jokes, was genuinely thrilled and surprised to know that one of my favorite movies is “Water” and posed for pics with me and a Kiwi buddy as they both sported their tribal tats… …when you meet someone that cool you damned well need to let them know they are special. And Billy IS special as hell.