Ferdinand Demara

Ferdinand Demara

(Tom: The really important thing that determines a man’s productive capacity is, can he learn and can he accurately apply what he learns to produce the desired product.)

He had no medical degree. No surgical training. No license of any kind.

And yet, after half an hour with a textbook, he picked up a scalpel and saved the lives of sixteen wounded soldiers.

The wounded arrived just before nightfall in 1951, during the Korean War.

A small South Korean junk eased alongside the HMCS Cayuga, a Canadian destroyer operating off the Korean coast. Inside were guerrilla fighters from a failed commando raid. Some were torn open by shrapnel. One man had a bullet lodged dangerously close to his heart. Another had injuries so severe that amputation was the only chance of survival.

The crew turned instinctively to the ship’s surgeon, a calm, capable man serving under the name Joseph Cyr.

There was only one problem.

He wasn’t Joseph Cyr.

And he wasn’t a doctor.

The man wearing the surgeon’s uniform was Ferdinand Waldo Demara, an American with no medical training whatsoever. Months earlier, he had stolen the real Dr. Joseph Cyr’s identity and credentials and used them to enlist in the Royal Canadian Navy, which was urgently recruiting medical officers for wartime service.

Now his deception had reached its breaking point.

Demara understood the stakes immediately. If he confessed, the wounded men would almost certainly die before help could arrive. If he tried to operate, he could kill them himself.

He chose to operate.

He ordered the crew to prepare the patients for surgery and retreated to his cabin. There, he opened a medical textbook and began reading with ferocious concentration, focusing on wound extraction, chest surgery, and emergency amputation. His entire surgical education lasted about thirty minutes.

Then he walked into the operating room.

Throughout the night, Demara performed one operation after another. He removed shrapnel. He closed deep wounds. He amputated a crushed foot. He extracted a bullet from a man’s chest, working perilously close to the heart. He relied on anatomy diagrams, logic, nerve, and an extraordinary ability to absorb information quickly.

When morning came, every single patient was alive.

The crew believed they had witnessed something close to a miracle and began preparing a recommendation for a commendation. That decision would ultimately expose him.

Ferdinand Demara was no ordinary impostor.

Born in 1921 in Massachusetts, he grew up during the Great Depression, watching his family fall from comfort into hardship. As a teenager, he ran away to join a monastery. When that life no longer suited him, he reinvented himself again and again.

Over the years, Demara successfully passed himself off as a monk, a psychology professor, a prison warden, a lawyer, a cancer researcher, and an engineer. He possessed an exceptional memory, remarkable intelligence, and a keen understanding of institutional behavior. He learned how professionals spoke, how authority sounded, and how confidence discouraged scrutiny.

He lived by two rules: never volunteer unnecessary information, and project certainty at all times.

When Demara joined the Royal Canadian Navy under a stolen identity, no one questioned him. Canada needed doctors. The war accelerated paperwork. His credentials were accepted at face value.

Aboard the Cayuga, Demara improvised constantly. When sailors came to him with ailments, he would excuse himself, sprint to his cabin, consult textbooks, and return with a confident diagnosis. He treated many conditions with penicillin, which was widely used at the time. When the ship’s captain needed teeth extracted, Demara performed the procedure successfully, earning praise for his steady hand.

But it was the night of the guerrillas that sealed his legend.

Ironically, his success led to his exposure. Canadian newspapers praised “Dr. Joseph Cyr” for his heroism. One reader was the real Dr. Cyr’s mother, who knew her son was safely practicing medicine in New Brunswick. She contacted authorities. An investigation followed.

When confronted, Demara collapsed under the pressure. He secluded himself for days, sedated, before finally surrendering.

The Royal Canadian Navy faced embarrassment of its own making. Prosecuting Demara would highlight their failures, so they quietly discharged him, paid him in full, and deported him to the United States without charges.

In 1961, Hollywood dramatized his life in The Great Impostor, starring Tony Curtis. The fame ended Demara’s ability to disappear into new identities, but it also changed how people viewed him.

Years later, when Demara attended a reunion of the Cayuga crew, the sailors welcomed him warmly. They remembered him not as a fraud, but as the man who saved lives when no one else could.

Demara spent his final years as a legitimately ordained hospital chaplain in California. He died in 1982 at age sixty.

The question remains unsettled.

Was Ferdinand Demara a criminal, or was he a hero?

Was he reckless, or was he brilliant under pressure?

Do credentials define competence—or does action?

For sixteen wounded men on a ship in Korean waters, the answer was simple.

He showed up.

He acted.

And they lived.

The $134 Billion Betrayal: Inside Elon Musk’s Explosive Lawsuit With OpenAI

Elon Musk’s lawsuit against OpenAI and Microsoft has evolved into a high-stakes dispute over whether OpenAI stayed true to the mission it was founded on or quietly outgrew it while relying on that original promise.

Musk is seeking between $79 billion and $134 billion in damages, a figure derived from an expert valuation that treats his early funding and contributions as foundational to what OpenAI later became. While the number is enormous, the heart of the case is simpler: Musk argues he helped create and fund a nonprofit dedicated to AI for the public good, and that OpenAI later abandoned that commitment in a way that amounted to fraud.

According to Musk’s filings, his roughly $38 million in early funding was not just a donation but the financial backbone of OpenAI’s formative years, supplemented by recruiting help, strategic guidance, and credibility. His damages theory, prepared by financial economist C. Paul Wazzan, ties those early inputs to OpenAI’s current valuation of around $500 billion.

The claim is framed as disgorgement rather than repayment, with Musk arguing that the vast gains realized by OpenAI and Microsoft flowed from a nonprofit story that attracted support and trust, only to be discarded once the company reached scale, according to TechCrunch.

Finish reading: https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/134-billion-betrayal-inside-elon-musks-explosive-lawsuit-openai

HUNDREDS of studies now indicate COVID-19 “vaccines” are one of the LARGEST carcinogenic exposures in modern history.

Spike Protein Increases Cancers

They:

1. Increase your risk of 7 major cancers
2. Disrupt THOUSANDS of critical genes
3. Integrate into human genomes
4. Drive genome instability
5. Enable tumor immune escape
6. Suppress DNA repair mechanisms
7. Drive chronic inflammation
8. Cause immune dysregulation (?T-cells, ?type I IFN)
9. Disrupt microRNA networks controlling growth/apoptosis
10. Activate oncogenic signaling (MAPK, PI3K/AKT/mTOR)
11. Remodel the tumor microenvironment
12. Reactivate dormant cancers
13. Block innate immune sensing (TLR inhibition)
14. Produce aberrant proteins (frameshift errors)
15. Induce immune exhaustion
16. Promote IgG4 class switching
17. Contain plasmid DNA including SV40
18. Disrupt RAS signaling ? oxidative stress + proliferation
19. Damage the microbiome(loss of immune balance)
20. Increase treatment resistance

Video: https://x.com/NicHulscher/status/2012589278836978121?s=20

Beef Patties And Salad

Beef Patties

Ingredients:
Patties:

1 kg Beef mince
2 Eggs
250 g Butter
1 Potato
1 Onion
1 Carrot
1 Red Pepper
250 g Cream Cheese
Head of Garlic
Parsley
Cheddar cheese
Mozzarella Cheese
Black Pepper
Salt
Paprika

Salad:
Lettuce
Avocado
Yellow Capsicum
Red onion
Cannced corn

Sauce:
Yogurt
Honey
Lime vinegar
Lemon juice
Mustard
Black Pepper
Salt

Instructions:
Poor a cup of very hot water over minced meat
put meat on bench or into a large mixing bowl
make indentation in centre
Add the two eggs
Add 250 g Butter pieces
Peel and grate Potato
Peel and grate Onion
Peel and grate Carrot
Remove seeds and cube the red Capsicum
Finely chop Garlic
Wash, paper towel dry and finely chop Parsley
Add vegetables and greens to meat
Add cream cheese to meat
Grate Cheddar cheese and put into clean bowl
Grate Mozzarella cheese and put into same bowl
Rinse cheeses with water
Drain and add to meat and veggies
Season with salt, pepper and paprika to meat
Mix well
Flatten to 1.5 cm with potato masher
Form into patties
Put patties on lined tray
Make indentations with a spoon
Bake at 180 degrees C/256 degrees F for an hour

Cut lettuce leaves
Add yellow bell pepper cut into cubes
Cut cucumber into pieces
Remove pit from and peel Avocado
Chop into pieces
Peel and finely chop a red onion
Put veggies on bowl
Add canned corn

Mix the sauce ingredients in a bowl and pour over salad veggies.

Click to view the video: https://www.youtube.com/shorts/ZgLVA4sRaY0

Cabbage Croquettes

Cabbage Croquettes

Ingredients:
A whole cabbage
2 carrots
1 Onion
1 Zucchini
2 Eggs
Head of Garlic
Half cup Grated Cheese
Two tablespoons of flour
Coconut or Olive oil
Salt
Pepper
Oregano

Instructions:
Finely chop an onion
Brown in the oil
While it is browning…
Into a large frypan add 3 or 4 cm of water and bring to boil
Slice a whole cabbage into 2 cm slices
Place it in the boiling water and cover
Boil for 15 minutes
While it is boiling…
Grate two carrots
Add carrot to onion in pan
Grate a Zucchini
Add Zucchini to pan
Season with salt and black pepper
When the cabbage is done, drain and chop finely
Mix cabbage and sauteed vegetables
Add flour
Add grated cheese
Add crushed garlic
Add two eggs
Season with salt, pepper and oregano
Add a cm of oil to frypan and place on heat
While the oil is heating…
Mix the vegetables well
Shape into croquettes
When the oil is hot…
Cook the croquettes in oil on each side for 4 minutes.

Click to view the video:  https://www.youtube.com/shorts/ivn-hW6_d2o

First Duty – William Osler

First Duty William Osler

William Osler, often referred to as the father of modern medicine, believed in the importance of educating patients on prevention rather than simply treating symptoms. His famous quote, “One of the first duties of the physician is to educate the masses not to take medicine,” serves as a reminder that true health lies in prevention and lifestyle changes rather than relying on medication alone.

This perspective calls for a shift in how we view healthcare. Instead of seeking quick fixes for health problems, Osler advocated for a focus on building healthy habits through diet, exercise, and mental well-being. In today’s world, where prescription medication is often over-prescribed, we need to pay attention to preventative health measures to avoid long-term reliance on medication.

Osler’s words still resonate today, encouraging us to take charge of our health and make mindful choices that benefit our long-term well-being. Rather than seeing health as something that can be treated by doctors alone, we should view it as an ongoing journey where prevention and education are just as important as treatment.