British physician Walter Hadwen’s medical career spanned the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The outspoken critic of both the theory and the practice of vaccination was arrested nine times for refusing to vaccinate his own children. Later, he was charged with manslaughter because he refused to participate in the fashionable practice of killing people with toxic smallpox and diphtheria vaccines. Hadwen had no respect for his colleagues who refused to stand up to the tyrannical vaccine culture of the time. The eloquent public speaker stated in 1925,
It is the great commercial manufacturing firms who are providing the brains for the medical man of today. [Applause and laughter.] We are deluged with circulars of ready-made medicines for every ailment under the sun. There never was a day when a medical man had less need for the use of his brains than he has at the present time. The commercial firms do all the thinking for him. [Hear, hear.] With a pocket syringe and a case of concentrated tabloids he can go forth a veritable medical Don Quixote to do battle with every imaginary foe. [Laughter.]45
The US has its own history of jailing vaccine informed medical professionals including naturopathic doctor and chiropractor, Herbert M. Shelton, in the 1940s.46 Shelton’s victimization by an abusive system led him to conclude, “Medical science is a form of delusional madness from which few medical men ever recover. Backed by commercialism, this madness runs roughshod over the life and health of the people.”47
Medical journalist Larry Husten writes of the problem of “eminence-based medicine” and “the culture of medicine, which rewards the hubris of eminence and actively punishes or offers subtle disincentives to anyone who question[s] this process.” According to Husten,
Medical training is disturbingly similar to military training, where immediate and unreflecting obedience is the goal. Both basic training and residency are designed to break down the mindset and instincts of a young person in order to mold them to the needs of the profession. In both, the submission to authority is a central tenet.48
The need to submit is so extreme that numerous healthcare professionals have been known to guard the secret of senior colleagues who commit medical atrocities including the routine performance of unnecessary and dangerous surgeries and sexual abuse of patients.49 If the culture of medicine sanctions acts such as these, one must ask the question: who is more sick, doctors or their patients?
45. “Dare Doctor’s Think?” Verbatim Report of the Great Meeting held at Queen’s Hall, London, Fri, Feb. 6, 1925, In connection with the Rex versus Hadwen manslaughter charge, http://soilandhealth.org/wp-content/uploads/02/0201hyglibcat/020119hadwin/020119hadwin.daredocsthink.html.
46. Victoria BidWell, “Timeline for the Life & Hard Times of Dr. Shelton,” http://soilandhealth.org/wp-content/uploads/02/0201hyglibcat/shelton.bio.bidwell.htm.
47. Eleanor McBean, The Poisoned Needle: Suppressed Facts About Vaccination, 1957, http://www.whale.to/a/mcbean.html#CHAPTER 9: MEDICAL INTERFERENCE.
48-49. Larry Husten, “The Big Dirty Secret Every Doctor Knows,” MedPageToday, August 2, 2016, http://www.medpagetoday.com/Cardiology/CardioBrief/59481.
from the book Jabbed
by Brett Wilcox
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