Fauci – The COVID Kevorkian: Minions of Mengele

          

When one take’s the time to look behind the public personas of Fauci and Kevorkian you will discover – not surprisingly – they have all the character traits of Hitler’s Dr. Josef Mengele.  Mengele was famously named “Dr. Death” (as was Kevorkian) for his experiments without anesthesia on live concentration camp inmates.  Kevorkian proposed using death row inmates to experiment on if they voluntarily agreed to remain alive  during Kevorkian’s experiments.  Fauci, on the other hand, completely disregards voluminous contradicting medical evidence choosing instead to make America one big concentration camp to his Fuhrers’ policies.  His “remedies” have caused the unnecessary deaths of thousands and retarded development of tens of thousands of American children (see: Seeing Like a State: How Certain Schemes to Improve the Human Condition Have Failed by James C. Scott)

KEVORIAN:  Kevorkian publicly promoted a terminal patient’s right to die by physician-assisted suicide. Kevorkian said that he assisted at least 130 patients to that end. He was convicted of murder in 1999 and was often portrayed in the media with the name of “Dr. Death”.  In 1998, Kevorkian was arrested and tried for his direct role in a case of voluntary euthanasia on a man named Thomas Youk who suffered from Lou Gehrig’s disease, or ALS. He was convicted of second-degree murder and served 8 years of a 10-to-25-year prison sentence. 

In a 1959 journal article, he wrote: “I propose that a prisoner condemned to death by due process of law be allowed to submit to medical experimentation under complete anesthesia as a form of execution in lieu of conventional methods prescribed by law.  Senior doctors at the University of Michigan opposed his proposal and Kevorkian chose to leave the University rather than stop advocating his ideas. 

As a pathologist at Pontiac General Hospital, Kevorkian experimented with transfusing blood from corpses recently brought into the hospital and transferred it into the bodies of hospital staff members.

According to the Detroit Free Press, 60% of the patients who died with Kevorkian’s help were not terminally ill, and at least 13 had not complained of pain. The report further asserted Kevorkian’s counseling was too brief (with at least 19 patients dying less than 24 hours after first meeting Kevorkian) and lacked a psychiatric exam in at least 19 cases, 5 of which involved people with histories of depression, though Kevorkian was sometimes alerted that the patient was unhappy for reasons other than their medical condition. In 1992,  The report also stated that Kevorkian failed to refer at least 17 patients to a pain specialist after they complained of chronic pain and sometimes failed to obtain a complete medical record for his patients, with at least three autopsies of suicides Kevorkian had assisted with showing the person who committed suicide to have no physical sign of disease. Rebecca Badger, a patient of Kevorkian’s and a mentally troubled drug abuser, had been mistakenly diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. The report also stated that Janet Adkins, Kevorkian’s first euthanasia patient, had been chosen without Kevorkian ever speaking to her, only with her husband, and when Kevorkian first met Adkins two days before her assisted suicide he “made no real effort to discover whether Ms. Adkins wished to end her life,” as the Michigan Court of Appeals put it in a 1995 ruling upholding an order against Kevorkian’s activity. According to The Economist: “Studies of those who sought out Dr. Kevorkian suggest that though many had a worsening illness… it was not usually terminal. Autopsies showed five people had no disease at all… Little over a third were in pain. Some presumably suffered from no more than hypochondria or depression.”

In a 2010 interview with Sanjay Gupta, Kevorkian stated  “What difference does it make if someone is terminal? We are all terminal.” In his view, a patient had to be suffering but did not have to be terminally ill to be assisted in committing suicide.

In a journal article titled “The Last Fearsome Taboo: Medical Aspects of Planned Death”, Kevorkian detailed anesthetizing, experimenting on, and utilizing the organs of a live, disabled newborn as a token of “daring and highly imaginative research” that would be possible “beyond the constraints of traditional but outmoded, hopelessly inadequate, and essentially irrelevant ethical codes now sustained for the most part by vacuous sentimental reverence”. Mengele must be pre-orgasmic!

“Dr. Jack Kevorkian attended his 25th suicide early today, but in a new twist, the body was left in the back seat of a car in a doctors’ parking lot outside the emergency room of one of Michigan’s largest hospitals.” 

“What I find most satisfying is the prospect of making possible the performance of invaluable experiments or other beneficial medical acts under conditions that this first unpleasant step can help establish – in a word obitiatry (not dead yet).”

FAUCI: Feckless Fauci was one of the world’s most frequently-cited scientists across all scientific journals. Many physicians ask “How does he -as a supposed impartial scientist- have time to actually read the volumes of research contradicting his agenda? ”  He’s so busy seeking the limelight he has neither the inclination nor the backbone to contradict those keeping him in his spotlight and signing his paycheck.  

Fauci’s most notorious error was a 1983 paper suggesting “routine close contact, as within a family household,” might spread HIV.

“He shamelessly benefited from the AIDS hysteria when negotiating budgets with Congress.”

The common traits Kevorkian and Fauci share are:

1: Brilliant but isolated childhoods

2. A maniacal craving for public attention.

3. Megalomania.

3. An unwillingness to accept moral, legal or scientific standards regarding medical issues.

4. A heightened ability to self promote at the expense of staff in order to climb their respective career ladders.

Hitler got the idea for his genocidal Final Solution from the American eugenicist / pro-abortionist Margaret Sanger.  It’s just a small step from Kevorkian to Fauci to Auschwitz.    

SEE:  Seeing Like a State: How Certain Schemes to Improve the Human Condition Have Failed by James C. Scott)

 

 

 

About Mike

Former Vietnam Marine; Retired Green Beret Captain; Retired Immigration Inspector / CBP Officer; Author "10 Years on the Line: My War on the Border," and "Collectanea of Conservative Concepts, Vols 1-3";
This entry was posted in America and tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *