Quote:A Chinese military surgeon had eight Chinese citizens killed to supply a single foreign patient with a new kidney ...
Ognir: thanks for posting this article.
The travesty of organ harvesting is definitely "under the radar".
It reminds me of several incidents shared with me over the last few years.
An acquaintance of a friend of mine was on business in Mexico City. He was snatched off the street, and was apparently knocked unconscious. That was all he remembered.
He woke up in a run-down hotel. His body felt horrible. At some point he realized that he had stitches in his back.
He was missing a kidney.
Another friend of mine was told by doctors that she needed a partial hysterectomy. All her friends advised getting a second opinion (she ignored their advice).
She scheduled the operation because she was fearful. The surgeons ended up doing a total hysterectomy, and ... removed one of her kidneys.
The surgeons claimed that they were able to determine, during the operation, that the kidney was cancerous and that it was better to remove it than have to do a second invasive surgery.
Of course, the fine print on the surgical waiver that she had signed before she was administered anaesthesia allowed the doctors to use their "discretion" while she was "under". She avoided litigation, because it would have been too expensive.
Think a moment about where the kidneys are in relation to the female sex organs. How did the surgeons determine that one kidney was cancerous?
Just my opinion, I believe she was harvested.
U.S. Marine General Smedley Butler stated "War is a racket."
Perhaps, also, (most, but not all) surgeries and medical interventions are a racket.
Years ago, I knew a married lady who lived in a nearby apartment complex. She had served in Gulf War One, the "Desert Storm". She came back from "Desert Storm" with some very debilitating variety of "Gulf War Syndrome".
She became bed ridden with constant fatigue, and no matter how much she ate, she kept losing weight till she was "skin and bones".
The Veterans Administration hospital she was assigned to was useless in terms of treating her, and the doctors generally did not recognize (at that time) "Gulf War Syndrome".
She contacted a general in the armed services who was a family friend and shared her frustration at what was happening to her.
The general advised her to visit a particular clinic in Texas, and
wrote a letter of introduction for her.
She traveled to Texas to the clinic. The clinic doctors told her that there was a priority list and that she had to wait until there was a "slot" available for her. That's when she discovered that the patients at this particular clinic were all very high-level brass in the armed services and the Pentagon. She was the only patient who was not a high-level officer.
Three weeks a later, a "slot" became available because of a patient "no show". The clinic gave her some unknown injections.
And what is more interesting, they apparently used laser light therapy, ozone therapy and some form of electronic therapy on her body. Of course, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration bans laser light therapy and most ozone therapies for use on human beings.
She was rapidly cured at this clinic. A clinic for high level brass, but
not for the average soldier.
It reminds me of the huge (twentieth century) monetary investment by John D. Rockefeller and the Royal Family of England into the establishment of modern allopathic medicine and the establishment of the modern allopathic pharmaceutical cartels.
But wait!
John D. Rockefeller, and the Royal Family of England didn't partake of allopathic physicians and allopathic pharmaceuticals.
They used homeopathic physicians and homeopathic remedies for their personal healing.
Go figure.
Are there healing modalities for the elite, but not for "the rest of us"?
Are those healing modalities
banned for "the rest of us"?
But not for the elite ...
Thanks again, Ognir, for posting this very informative article.
I suspect that these practices are world wide, not just in China.