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How The Covid Panic Exploited And Corrupted The Medical Profession

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It reads like a dystopian nov­el — coercive health care executives running patient care at the expense of thousands of lives, nurse advocates rescuing medically “kidnapped” hospital admittees, public schools rewarded millions of dollars for mandating child masking, and children serving as hosts for experimental vaccines.

In his latest book, What The Nurses Saw: An Investigation Into Systemic Medical Murders That Took Place in Hospitals During the COVID Panic and the Nurses Who Fought Back To Save Their Patients, Ken McCarthy documents real-world America during the earliest months of the Covid-19 outbreak. He sheds light on some of the most egregious and criminal acts committed in broad daylight in human history within our medical system. McCarthy argues widespread corruption of the news media, academia, and ultimately science has resulted in an extremely dysfunctional system that intrinsically places patients last.

McCarthy’s series of interviews with the unsung and often demonized health care heroes of the past few years — those who fought to save lives despite being threatened, accused, sued, and harassed — clarify the movement of funding and the ferocious, insatiable appetite of a system once designed to heal but now intent on hemorrhaging out conscientious employees.

Bateman: The title of your book is What the Nurses Saw. Tell me how you selected the nurses and health care professionals you did for this book. How did you determine which sources were trustworthy?

McCarthy: These are eyewitness accounts. All the people interviewed are veterans in their profession. Though they work in

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