StillmrShill

2.9K posts

StillmrShill

StillmrShill

@ShillStillmr

Katılım Nisan 2019
180 Takip Edilen90 Takipçiler
StillmrShill
StillmrShill@ShillStillmr·
@sbzomer This is AI garbage for engagement. Same thing was posted with a helicopter
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Ömerr
Ömerr@sbzomer·
Bir milyarderin emekli olmuş uçaktan yaptırdığı sığınağa bakın
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Wall Street Apes
Wall Street Apes@WallStreetApes·
American foods are cleverly changing their names because they no longer qualify as that legal food - Pringles used to be potato chips, now they’re labeled as “potato crisps” per FDA rules - McDonald’s Shakes are now called “shakes” (not legally milkshakes in some states) - Klondike Bar is no longer a chocolate shell, it’s a Chocolatey shell (not real chocolate) - Dairy Queen: All items are “treats” (no “ice cream” on the menu) - Oreo changed the spelling to “creme” (alternative spelling, not real cream) - Tyson changed spelling to “Wyngz” (It’s a processed chicken labeling trick) - Costco Blueberry Bagels labels as Imitation blueberry bagels (no actual blueberries) - Pearl Milling Company Syrup (formerly Aunt Jemima) Now ‘Original syrup’ not maple syrup. The first ingredients is corn syrup Our food is a science experiment Make America Healthy Again
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StillmrShill
StillmrShill@ShillStillmr·
@360_trader Bro. You already had a 6 pack. Why on earth would you ever run a glp anything
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360Trader
360Trader@360_trader·
6 weeks terzepatide
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Hans Amato
Hans Amato@HansAmato·
The most fucked up thing about American food is that you have to be a paranoid lunatic just to feed yourself something that won't kill you in 30 years. You're paying $400 a month at Whole Foods to avoid $200,000 in medical bills the food industry will hand you at 60. The default snack is a chemical no European country lets in. The default cooking oil was invented in 1911 in a soap factory by Procter and Gamble. The default protein bar is sugar wrapped in marketing. The default "healthy" yogurt has more sugar than ice cream. The default breakfast cereal was invented by a guy who wanted to make people less horny. That's not a joke btw. John Harvey Kellogg literally believed corn flakes would reduce masturbation. The cereal aisle is downstream of his crusade. You have to FIGHT to find real bread. FIGHT to find a chicken that wasn't raised in a steroid bath. FIGHT to find olive oil that hasn't been cut with canola in a warehouse in Spain. FIGHT to find a restaurant that doesn't cook everything in soybean oil. FIGHT to read every label like it's evidence at a murder trial. Your great-grandfather ate what was on his farm and he lived to 89. You eat 87 ingredients you can't pronounce per meal and you'll be on a statin at 52. Somehow this is "progress." The American food industry is a $1.5 trillion machine and the medical industry is a $4.5 trillion machine. Different shareholders, same business model: make you sick, then sell you the management. Doritos in your kid's lunchbox. Lipitor in his lunchbox 30 years later. Same parent companies sometimes. PepsiCo owns Quaker. Quaker pushed oatmeal as "heart healthy" while loading it with sugar. Mondelez owns Cadbury, Oreo, Ritz, Triscuit, Wheat Thins. Kraft Heinz owns Kraft Mac and Cheese, Velveeta, Capri Sun, Lunchables. The 7 companies that make 87% of what's on a typical American grocery shelf all have pharma stock holdings 2 to 3 layers deep. The grocery walkthrough that actually keeps you alive: > Outer aisles only. Produce, meat, dairy, eggs. Inner aisles are 90% chemistry experiments. > Meat: pasture-raised, grass-fed, no antibiotics. Costco has decent options. Local farmers are better. Skip "natural" labels (means nothing). > Eggs: pasture-raised, NOT cage-free (means nothing), NOT free-range (means almost nothing). Vital Farms is the easiest find. > Butter: Kerrygold or any grass-fed brand. The yellow color is beta-carotene from grass. Pale butter = grain fed. > Olive oil: California Olive Ranch, Kirkland's California, or single-estate Italian. Most "Italian" olive oil at Costco is Spanish-Tunisian blends cut with sunflower oil. Litigation pending. > Bread: sourdough from a local bakery or Ezekiel-style sprouted. Avoid anything with "vegetable oil" or "soybean oil" in the ingredients. What to delete from the cart entirely: > Anything in a bag that didn't exist in 1950 (chips, crackers, cereal in a box, pre-mixed dressings) > Vegetable oil, canola, soybean, corn, sunflower, safflower > Anything with HFCS, "natural flavors," carrageenan, soy lecithin, BHT, BHA > Sweetened yogurt (buy plain, sweeten with honey or fruit) > Pre-packaged "healthy" snacks (granola bars, RX bars, protein cookies) The 4-step kitchen audit that actually works: > Cook 6 nights a week. No restaurants on weeknights. The exposure compounds when families eat out 4 times a week. > Buy meat from one farmer for the year. Costs the same per pound, eat better cuts. > Eggs and rice are superfoods. Stop chasing trendy ones. The basics still print. > Skip protein bars. A boiled egg + an apple beats every $4 bar on the shelf and costs $0.80. The system is engineered to keep you a customer. Opt out. DM me "REPORT" for the custom health report here's what you get: - full symptom and history mapping specific to you - the most likely biological root causes behind what you're feeling - exact labs to order and how to read the results yourself - a prioritized protocol: what to fix, in what order, built around your body not a generic PDF. not a supplement list. a personalized breakdown of what's actually wrong and how to fix it the report your doctor would give you if he had 4 hours instead of 13 minutes
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StillmrShill
StillmrShill@ShillStillmr·
@ajisafeolumuyi2 Not a single fucking house from 100 years ago was built with these in America. Account based in........ Niger ia 🙄
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ajisafeolumuyiwa
ajisafeolumuyiwa@ajisafeolumuyi2·
The reason why many American wooden houses last more than 100 years.
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StillmrShill
StillmrShill@ShillStillmr·
@smithhmesteadms @AlpacaAurelius If I ever get cancer I'll be going to Houston for MD Anderson. We had a family friend get kidney cancer. Biloxi Dr's removed the kidney. A few years later it came back n the other kidney. MD Anderson looked at his prior stuff and said they could've saved the kidney. He died 2024
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StillmrShill
StillmrShill@ShillStillmr·
@smithhmesteadms @AlpacaAurelius Agreed. Live in Biloxi. For basic physicians you're ok but any time we have needed specialty care for us or our kids we ALWAYS travel to Louisiana and go to Oschner. Been fucked to many times by "specialist" in MS.
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Carnivore Aurelius ©🥩 ☀️🦙
americans in the southeast of the US have a 20 year shorter life expectancy than those elsewhere insane difference why?
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StillmrShill
StillmrShill@ShillStillmr·
@WallStreetApes I literally had a black server refuse to let black people sit in her section 😂😂😂
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Wall Street Apes
Wall Street Apes@WallStreetApes·
American server says there is a big difference between how White customers treat them when they make mistakes vs how Black customers treat them - “This is how white people are when you make a mistake in a restaurant, ‘oh, no biggie, no problem.’ And they still tip like $10, $12” - “Black people when you make a mistake. ‘Mm yeah, I need to speak to your manager. I need to speak to your manager. I need you to comp my entire meal, and I'm gonna write a review to corporate and tell them how terrible this establishment is, and we're not tipping. You get a better job.’” She also fingers black customers give her a very bad attitude compared to white customers This post had over 51k likes and over 1000 comments so I read through the comments Every top comment were servers saying they experience this exact same thing
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Gary Brecka
Gary Brecka@thegarybrecka·
The MTHFR gene mutation affects an estimated 40–60% of the population. Here's why that matters: if you carry it, your body struggles to convert folic acid into its active, usable form, methylfolate. The result? Poor methylation. Which drives depression, anxiety, fatigue, cardiovascular risk, and even fertility issues. The fix isn't complicated: swap synthetic folic acid for methylfolate. But first, get tested. Your genes are not your destiny, they're your roadmap.
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StillmrShill
StillmrShill@ShillStillmr·
@DividendMil You've obviously never built anything like a deck, barn or house before.
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DividendMillennial
DividendMillennial@DividendMil·
I’m 42 years old and I am yet to ever use the Pythagorean theory in a real life setting… Another reason why financial education should be taught in schools instead of trigonometry
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Justa Dude
Justa Dude@JustaDude2i·
An 81 year old homeowner in Texas fired her weapon after two teens, ages 15 and 16, allegedly forced their way into her home late at night. Police reported clear signs of forced entry, and one teen died at the scene while the other later died at the hospital. Days later, the families filed a civil lawsuit seeking $1 million, claiming excessive force. The case has sparked intense debate over self defense rights, homeowner protection, and the legal limits of using deadly force during a break in.
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Sama Hoole
Sama Hoole@SamaHoole·
The year is 1950. Your doctor lights a cigarette and tells you smoking is fine. He read it in a study. He is telling the truth about having read it. He does not know, or is not saying, that the study was funded by the tobacco industry. The year is 1958. Your doctor tells you to eat less fat. The evidence is contested. The contestation is not in the public messaging. The food industry has been helpful in clarifying which findings deserve attention. Some researchers who published contradictory data have been quietly defunded. Ancel Keys is on the cover of Time magazine. The year is 1962. Your doctor prescribes thalidomide to your pregnant wife for morning sickness. It has been approved. The FDA gave it the green light in Europe. Twelve thousand children will be born with severe limb malformations before anyone in an official capacity acknowledges the problem. The families are told the drug was safe. The drug was approved. Both of these things remain true. The year is 1972. Your doctor prescribes Valium. Britain is in the grip of a benzodiazepine wave that will last two decades. The dependency risk is known internally. It is not shared. Your doctor is not lying to you. He was not told either. The year is 1999. Your doctor prescribes Vioxx for your arthritis. It is newer than ibuprofen, well-tolerated, and Merck has a study showing it works. Merck also has internal data suggesting it roughly doubles the risk of heart attack. This data will not reach your doctor for four more years. Fifty thousand people are estimated to have died in the interim. Merck eventually settles for 4.85 billion dollars. No criminal charges are brought. The year is 2002. Your doctor prescribes OxyContin. Purdue Pharma trained its sales representatives to tell doctors the addiction risk was less than one percent. That figure came from a letter, not a study. The letter was about patients with terminal cancer on short-term doses in hospital settings. Your doctor is a GP with a patient who has a bad back. Nobody draws a distinction. Nobody is required to. The year is 2008. Your doctor checks your cholesterol. Your LDL is elevated. You are prescribed a statin. Nobody mentions that the number needed to treat for primary prevention is approximately 250. Nobody mentions that the muscle deterioration you'll notice over the next two years is listed as a rare side effect rather than a documented pattern affecting a meaningful percentage of patients. The trial that informed the prescription was funded by the manufacturer. Now it is today. Your doctor has new guidelines. New studies. New consensus. He is confident. He has always been confident. The confidence has never been the problem. The confidence is, in fact, precisely the problem.
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PeachProof
PeachProof@PeachProof23·
This might be the most legendary retirement project I’ve ever seen. 🚁🛠️ ​After a lifetime in the cockpit, this pilot found out his original training helicopter was headed for the scrap yard. Instead of letting it be shredded, he bought it, hauled it to the countryside, and did something absolutely wild. ​He buried it. But this wasn't just a burial—it was an engineering masterpiece: ​They dug a custom trench and lowered the entire fuselage underground. ​Built a stunning, modern A-frame cabin directly over the site. ​Transformed the interior into a high-tech, fully functional bunker. ​The craziest part? The cockpit has been converted into a pro-level flight simulator using the original controls. He can literally "fly" his favorite bird while 10 feet underground. ​This is a masterclass in recycling and preserving a legacy. Imagine walking into someone’s living room, opening a floor hatch, and descending into a piece of aviation history. ​Is this the ultimate "Man Cave" or just the smartest way to prep for the future?
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StillmrShill
StillmrShill@ShillStillmr·
@asuraaxiuluo @EricLDaugh LMFAO. In boxing they have what's called a punchers chance. Meaning that even an untrained fighter can land 1 lucky punch. They shot down 1 jet. The USA destroyed their entire navy, airforce and 90% of infastructure. You look fucking retarded. Get back in the kitchen.
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🇹🇼Tokkibani托奇邦妮🇹🇼
@EricLDaugh repeat that 1000x maybe it is true.. those primitive iranians shot down your state of the art aircraft remember? and you guys had to send in tonnes of stuffs and people in to get the guy out. lol.. who got their ass kicked?
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Eric Daugherty
Eric Daugherty@EricLDaugh·
🚨 IT'S OFFICIAL: Iran just got EMBARRASSED on the world stage, they were BLUFFING all this time and even some of our own Fake News FELL for it "China just watched billions of infrastructure go up in smoke and Russia watched all the defenses that they sold not even work once!" Now Iran has a QUARTER TRILLION dollar rebuild "We sailed two destroyers straight up the gap under zero enemy fire. NATO navies could have joined in, they didn't!" "Remember all the talk about Iranians collecting TOLLS? More BLUFFING. Apparently they weren't able to collect a single toll." "They couldn't pull off the processing because they have no banking, internet, or comms! It was just a couple of Iranian sailors sitting on a dock with their hands out." 🤣 "The Iranians strapped for cash, not just to pay for their salaries, but it's gonna cost them a quarter trillion to rebuild."
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Siaxares 🇮🇷 سیاکسارِس
I'm telling you this as an Iranian inside Iran right now: What the people of Iran want above all is the removal of this regime. The method matters far less than the end result. It could be military action, a slow Gorbachev-style implosion, or internal crumbling by the people if we're finally given the chance. We're not in a position to be picky anymore. Too many have died — the vast majority at the hands of the regime. Even the Minab school massacre is now proven: the IRGC deliberately used the school as a human shield for their operations. These deaths cannot be in vain. Their sacrifices demand the toppling of this evil regime so their souls can rest and justice is served. We've seen too much death, suffering, and abuse to give up now. @realDonaldTrump and @netanyahu — if you can help deliver the end of this nightmare, history will thank you. Do not forget us. Be our voice. Help us throw the Islamic Regime into the wastebin of history, and half the world's problems will vanish with it. #IranMassacre#IranRevolution2026
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AshleY
AshleY@Aku_700·
Louisiana pedophil*le GETS 50 YEARS IN PRISON AND HIS TESTICLES RIPPED OFF 54-year-old Glenn Sullivan Sr. from Louisiana pleaded guilty to raping a 14-year-old girl multiple times, getting her pregnant. As part of the plea deal, he chose surgical castration instead of chemical castration. This is reportedly the first time physical castration has been ordered in the area for this kind of crime. The judge made it clear: this sick predator will never hurt another child again.
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Dear Son.
Dear Son.@DearS_o_n·
Name a huge scam that has been normalised?
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StillmrShill
StillmrShill@ShillStillmr·
@jwhaifa Of all the things that never happened, this never happened the most. Also your shitty photoshop picture is abysmal.
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j wall ✡
j wall ✡@jwhaifa·
My daughter got detention for defending her late Marine father — but when FOUR MEN IN UNIFORM walked into the school the next day, the entire building went silent. "Mrs. Harrison, you have to understand: Grace’s behavior was completely UNACCEPTABLE. We respect your husband’s service to this country, but..." her teacher said. My 14-year-old daughter sat beside me, her eyes glassy. The day before, one of her classmates had made a joke about Grace not having a father. He was a Marine. Grace was only three when we lost him. So when that girl laughed and said, "Maybe your dad just didn’t want to come back," something inside Grace snapped. She shot to her feet so fast that her chair slammed to the floor. Through tears, she shouted, "My dad was a HERO. Don’t you ever talk about him like that again!" She was the one who got detention. She barely said a word the whole way home. That night, I found her sitting on the floor in my husband’s old sweatshirt. "I’m sorry I got in trouble," she whispered. "I just couldn’t let her say that about him." My heart cracked wide open. The next morning, the school called an emergency assembly. I assumed it had something to do with Spirit Week. A few minutes after the first bell, Grace texted me from the auditorium. Then my phone rang. "Mom..." she whispered, her voice shaky. "You need to come." I stood up so fast I knocked over my coffee. "What happened? Grace, are you okay?" There was a long silence on the other end. "Mom... four men in uniform just walked into the school." "Hide right now. What’s happening? I’m calling the police!" But Grace laughed. "No, Mom, they’re not doing anything bad. You have no idea WHAT JUST HAPPENED! Just get here, please!" she said, before the line went dead. I didn't bother grabbing my purse. I threw my keys into the ignition, my heart hammering against my ribs, and sped to the high school. When I burst through the double doors of the auditorium, I stopped dead in my tracks. The room, packed with over eight hundred teenagers, was completely, eerily silent. Down the center aisle stood four imposing figures in impeccable Marine Corps Dress Blues. The brass buttons caught the overhead lights, and their crisp white covers were tucked sharply under their arms. I recognized the man at the front immediately. It was Staff Sergeant Miller—my late husband’s closest friend and squad leader. I had called him in tears the night before, just needing someone who understood the weight of the disrespect Grace had faced. I hadn't expected him to do *this*. The principal, Mr. Davis, stood awkwardly at the podium, looking completely out of his depth. Staff Sergeant Miller didn't wait for permission to speak. He stepped up to the front, taking the microphone from the stand, and his booming, authoritative voice echoed through the massive room. "We apologize for the interruption, Principal Davis," Miller said, though his tone suggested he wasn't sorry at all. "But we received word that a young lady in this school was being disciplined for defending the honor of a fallen United States Marine." A collective gasp rippled through the student body. The teacher who had given Grace detention slunk back into her seat in the front row, her face turning crimson. Miller’s heavy gaze swept across the bleachers. "Where is Grace Harrison?" Grace stood up slowly from the middle row, still wearing her dad’s oversized sweatshirt. "Come down here, Grace," Miller commanded gently. As she walked down the bleacher steps, the three other Marines broke formation and fell perfectly into step behind her, creating an impromptu honor guard. They escorted her to the center of the floor. Miller turned to face the silent crowd. "Captain Mark Harrison didn't just 'not want to come back.' He gave his life pulling three wounded men out of a burning transport vehicle in the middle of a firefight. I know, because I was one of those men. None of us standing here today would be breathing if it weren't for Grace's father." The silence in the room was absolute. You could have heard a pin drop. A few rows up, the girl who had made the cruel joke the day before was staring at her shoes, visibly crying. Miller turned back to Grace and dropped to one knee, bringing himself to eye level with her. He pulled a small, velvet box from his pocket and opened it, revealing a gleaming Challenge Coin from their old unit. "Grace," he said, his voice thick with emotion but loud enough for the microphone to carry. "Your father was the bravest man I ever knew. You stood your ground yesterday, just like he would have. You protected his honor, and now, his squad is here to protect yours. We have your back. Always." He pressed the heavy metal coin into her palm, stood up, and then all four Marines snapped a crisp, perfectly unified salute to my fourteen-year-old daughter. Tears streamed down Grace's face, but they weren't tears of anger or shame anymore. She stood tall, squared her shoulders, and returned a clumsy but beautiful salute of her own. Suddenly, from the back row of the bleachers, a single student stood up and started clapping. Then another. Within seconds, the entire auditorium erupted into a deafening standing ovation. Even Mr. Davis and the teachers were on their feet. I hurried down the aisle, wiping away my own tears, and wrapped Grace in a massive hug. Staff Sergeant Miller tipped his head to me, a fierce, protective glint in his eye. Before we could leave the building, Principal Davis rushed over to us in the hallway. He looked thoroughly chastised. "Mrs. Harrison, Grace," he stammered, wringing his hands. "I... I want to formally apologize. The detention has been completely wiped from her record. We will be handling the bullying incident with the other student appropriately, and frankly, I think our staff needs a heavy refresher on empathy." Grace squeezed the coin in her hand, looking up at the four men in uniform who had dropped everything to stand by her side. She didn't need to say a word. The message had been delivered loud and clear. Captain Mark Harrison had left a legacy of courage behind, and that day, an entire school learned exactly what it meant to be a hero's daughter.
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Sama Hoole
Sama Hoole@SamaHoole·
In 1900, John D. Rockefeller controlled approximately 90 percent of all petroleum refining in the United States. He was, by some calculations, the richest private individual who had ever lived. He had a problem. Scientists were discovering that compounds derived from coal tar, a petroleum byproduct, could be used as synthetic medicines. Aspirin, derived from coal tar, had been launched by Bayer in 1899. The petroleum waste stream Rockefeller had previously had to dispose of could now be sold back to the public as medicine at a markup of roughly 10,000 percent. He had another problem. American medicine in 1900 was a competitive ecosystem of homeopaths, herbalists, naturopaths, osteopaths, midwives, and traditional doctors who used food, plants, water, and lifestyle as the primary tools of healing. Approximately half of all American medical schools taught some form of natural or alternative medicine. Rockefeller bought into the German pharmaceutical industry, eventually taking a substantial stake in IG Farben, the conglomerate that included Bayer, BASF, and Hoechst. He then commissioned a report. The report was written by Abraham Flexner, an educator with no medical training, funded by the Rockefeller and Carnegie Foundations, and published in 1910. It declared that natural and alternative medical schools were unscientific quackery. It recommended the closure of more than half of all American medical schools and the standardisation of the rest around medicine based on synthetic patented drugs. Congress acted. Half of American medical schools closed within a decade. The remainder accepted Rockefeller and Carnegie funding on the condition that their curricula be reorganised around pharmaceutical treatment. Nutrition was removed. Herbal medicine was removed. Lifestyle intervention was removed. The doctor's job was redefined: diagnose the symptom, prescribe the drug. The drugs were petroleum-derived. The petroleum was supplied by Rockefeller-controlled refineries. The medical schools were funded by Rockefeller. The journals were funded by Rockefeller. The AMA was supported by Rockefeller. The hospitals were funded by Rockefeller. By 1925, the American medical system was a vertically integrated extension of the petroleum industry, operating under the marketing slogan that it was scientific. This is the system that exists today. The pharmaceutical industry generates approximately $1.5 trillion in annual revenue. The American population, 4 percent of the global total, consumes approximately 50 percent of all pharmaceuticals manufactured. The system was not designed to make people healthy. The system was designed to manage symptoms in a way that produces lifetime customers. A healthy patient is a former customer. A managed patient, who takes the pill every day for the rest of their life, is an annuity. The objective has always been to keep you in that profitable corridor between healthy and dead. Long enough to keep buying. Not so well that you stop. The doctor who advises you to fix your metabolism by changing your diet is, from the point of view of the system that trained him, a defective product. The doctor who prescribes you a statin, a metformin, an antidepressant, and a blood pressure medication for life is performing exactly as designed. The system was designed by an oil baron who needed to sell the waste products of his refineries. It still functions, 116 years after the Flexner Report, exactly the way he designed it. You are the customer. The corridor is where you live.
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