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Tuesday, February 23, 2010

What to do About the CMPA?

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by Morley Evans

The CMPA is the Canadian Medical Protective Association (founded in 1901). What to do about it? Can it be reformed? Can it be controlled?

I was tortured for eight years. Then I slipped into a coma. It has taken me eighteen years to crawl out of the grave that was dug for me by the doctor who was prescribing Zocor and a second doctor who almost finished me off with Lipitor. [1] No one responsible offered me anything. They certainly didn't offer any medical relief. No one charged with protecting the public did his job either. There was no day in court, no out of court settlement, no offer, no sympathy, not even one kind word. They swept me under the carpet after they laughed in my face. The shadowy CMPA — which is the most powerful medical organization in Canada — was founded "to protect the reputations of physicians." That sounds innocent enough.

The CMPA has protected bastards for over a century by subverting justice. Canada's legal system is a joke, especially with regards to doctors, but not only them. The criminal CMPA is directly responsible. Nothing is too outrageous to be excused and ignored, so beware.

Am I unique? Perhaps, but only in the sense that I survived the Canadian "health care system" here in Regina. Next time I might not be so lucky. Then again, the Power above may be protecting me to denounce this evil.

If the airline industry were run like the doctor business in Canada, dozens of planes would be crashing every week. The airline industry is completely different because it is run by responsible people who give a damn about the safety of their customers. Despite crashes and deaths, the auto business is nearly as good when one considers the astronomical number of passenger miles driven without incident every year. Even the Mafia cares more about its customers than established Canadian medicine. Others care, or they go out of business: Not the CMPA and the rest who run established medicine in Canada.

These scum cannot be reformed. They can go to Hell.

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Blackhawk Down

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by Morley Evans

The movie, Blackhawk Down, is about the Battle of Mogadishu (1993). The Wikipedia article ends with these words:

The film ends with text informing the viewer that "1000 Somalis died and 19 Americans lost their lives in the conflict. Mike Durant was released after 11 days of captivity. On August 2, 1996, warlord Mohamed Farrah Aidid was killed in Mogadishu. General Garrison retired the following day."

All American war movies [1], including such work as Full Metal Jacket and She Wore a Yellow Ribbon, focus upon the trials and tribulations of American soldiers as they battle faceless enemies. The enemies in Blackhawk Down, called "skinnies", are usually silhouettes shooting at us. We don't know who they are or why our solders are fighting them or what was gained or lost after our guys won. Wikipedia estimates between 500 and 1500 Somalis were killed versus 18 Americans and one Malaysian. This ridiculous kill ratio is consistent with current figures from Iraq and Afghanistan as well as Vietnam and Korea. But in the essay on the Battle of Mogadishu (1993) these figures are quite different: The Somalis did much better when they counted their own dead.

American forces have always done well, in this sense. Americans have never paid a heavy price, despite what is generally believed by Americans. In WWI [2] and WW II [3], American losses were 2% of the total military slaughtered and even less when civilians are included. American civilians have never been touched. The appalling statistics are unknown by the general American public. Movies like Blackhawk Down, with images of blood drenched GIs, reinforce this misconception.

Did our guys win? Win? They killed lots of Somalis, but Somalia is still a lawless mess, an armed camp that is hostile to the U.S. The original reason for going to Somalia was humanitarian aid. So the mission to Somalia was actually a failure. It was a fiasco. The helicopter manufacturers did well, of course, as did other armament contractors.

The Battle of Mogadishu (1993) was undertaken during the administration of William Jefferson Clinton. The Somalia invasion was one of the first things done in the new post Cold War era when the threat of the Soviet Union was gone. The official White House Clinton biography gives no hint at all about Somalia. As far as the White House is concerned, "the U.S. enjoyed more peace and economic well being than at any time in its history." [4] How nice.

[1] Does anyone else make war movies, or war TV shows, or war games, or war toys, or feature soldiers, airmen, and sailors on daytime game shows like The Price Is Right? "War is Hell," Sherman observed but war can be fun too as we learned from Sergeant Bilko, The Dirty Dozen and Kelly's Heroes. I Dream of Genie featured servicemen in uniform. British war movies such as Bridge on the River Kwai, Lawrence of Arabia and Mrs. Miniver were made by Hollywood.
[2] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wwi_casualties
[3] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WWII_Casualties
[4] http://www.whitehouse.gov/about/presidents/williamjClinton

Thursday, February 18, 2010

Henry David Thoreau

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There are a thousand hacking at the branches of evil to one who is striking at the root.
Henry David Thoreau

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Believe It Or Not!

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by Morley Evans

I had another outstanding day at the gym today:

I am 62 years old. I am healthier now than when I was 26, or 16, or 6. I was in a coma in June 2000. Since I eliminated the meds that were killing me along with the doctors who were prescribing them and added Juice Plus+ to my nutrition regimen, I have been improving month after month. Will I live another sixty years? That is the plan.

Whether your own journey to optimal wellness is longer or shorter than mine, a long life with good health should be your plan too!

You can find out more here — http://www.morleyevansjuiceplus.com

Monday, February 15, 2010

Shun them

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by Morley Evans


Here is a comment I just posted on www.AntiWar.com with regards to a warmongering advertisement by Elie Wiesel in the New York Times:
• posted on AntiWar.com http://original.antiwar.com/john-v-walsh/2010/02/14/elie-wiesels-ignoble-recruits/

“Endorsement by Nobel Laureates once lent gravitas to one's case, but then the Nobel Committee exposed itself when they gave a Nobel Prize to fraudster Al Gore. The so-called State of "Israel" sits in flagrante delicto atop what may be the worst human rights record in history. And the claim that the United States is the world's moral leader is pasted over the 20th Century — "The American Century" — which was history's greatest bloodbath. These buffoons have nothing to teach the world. They should be the subject of ridicule. They should be shunned by decent people.”

Illegitimi non carborundum

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by Morley Evans


Illegitimi non carborundum

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illegitimi_non_carborundum

Monday, February 8, 2010

Killing Hope

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by Morley Evans


Killing Hope by William Blum

THIS IS A WONDERFUL BOOK!

I had no idea that the United States was as active as it has been since WW II. The military and the CIA have been in overdrive everywhere for 65 years. Killing Hope deals with events after 1945. Before that, of course, there was WW II, the interwar period (1918 to 1939), WW I, the run-up to WW I, the Spanish American War and the building of the Panama Canal with interventions in Central America and Colombia. Washington was not asleep before the 20th Century, either. The United States has been up to its neck in everything throughout its history. You can look that up in Appendix II.

After looking at things through the eyes of our enemies, I believe we in the West have all been the victims of a never-ending series of elaborate hoaxes that have been perpetrated by our élites. Our enemies were never as big and scary as we believed they were. We, on the other hand, were always very big and scary.

The Twentieth Century looks to me like a giant power grab with the Anglo-American empire (that's us good guys, you know) taking over the world. We were trying to forestall losing our preeminent position as others caught up to us. Before WW I, the British were desperately afraid of Germany which was making better stuff and selling it for less. Before WW II, the United States was desperately afraid of Japan for the same reason. Nobody imagined that India and China would ever get up off the floor where we put them, but they have.

The Chinese can thank Richard M. Nixon for opening the door to China in 1972. Samuel Gompers must have been spinning in his grave. Everyone is catching up: It was inevitable because people are smart and they learn from each other.

In times going back long before Marco Polo, all the good stuff was coming from India and China. The great goal in Europe was to get to India, China and Japan. The Portuguese went around Africa. The Spanish went west and ran into the Americas. Then they continued on across the Pacific. The British and Dutch were fast on their heels.

Five Hundred years after Columbus, China and India are important again. Japan and Germany have been leading economies for decades — after they were bombed into the stone age and crushed in 1945. If one doesn't count Grenada and Panama, we haven't won a war since The Great Victory of '45. Whoda thunk that would happen? We have been doing our best, but hope is hard to kill.