0:00
/
0:00

Modern Medicine Has A Corruption Problem

1

In the video is Dr Aseem Malhotra on Alex Jones Show, he lays out succintly what the majority have little or no idea about of their most trusted industry. Modern medicine has a corruption problem, and it’s costing lives on a massive scale. This isn’t about fringe theories or personal beliefs. It’s about a system that has been quietly hijacked by pharmaceutical corporations, regulators that are bought and paid for, and a medical establishment that has been conditioned to follow orders, not ask questions. The third leading cause of death globally, after heart disease and cancer, is properly prescribed medication. That fact alone should stop everything. But instead, the industry pushes forward like nothing’s wrong.

Doctors aren’t the enemy. Most of them are doing what they think is right. The problem is, they’re working off information that’s biased, manipulated, or flat-out false. The drug companies design the trials, control the data, and spin the results. Regulators like the FDA and the UK’s MHRA are supposed to protect the public, but they’ve been captured. In the U.S., around 65% of the FDA’s budget comes from the very drug companies it regulates. In the UK, it’s even worse, 86% of the MHRA’s funding comes from Big Pharma. That’s not regulation. That’s sponsorship.

This isn’t new. The Vioxx scandal showed exactly how deep the rot goes. Merck released a drug that they knew raised the risk of heart attacks and strokes. Internal emails from top scientists at Merck confirmed they understood the danger. But they put the drug on the market anyway, made billions in profit, and 60,000 Americans died as a result. When the FDA told Merck to warn the public with a black box label, Merck ignored them. Instead, they bought more marketing material, reprints from the New England Journal of Medicine, one of the most respected medical journals in the world, to give the false impression the drug was safe. That’s not just unethical. That’s criminal.

But no one went to jail. No one even lost their job. The company paid a fine and carried on. That’s how the system works. It’s a business, and your health is a secondary concern. Even journals aren’t safe. They make huge profits selling reprints of favorable studies to drug companies, who then use those papers to push dangerous products on doctors and the public.

This system is run by people who behave exactly like what psychologists define as psychopathic entities. Not individuals, but corporations. They show no remorse. They lie to protect profits. They have no concern for the damage they do. And they control the levers of power in medicine: the funding, the research, the regulators, and the messaging.

Millions of people have died from drugs that were either unnecessary or more harmful than beneficial. And that’s not counting the long-term chronic damage caused by dependency, side effects, and the false belief that health comes in a pill. This is not a few bad actors. It’s the system itself.

Meanwhile, many of the scientists who try to speak out get crushed. Careers are destroyed, reputations smeared, and institutions pressured into silence because they depend on pharmaceutical funding. Real science gets buried under corporate public relations.

People talk about informed consent, but how can consent be informed when doctors themselves aren’t given the truth? The system hides the risks, exaggerates the benefits, and punishes dissent. And the public suffers for it.

There’s hope in people like Secretary Robert Kennedy Jr., Marty Makary, and Jay Bhattacharya, figures who understand the problem and are working to fix it. But they can’t do it alone. The system won’t change without a massive push from the public. That means speaking out, refusing to be silenced, and demanding accountability.

People have been dying for decades because of medical corruption. The facts are there, the bodies are there, and the money trail is clear. If we ignore it, we become part of it. If we speak up, we can stop it.

But silence is no longer an option. Not when lives are at stake, not of concern to Bill Gates and the imbeciles he bribes, but to us, it is a matter grave concern.

If you think my voice should be heard louder then PLEASE support by becoming a paid subscriber. I have minimal overheads, no sponsors to sell myself or soul to, no bosses who tell me what to write (or NOT write), or staff I have to pay. I’m here for your raw, straight, and dedicated analyses. Your support is appreciated. Thank you.

buymeacoffee.com/ggtv

Discussion about this video

User's avatar