Comment I read a few hours ago on Youtube:
Okay now I've had three doctors in 3 months from three separate departments during three separate visits indicate to me directly the same exact thing.
I make it a habit now whenever I have a scheduled doctor's visit to probe individual medical staff about covid-19. What I've learned when you talk to them face-to-face about this virus "pandemic", in most instances you will get an entirely different response from them then if they are in front of their colleagues, a news camera or on the record.
The first doctor I spoke with back in October told me that they have to screen for certain pathogens in the digestive health wing before performing surgical procedures like an endoscopy or colonoscopy. These include screenings for MRSA, Candidis Auris and covid-19.
I asked her directly how many times out of a day's worth of screening patients do people come back positive for covid-19. For a moment she remained quiet as if she was going to ignore and not answer my question. She never looked directly at me but continued to type on her computer as if she was annoyed by the question. Then almost begrudgingly she replied in a quiet still voice, "I don't know". And I thought that was going to be her final answer. Then a few seconds later while still looking away from me, she said, "not that many." Her demeanor was almost as if she knew better than to speak against the propaganda protocol which is that covid-19 is taking over the world with infection.
The 2nd doctor that I asked was in the Family Medicine Department during a basic evaluation back in November. And she was more straightforward when I asked the same question about screening for covid-19. She told me," we don't see that many positive readings. But we're only one Department. Most of the covid cases probably go to emergency."
The Third person I asked was an RN in the testing Laboratory while she took my blood for a couple of tests. I could tell she was young but somewhat experienced. And the laboratory was right next to the emergency wing on the other side of the wall. I asked her, since the hospital screens every patient for covid-19 for any procedure even while taking blood, how common is it to see a positive covid case. And she told me, "it's rare not too common in this department. What made you ask?"
The thing is if you want to know the truth about covid-19 you have to speak to the nurses, technicians, doctors, paramedics, administrative staff, hell even the janitor that sweeps the floors at the hospital off in a little corner away from cameras, their colleagues and other people, you will be extremely surprised with what they have to tell you if they're confident enough to answer your question honestly from their experience one-on-one.
This does not necessarily mean that they are against vaccinations, it just means that they know the truth and if they feel safe enough they will tell it.