A viral account from two California
doctors, Dr. Dan Erickson and Dr. Artin Massihi, have voiced the
concerns of millions: When will the coronavirus “shelter-in-place”
orders end, and does it really make scientific sense to quarantine
the healthy?
On April 22, 2020, they held a press
conference and said emphatically that based on their analysis
businesses should re-open, and people should return to regular life,
without masks.
“Do we need to still shelter in
place? Our answer is emphatically no,” Dr. Erickson, a board
certified Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine, said to a captivated
audience of journalists. “Do we need businesses to be shut down?
Emphatically no. Do we need to test them and get them back to work?
Absolutely.”
The two doctors own and operate seven
urgent care facilities in Kern County, California as part of a
franchise called Accelerated Health Care, and were basing their
position on the in-house testing data they personally have reviews.
Other points the doctors raised were
that their analysis of the official CDC and WHO COVID-19 data has
proven that the disease is no more dangerous than the seasonal flu,
and that self-quarantining will actually make the general population
more susceptible to other diseases because their immune systems have
been artificially lowered by lack of exposure to others.
Both doctors recounted they have heard
from multiple unnamed ER physicians around the country that hospital
administrations are pressuring doctors to wrongly write that
coronavirus by itself has caused deaths, instead of including other
factors, such as underlying health conditions and poor life choices,
such as lifelong smoking.
Dr. Erickson believes there is a hidden
agenda behind the discrepancy and that politics, not science, is
motivating governments and media to maintain the pandemic, and its
associating climate of ear.
TruNews has chosen to re-post this
video in its entirety, without edit, because YouTube has begun to
censor it from their platform, citing a violation of “community
guidelines.”
In an interview with CNN’s Brian
Stelter, prior to the censoring of the video above, YouTube CEO Susan
Wojcicki said she plans to stamp out misinformation, and examples of
content that would be a violation of YouTube’s policies include
anything “that is medically unsubstantiated," such as someone
saying “take vitamin C, take turmeric, like those are/or will cure
you.”
Wojcicki added: “Anything that would
go against World Health Organization [WHO] recommendations would be a
violation of our policy."
LISTEN HERE.
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