Playing Doctor
Exactly what you get these days: a puppet who worships the PDR.
Credit: Politics in Healing: The Suppression and Manipulation of American Medicine (2000)
Remember when playing doctor was (almost) innocent fun for little kids?
Fast forward: they give you a smile, a stethoscope, and a script. They call it care; we call it a play. The white coat is a costume, the diagnosis a prompt, the prescription pad a vending machine that pays pharma and trims your freedom. You line up for “free” injections that come with value meals while your data is harvested, your options shrunk, and your sovereignty billed as a convenience fee.
This is what passes for medicine now — algorithmic obedience with bedside manner.
1. The Stage:
How Medicine Became Performance
Walk into any modern clinic and you feel it: fluorescent, sterile lighting, uniform furniture, the ‘sanitized’ waiting room a kind of pre-show lobby. The performance begins when the ‘provider’ enters. Notice that word—not doctor, healer, or physician, but provider. An interchangeable role on the stage, often little more than a licensed drug pusher in a white coat.
The wolf sees the choreography: tap the laptop, ask a few leading questions, click boxes that flash red or green, then deliver the lines. The props—thermometer, cuff, reflex hammer, rubber gloves—are less diagnostic tools than stage objects, giving only the illusion of examination. The real action comes from a script already written offstage by insurers, pharma, and policy bureaucrats. Your statin, your antidepressant, your metformin, your Ozempic, your booster—they’re all waiting at the pharmacy before you even walk in.
Like all theater, it depends on suspension of disbelief.
But the curtain’s threadbare; the audience sees the wires.
2. The Script:
The Physician’s Desk Reference As Scripture
The Physician’s Desk Reference (PDR), along with endless guidelines and formularies, serves as the Bible of this new church. Doctors are not expected to think, only to consult the oracle. Click, scroll, select.
Commandments of the new priesthood:
Thou shalt prescribe the branded pill before trying food, herbs, or fasting.
Thou shalt never mention Rife’s frequencies, Koch’s Glyoxylide, or Burzynski’s peptides—those are forbidden gospels.
Thou shalt chant “safe and effective” when the ritual demands.
Guidelines became gospel; free thought became blasphemy. Doctors who stray risk banishment—licenses revoked, careers shredded. The debt of medical school makes heresy unaffordable.
3. The Casting Call
Training, Protocols, And The Loss Of Judgment
Medical school isn’t about cultivating healers; it’s about training actors to hit their marks. Students learn the code: which answer scores, which drug reimburses, which procedure pays.
Gut instinct is punished, curiosity discouraged. By the time they graduate, judgment has atrophied into reflex: “What does the guideline say?” The stethoscope is no longer an instrument of listening but a badge of authority—a costume prop.
The wolf doesn’t blame them entirely.
They were trained to play doctor, not to be one.
Rockefeller Medicine
There is no verifiable historical record of John D. Rockefeller or the Rockefeller family officially stating the following Masonic Creed. (Gee, I wonder why?)
4. The Producer:
Pharma, Payers, And The Invisible Hands
Behind the actors stand the producers: Rockefeller medicine men, pharma giants, insurers, regulators. They bankroll the show, dictate the script, and skim the profits.
Koch refused to sell Glyoxylide → the AMA branded him a quack.
Rife cured 16 “terminal” patients in 1934 → his lab was vandalized, his records erased.
Burzynski dissolved brain tumors → the FDA convened four grand juries and the NCI filed patents on his stolen formula.
The pattern never changes: Buy if you can. Bury if you can’t.
Doctors may wear the costume, but they don’t own the stage.
5. The Audience:
The Patient as Consumer
Once, a patient was a human asking for help. Now you’re a consumer, segmented by actuarial table, tracked by portal, reduced to “lifetime value.”
The village analogy holds: the healers had water; they locked the well. They banned cups, sold potions, and jailed travelers who carried herbs. Villagers died, never knowing the cure sat in the vault.
Today’s vault is the FDA’s approval process—$300 million to play, which no natural cure can afford. That’s not science; that’s paywall medicine.
This inversion is the parasite’s favorite trick: turn humans into metrics, then monetize their decline.
6. The Props:
Technology, Data, and The Algorithmic Stethoscope
Laptops, dashboards, EMRs—these are the new props. You speak; the provider types. The “risk profile” algorithm spits out profitable options. The stethoscope touches your chest for one second—ritual over.
The parasite’s AI already knows your outcome. It’s predictive policing in a lab coat.
You thought you were talking to a doctor.
You were really talking to an interface.
7. The Intermission:
What Was Lost — Time, Touch, And Trust
There was a time when medicine paused long enough to listen.
Bedside. Hand on wrist. Eyes locked. Story told.
That was intermission—the only part that healed. But it couldn’t be coded, so it couldn’t be billed. It was cut from the script.
The wolf knows: what they cut is what mattered most.
What they cut from the script is the very thing that once kept medicine human—step past the curtain, toss a coin to the Onion, and see why the parasites fear its return.
8. The Rogue Healers:
Wolves In Lab Coats
And yet, here and there, wolves slip through.
The doctor who nods at the pharma rep, then whispers: “Don’t take that booster.”
The surgeon who risks his license by telling the truth about vaccine injury.
The healer who slips herbs under the table, hiding from regulators.
Rare, but real. They remind us healing is listening to body and field, not obedience to script.
Rebel Doctors
A century of white coats turned pharmacy into payday; chronic sickness became the most dependable dividend on Earth.
9. The Parasitic Numbers:
Behind the curtain: actuarial manipulations, service areas cut, “extras” vanished. Bend over in 2025, bend over further in 2026.
Healthcare is the casino where the house always wins—and calls your survival an “anecdote.
10. Fieldcraft For The Patient-Wolf:
The wolf plays, but only to survive:
Strip the plan bare. Use it only when you must.
Highlight every claw in the ANOC (advance notice of care / claims).
Decline freebies; all hooks. All fries.
Stock silver, herbs, cash, booze, and meds.
Avoid wellness apps—parasite spyware is everywhere.
Build off-grid lifelines: barter, compounding, community healers.
🔥 Opium for the Masses: Harvesting Nature’s Best Pain Medication
The wolf plays the parasite’s game only until he finds the exit.
11. The Counterplay:
Alternate Medicine Economies
Outside the parasite’s theater, a parallel medicine is stirring. Herbalists, compounding pharmacists, families learning to monitor and heal at home.
Rife’s frequencies resurface in quiet labs. Becker’s currents still regenerate tissue. Naessens’ somatids whisper terrain-first truths. These are seeds of a sovereign economy—small, imperfect, alive.
The parasites can’t stop it.
12. The Exit Cue:
Reclaiming Sovereignty
The play runs as long as the audience applauds. But wolves don’t clap. We expose the script, take what we need, and build elsewhere.
Sovereignty means remembering:
Your body is not their stage.
Your soul is not their ledger.
Your life is not their revenue stream.
Playing doctor used to be child’s play. Now it’s deadly theater. The wolf knows the difference — and walks offstage.
So take heart, pilgrims—what’s poisoned will pass, what’s true will rise. The field remembers, the body remembers, and the Source never forgets. Walk on; the light has always been inside you.
References
Clif High — Event Stream, manifestation, and narrative collapse.
Walter Russell — Illumination and still magnetic light (contrasting real knowing with algorithmic scripts).
Joseph P. Farrell — Hidden technocracy and control systems.
UHC / CMS memos — VBID cuts, 2026 drug cap, service area changes (parasite playbook in fine print).
Daniel Haley, Politics in Healing: The Suppression and Manipulation of American Medicine (2000)
E. Richard Brown, Rockefeller Medicine Men
Case studies: William Koch (Glyoxylide), Royal Rife (frequencies), Stefan Durovic/Andrew Ivy (Krebiozen), Stanley Jacob (DMSO), Stanislaw Burzynski (antineoplastons), Gaston Naessens (714-X), Robert Becker (The Body Electric)











Couldn’t agree more!!
I’m not sure where you heard that John D. Rockefeller used homeopathy considering he was the one that pushed for banning it and promoting his style of medicine made from petroleum. He’s also the one who built Medical Schools and made the upcoming doctors practice his style of medicine or they would get no license. He also started the pharmaceutical companies and when his so called medicine caused cancer he created the Cancer Institute. I say stick with natural remedies and forget man made medicines. We all have choices so make the right one, your good health depends on it.