The Original 2 Hour Video Rashid Buttar
The video i posted below has now been censored again…
Anybody know what the “Community Guidelines ” are ?
Ah here they are and nothing in this applies here
https://support.google.com/youtube/answer/9288567?hl=en
MAJOR ANNOUNCEMENT
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qNK9zesHQls
THE SURGEON GENERAL
…………..
I now realize it was an interview 45 min long done after this video below was censored by Utube.
I found a new link that is working for the moment .
I have not watched this yet…it s 2 hours long…but since there is no basketball or hockey or baseball
why not spend 2 hours watching what we are Not supposed to watch…then decide for ourselves if it 100% BS
50% BS or All rings true. We are all adults here right ?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rnbf9wccdxE
I just had a thought
A….When it comes to a woman deciding what to do with her body vis a vis aborting an unborn “life”
The Left is Pro Choice and the Right is Pro Life .
B…When it comes to a person deciding to have drugs injected into their bodies ( vaccines) to protect others lives
The Left is Pro Life and the Right is Pro Choice .
I guess I don’t fit in
Personally I am always pro Choice. It’s MY body ..my Choice
I think that’s not Left and that’s not Right ..I think it’s Libertarianism
That’s an interesting observation that is generally true. But the anti-vaccination movement is bipartisan in some areas like California:
Anti-vaccination movement unites fringe elements of left and right
https://www.sacbee.com/opinion/california-forum/article235028692.html
————————————-
I’m curious though about where the line is drawn for anti-vaxers.
— Would one not get a tetanus shot after a nasty puncture wound?
— Or not get rabies shots after being bitten by a rabid animal?
Good point Alfa8
yes and yes !
Background
The son of Pakistani parents,[7] Buttar was born in London in 1966. He immigrated with his parents to the U.S. at the age of 9 and grew up in rural Rosebud, MO. He attended Washington University, graduating with a bachelor’s degree in biology and religion, and then earned his degree in osteopathy from University of Osteopathic Medicine and Health Sciences in Des Moines, IA. According to his website, he worked as a surgeon with the U.S. Army for several years but did not complete his surgical residency.[8]
Buttar claims to be board certified by several entities,[9] all of which are listed as “questionable organizations” by Quackwatch including the American Academy of Preventative Medicine, American Academy of Integrative Medicine, and American College for Advancement in Medicine; the latter’s primary purpose being the promotion of chelation therapy.[10]
In 2007, Buttar was brought before the North Carolina Board of Medical Examiners, accused of unprofessional conduct for providing “ineffectual therapies” to four cancer patients. Three of those patients later died.[11][12][13] The panel recommended that Buttar’s “license be suspended indefinitely, but that the suspension be immediately stayed”.[14] In 2010 the board, in response to this and other concerns, chose to formally reprimand Buttar but allowed him to continue to practice.[2][15]
Buttar has been criticized for his use of chelation therapies,[1] such as topical cream containing chelators to treat children with autism, and for his use of intravenous hydrogen peroxide and EDTA to treat cancer.[4][16] He came to public attention in 2009 when he alleged to have successfully used chelation therapy to treat Desiree Jennings, a Washington Redskins cheerleading ambassador who had made dubious claims about suffering from dystonia and losing her ability to walk or talk normally after receiving a flu shot.[1][17][18][19][20] Reporting on the case, Discover described Buttar as a “a prominent anti-vaccine doctor who treats ‘vaccine damage’ cases”.
In July 2009, Buttar and his wife Debbie achieved the rank of “blue diamond” within the distributor network of the multi-level marketing company Monavie, which sold an acai-based beverage until going into foreclosure in 2015.[21]
In April 2010, the FDA sent Buttar a warning letter for illegally marketing unapproved topical creams as drugs via his websites, YouTube videos, and radio appearances.[4][5] FDA inspections also revealed that Buttar’s company, V-SAB Medical Labs, had not complied with good manufacturing practices and that its products were “adulterated” according to the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act.[6]
In 2011, as result of the disciplinary action in North Carolina, the Hawaii Medical Board denied Buttar a medical license.[22]
In 2019, the North Carolina Medical Board disciplined Buttar after receiving two complaints. In one case, a physician was worried that Buttar’s treatment of a cancer patient hindered appropriate treatment and increased the patient’s pain and suffering. In the other case, Buttar admitted that his personal relationship with the parent of a young patient constituted a boundary violation. Buttar and the Medical Board settled the complaints in a Consent Order that included a reprimand and a requirement to take courses in ethics and record keeping. Buttar acknowledged that his conduct constituted “unprofessional conduct including, but not limited to, departure from or the failure to conform to the ethics of the profession.” Additionally, regarding the cancer patient, Buttar acknowledged that his documentation of care “failed to conform to the standards of acceptable and prevailing medical practice”.[3]
COVID-19 conspiracy theories and misinformation
See also: Misinformation related to the 2019–20 coronavirus pandemic
During the 2019-20 coronavirus pandemic, a series of videos featuring Buttar were posted to YouTube by the fake news website Next News Network, in which Buttar advanced a conspiracy theory claiming that NIAID director Anthony Fauci’s research helped create COVID-19, as well as numerous other false claims, such as that 5G cell phone networks and “chemtrails” cause COVID-19.[23][24][12][25] YouTube removed the video a week after it was posted, replacing it with a message saying, “This video has been removed for violating YouTube’s Community Guidelines.”[25]
Book
It very well could be he is being censored for fleecing the public?
Hey Steins1…I hear you…and thanks for printing this out.
That’s what this exercise is all about.
Dr. Buttar is very bright and very convincing in what he says in that video.
However his Wikapedia Bio is very damning ….a real hit job .
If all this is correct it is very hard to give him credibility.
But some of the tone of some of the Bio is quite unprofessional IMHO
“the fake news website Next News Network”,…whoever wrote this went out of their way to condemn this out fit as well.
Thats a little over the top.
On the other hand…a reputable Doctor involved in a ponzi scheme is telling to say the least.
So on balance the Wikipedia bio has turned me back into a skeptic.
I wonder WHO wrote that bio though ( pun intended)
The video does open one’s eyes to Bill Gates Involvement …I always thought of him as a benign figure who just got lucky and became the worlds richest man …but he seems anything but benign….so there’s that.
And Dr Fauchi doesn’t look like a saint either.
So there we go….some very believable elements to this story but the Story teller is very suspect himself.
Where does that leave us poor stiffs who are trying to unwind this riddle ?
Dazed and Confused …but still we know more now than we did before.
Thanks for this Sir Steins
Yeah, it’s a little like if it walks like a duck…