Now They’re Enlisting Doctors To Scare You Witless About Climate Change

In theory, people being more political sounds great. Less dreary conversations about the weather and the ‘footie’, and more watercoolers surrounded by colleagues fizzing with enthusiasm about democracy and its pleasures. [emphasis, links added]

But the actual practice of this presupposes that we will all be open-minded and curious and – unless we are extremely learned about something – that the opinion of all citizens shall be equal.

Above all, it fails to observe that pontificating about something you’re not an expert in – just because you have a more elevated station than the people you’re preaching to – totally negates this democratic dream.

It simply sets the stage for a silly symphony of busybodies.

This came to mind on reading that the Royal College of Physicians (RCP) has this week issued new guidance instructing doctors, as ‘trusted members of the community’, to lecture their poor patients about the dangers of climate change.

This is troubling enough given the average duration of a face-to-face appointment with a GP in England – when you finally get one – is just 10 minutes.

Furthermore, this 11-page document also suggests that doctors should cause even more anxiety to patients by ‘working from home’ and cutting back on tests and prescriptions – in the name of saving the planet, of course.

So basically doctors are being advised by the RCP to do less of the things doctors have historically been required to do while amping up the scolding about an area they have no training in.

It also urges doctors, after scaring their patients with talk of burning rivers and the liketo keep an eye out for the poor creatures showing signs of ‘eco-distress’ – that is, anxiety and depression allegedly caused by climate change.

I would venture that if this condition exists in any great numbers, it’s caused not by climate change itself but by people banging on about climate change, alongside the other anxieties that stem from not being able to get a GP appointment, a medical test, or a prescription.

We’re not quite at the stage of those crazy Canucks.

In 2021, a doctor in British Columbia diagnosed a woman with ‘climate change’ – thought to be a world first – after she reported having breathing problems following a hot summer featuring a slew of forest fires. How many years at medical school did it take to come to this razor-sharp conclusion?

Dr Kyle Merritt opined:

‘She has diabetes. She has some heart failure… She lives in a trailer, no air conditioning. All of her health problems have all been worsened. And she’s really struggling to stay hydrated.

I’m sure we’ll get to where Canada is eventually, though. When a society is as single-minded about scaring itself as the Kool-Aid-quaffing Canadians have been for some time, there’s no telling what rabbit holes we’ll race each other to the bottom of.

It’s telling that the RCP document showcases such condescending gems from the World Health Organization as ‘don’t debate the science’ and ‘talk about the health benefits of climate action’.

I wonder what health benefits the people inside the ambulances blocked by Just Stop Oil over the past few years have gained from climate change action?

The NHS isn’t just keen to lecture patients about climate change; it’s also chasing the Net Zero dream.

A rather chilling report published earlier this year in the Telegraph revealed that the NHS plans to introduce electric ambulances to reach green targets.

Paramedics have already expressed concern about the dangerous effect this will have on patients, as ambulances spend hours recharging instead of collecting the sick.

Former chancellor Nigel Lawson once famously said that the NHS is the closest thing that the English have to a religion, which makes doctors the priests. When the NHS itself follows the new false gods of everything from climate change to trans rights, the stage is set for the mayhem of unbridled magical thinking.

Like the old priests, doctors are often no better than the rest of us; often, they’re worse. The majority of them may well be driven by the desire to improve the human condition – but the idea that they are somehow holy receptacles of wisdom is absurd.

I’d listen to a doctor’s advice on what to do with, say, a broken leg, because I’m aware that they studied the subjects of sickness and health into their mid-twenties, while I was chasing off to interview gormless pop stars. But take lessons from them on politics or lifestyle? No thanks.

See more at Climate dispatch 

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Comments (3)

  • Avatar

    Wisenox

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    I believe I can now explain how and where pi and phi interact. If it’s right, it explains why they show up in everything. I think I know what creates them.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Lorraine

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    If my doctor pushes the vax or man-made climate change they are no longer my doctor. They’re propagandists who take orders from big Pharma and the globalist NWO. They have no interest in anyone’s health just their own job security and perhaps monetary reward for themselves.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Tom

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    So funny since most doctors don’t even know how to doctor apart from passing out pills. Now they are suddenly climate experts?

    Reply

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