The World Health Organisation is aiming to weaponize public health to advance centralised control over medicine and expand that power to anything else that it can define as a public health crisis.
During a Conservative Political Action Conference panel hosted by Jan Jekielek, physicians Dr. Robert Malone and Dr. Brooke Miller explained what they see as a plan to expand the centralization of medicine.
“This appears to be a power grab,” Dr. Malone said during the event at the Gaylord National Resort & Convention Centre in Fort Washington, Maryland, on Feb. 24.
While the WHO and its director-general, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, deny it, Dr. Malone said the WHO, an agency of the United Nations, is proposing an international treaty that would allow the WHO to establish treatment norms and define a public health crisis “for anything they wish.”
He said this power could be used to tell the United States what to do about matters such as energy, carbon dioxide emissions, firearms, and abortion.
“Everything falls under public health as an issue, and then they will have the authority to mandate what nation-states shall do in response to those public health emergencies,” Dr. Malone said.
States that object, he said, would be subject to potential sanctions or other actions if they don’t follow the WHO’s directives. Dr. Malone argued that this is an unconstitutional action because the federal government isn’t granted public health authority under the U.S. Constitution.
“This goes all the way down to the level of the WHO being able to stipulate what medical products or procedures you receive, what vaccines you take, and what medicines you’re allowed to take,” he said.
“This is centralised medicine on a global scale.”
Both Dr. Malone and Dr. Miller lamented the shift away from patient-driven medicine towards what they called checklist medicine.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, both physicians saw how the medical world rejected the research of novel ideas and treatments for the disease and instead followed the orders of the top public health authorities.
Dr. Miller said when he was investigating treatments for COVID-19 and presented them to fellow doctors, they “didn’t want to hear about it.”
“They only wanted to follow what the central planners told them to do,” he said.
Even without a WHO treaty, Dr. Malone said, the medical profession is now becoming more centralised, and thinking outside the box is being punished.
“In many states, many nations, there are now laws being enacted that physicians who speak about their opinions, their observations, which differ from the approved narrative, are subjected to jail time and major fines up to $200,000,” he said. “This is coming through in Canada and has already been enacted in France.”
This shift, Dr. Malone said, completely ignores the Hippocratic Oath that a doctor should swear to, which compels them to always do what’s best for the individual patient.
The medical industry wants doctors to work off of a checklist and follow a set of prescribed orders, he said. Furthermore, Dr. Malone said, the breakdown of individualised care is part of a broader objective: artificial intelligence-driven medicine.
“That’s where they want to go. … standardised medicine where you’re all a number, and you are processed through the system, given a diagnosis,” he said. “Checklist-driven medicine … is what’s being taught in medical schools right now, together with ‘wokeism,’ this is what’s being pushed all the way through the system.”
Regular people need to get involved with their government to prevent the further centralization of medicine in the country, according to both doctors. Dr. Miller said citizens must not be afraid to stand up to the powerful.
“We must demand that our government not sign this treaty. And I would say go even further, we must leave the WHO and defund the WHO,” he said.
Dr. Malone said people need to get involved with their state governments, alert them of what’s happening, and urge them to resist. He also recommended forming a commission to review what’s happening within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Finally, he said, people need to seek out doctors who aren’t part of the corporate medical world.
While many doctors may not want to be involved with corporate health care, the increasing complexity of paperwork forced by the Affordable Care Act and other regulations and the allure of money make it harder to avoid.
“They work for the corporation, they don’t work for the patient,” Dr. Miller said