Différences entre les versions de « Aseem Malhotra »

Ligne 14 : Ligne 14 :


====Transcription====
====Transcription====
<blockquote>J'ai maintenant l'honneur de vous présenter les intervenants, le Dr Aseem Malhotra, cardiologue britannique et militant pour la liberté en matière de santé depuis des années.
{| class="wikitable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"
|+
!VO
!VF
|-
|I now I'm honored to introduce the panelists here, Dr. Aseem Malhotra, UK cardiologist and health freedom activist for years.
And I'm so delighted that you're also part of our executive board.


Dr. Aseem Malhotra is our chief medical and scientific.
Thank you so much. Thank you for your statement now.
So I'm going to share with you over the next few minutes some facts,
experiences I've had, and also try and get people thinking of a concept of what is really
the very root of the problem.
You know, I think about this very rationally, that unless you understand the very root cause
of the issue or the problem, any solutions we offer moving forward are going to be flawed.
So what I didn't mention yesterday, and many of you may not know this, but I've had an
extensive history going back 10 to 15 years in being involved in health policy, both in
the UK and internationally.
I was somebody that got very heavily involved in exposing the harms of excess sugar.
At the time when I came out, all of the research was being publicised, I was called a quack.
You know, who's this guy saying shit about it?
Look how where things have evolved to, right?
So I was the lead campaigner behind the sugary drinks tax in the UK.
I helped, and probably the lead campaigner to ensure that low-carb diets are now part
of a potential management plan for diabetes.
I stopped the overprescription of statins
to millions of people over the age of 50,
by campaigning and getting doctors involved
to saying there should not be the default option that doctors should be paid to give everybody
a prescription of statin.
I more recently campaigned with lots of other people
that played a key role in overturning vaccine mandates
for healthcare workers.
So I do have that history and I've worked at health policy
and I've worked with people at the very top.
A lot of people here, a lot of people in the grassroots
who don't necessarily have access to.
And that also can create distrust
and even the ultimate theory is that there's some plan,
there's some kind of agenda that they want to deliberately,
let's say, depopulate or whatever else.
And I found that could be true,
but in my experience that doesn't seem to be the case.
So what's really going on here?
Well, in 2017, I interviewed Marcia Angel
for an article I was writing for The Guardian.
For people don't know who Marcia Angel is,
she was the former editor
of the highest impact medical journal in the world,
the New England Journal of Medicine. And the article I wrote was called, look it up,
Finance Prompts Patients, Poor Research and Ill-informed Doctors are Basically
Harming Healthcare. That was 2017. And I'll never forget one of the lines she
said to me. She said, Aseem, the greatest battle we have in healthcare
is one of truth versus
money.
So as obviously the pandemic raged on and I was then involved in a very different
situation, of course, being a very strong advocate to get the mRNA vaccine stopped.
I was learning more and more and trying to get much more deep into the understanding
of the problem, but also how do we get to the state of, you know, as I said yesterday
in my talk, optimal health, which I think at the root primarily has to start psychologically.
We start mentally and then everything else flows from there.
And within that, you know, there are several components that are important for good mental
health, which are the basics, okay, that a lot of people don't have.
A lot of us here probably are struggling with some degree, some of these, right?
So it's about safety, security, and sustenance.
This is from birth onwards, like feeling safe, secure, okay?
These are things like having enough money to know that you can feed yourself and your
children, right?
Not having that stress.
It's about self-efficacy and self-esteem,
feeling that you are valued in what you do.
It's about interconnectedness.
It's about autonomy and authenticity.
When you do not feel safe to speak, that is oppressive on the mind
and on the population, and it's damaging to health.
And we've seen all of that play out.
So, moving on from that, one of the things that I think we haven't learned very well throughout history
is understanding when we have had huge population upheavals, oppressive
regimes, etc., etc.
The root of the problem, which has changed in terms of the people that are propagating
it, in my view, and just bear with me with it, because this is quite interesting in terms
of my journey as an allopathic doctor, is that Western medicine is rooted in colonial thinking.
And what does that mean?
It means that the current model of medicine, which we, of course, talked about yesterday,
which is horrifically bad in many ways in terms of over-medicating people lack of informed consent,
survives on the mindset that this is the solution moving forward
by deliberately suppressing
other alternatives such as ancient healing arts of the east and for me in my journey part of that
was when i come to discover that heart disease can be reversed i go to india i meet this cardiologist
that's not using any pharmacological treatment and actually genuinely reversing heart disease by
helping people change their mindset. So that mindset i think all of us have to start moving
forward there are there are two issues i would say if you were to take away two points from
my conversation now with you as a population that we have to think about and get ahead of
is that because of the way the system is (the control of the information by these corporate entities)
is we are increasingly losing access to the truth and our capacity for empathy
That is crucial and key because we are up against it, right?
We are the movement that is trying to change and take down this corporate tyrannical
system, and we are also vulnerable to losing empathy for the people that we are
fighting, but we're not fighting the people.
We are all part of this together. Okay?
So we have to start thinking, going beyond. We've got to this situation
because of this colonial thinking, which also means that the, we have to change a
mindset where people think some human beings are less worthy than others.
And that is at the heart of part of why we have this oligarchy, the World Economic Forum.
All these people ideologically, because they've got to these positions of power. Also, they think
they know better than we do what's best for us. And they genuinely believe that.
So we have to go into
those conversations.
It doesn't mean we're not assertive. It doesn't mean we can't stand up.
But it means a non-violent way of resistance, because that's the most sustainable way forward.
So I just want to finish on that note. You all know what we need to do. But we have to.
And it's going to happen: we're going to have pushback, right? When they go low, we stay high.
|J'ai maintenant l'honneur de vous présenter les intervenants, le Dr Aseem Malhotra, cardiologue britannique et militant pour la liberté en matière de santé depuis des années.
Je suis également ravi que vous fassiez partie de notre comité exécutif.
Je suis également ravi que vous fassiez partie de notre comité exécutif.


Ligne 224 : Ligne 438 :
Je voudrais donc conclure sur cette note. Vous savez tous ce que nous devons faire. Mais nous devons le faire.
Je voudrais donc conclure sur cette note. Vous savez tous ce que nous devons faire. Mais nous devons le faire.


Et cela va arriver : nous allons subir des résistances, n'est-ce pas ? Quand ils s'abaissent, nous restons élevés.</blockquote>
Et cela va arriver : nous allons subir des résistances, n'est-ce pas ? Quand ils s'abaissent, nous restons élevés.
|}
6 155

modifications