One of the many questions I frequently get from the inquiring masses of the people is do I believe in surgery.
Dherbs does NOT believe in surgery for any degenerative disease, which is a preventable disease by way of lifestyle and dietary change. Most of the diseases people visit doctors and hospitals for are "degenerative" in nature and thus unnecessary. These particular diseases can be eradicated by diet, lifestyle, and thought pattern change; but because the majority of Western people are afraid of disease and sickness, they run to the doctor and complicate matters.
I only endorse surgery for industrial and societal injuries, i.e. dismembering of body parts (sewing them back on), removing foreign objects of a metallic nature (i.e. bullets), etc.
Surgery for poor circulation, heart disease, arteriosclerosis, uterine complaints, cancer, and other preventable diseases are totally unnecessary; and so is surgery for such things as childbirth (Cesarean section or C-Section), circumcision, hysterectomy, mastectomy, infanticide (abortion), and in vitro (artificial insemination) pregnancy.
Also, you may not look at such operation as such, but implant of fake breasts (silicon breasts) is surgical in nature; that's were plastic surgeons make most of their money from, the actual "surgery," not the plastic or silicon implants which only cost about $5-$10. Remember, plastic surgery is surgery. It is surgery performed to put harmful synthetic material called "plastic" into the body (for various reasons, most of them being vain and frivolous in my personal and honest opinion).
Anytime a doctor has to cut or slash you open, it's technically called surgery. Surgery is where the big bucks are and Western allopathic doctors are quick to cut on a body even if it is unnecessary. Medicine is BIG BUSINESS in today's world. Pharmaceutical drugs bring in billions upon billions of dollars (actually, trillions of dollars) and surgery is right behind.
There are millions of people walking around today with all kinds of ugly marks and gashes on their body resulting from needless, useless, and unnecessary surgeries performed by doctors called surgeons. These marks stay with these victims (participants) for the rest of their lives in the flesh - a physical badge of dishonor if you will, the dishonor resulting from ignorance in the first degree.
Just because a body organ is not functioning to par or optimally does not mean it should or needs to be removed. You don't remove or take out a woman's uterus just because there's a problem with it. When you remove a woman's uterus you remove her female command center or a big chunk of it. The uterus is the seat of femininity and feminine intellect and wisdom. It is the seat of a woman's Goddess-ness. Even if a woman is beyond her child-bearing years, this does not mean she no longer needs her uterus. The uterus, like all other organs, is a thinking organ. It has intelligence. Male or female, you need every organ you were born with. There are no exceptions to this. Doctors are wrong for removing people's tonsils, appendices (appendix), gallbladders, spleens, etc. They are also wrong for removing women's breasts, ovaries, and uteruses. You should die with every organ you were born with intact.
Western medicine is very sexist too. Doctors are quick to remove a female anatomical member or internal organ. Doctors are quicker to remove a woman's ovaries than a man's testicles. Why is this? Is it because a man's power is located in his testicles? In Western society, we associate power, control, and authority with the male genitalia. You need control, power, and authority to punish someone in this society. Therefore, our criminal judicial system is called a "penal" system. There's a correlation to the male penis and the activity of punishment (a/k/a penalization).
We also associate "power" with the testicles: "Don't you have any 'balls' to stand up to him?" Balls (testicles) refer to testicular fortitude.
The foregoing is something to think over!
When you see the medical suffix "ectomy," i.e. vasectomy, hysterectomy, mastectomy, you are dealing with surgery or cutting on the body to remove, insert, or repair something.
It is outright criminal for doctors to perform surgery on cancer patients. It is a known medical fact that surgery causes cancer cells to spread throughout the body; so why would doctors cut open cancer patients? Is it to kill them off after robbing them (or their insurance provider) blind? Is this why doctors can predict how long cancer patients have to live? The worst thing you can do for a cancer patient is to perform chemotherapy, radiation therapy, and surgery on them. To do such is murder (voluntary manslaughter due to undue influence).
Doctors cannot make things better when you are dealing with a degenerative disease. In fact, they will make things worse (creating additional business for themselves and their partners called pharmacists). I may sound harsh and biased but it's true. These people are not into healing but making money no matter how well-intentioned they may appear.
Doctors are not into healing because healing is free. Doctors can only diagnose, treat, manage, or remove and these things cost money. Doctors cannot prescribe herbs because herbs don't bring in money like drugs, at least not to doctors. You can patent a pharmaceutical drug but not an herb (natural plant). Herbs can actually help you to heal from a degenerative disease and prevent surgery. Now if a piano falls on your head an herb is not going to help much and surgery would be the appropriate measure to take. Practicality, intelligence, reason, and common sense is needed, but these things are dead in the average American today which explains the sorry state of affairs of the United States in general and the U.S. citizens in particular.
So again and in closing, I have an aversion to surgery for degenerative diseases. Surgeries are only necessary for industrial and societal injuries.
Surgery creates a lot of drug addicts who are addicted to pain killer medication because the aftermath of a surgical operation can be very painful, physically as well as emotionally.
Before you consider surgery, ask yourself the following questions:
"Is my problem degenerative in nature (something that I can heal by changing my diet and lifestyle)?
"Is the surgery something I really don't need?"
"Am I prepared to live with the consequences of a surgical operation (i.e. pain, wrong organ removed, permanent damage, etc.)?"
"Does the organ in question (to be removed via surgery) have a function other than a physical function (i.e. emotional function)?"
"Will removal of an organ tax another organ in the body due to having to take up the slack of the removed organ?"
"Would the surgery be suggested if I didn't have medical insurance or the cash to pay for it?"
These are a few necessary and intelligent questions to ask (yourself) when surgery has been advised or suggested by a doctor (surgeon).
Thank you for reading!
This article is compliments of Dherbs.Com. |