The medical community not wearing masks is not safe, not intelligent enough to actually effectively care for you, cannot be trusted ethically in the charge of your care, and should be written off as reckless vectors of disease, chronic illness, and death at every level from EMT to MD/DO.

From the CDC to your general practitioner.

My doctor resigned in protest of unsafe working conditions, and his replacement is an unmasked clown.

#COVID19 #CovidIsNotOver #COVIDisAirborne

its interesting.

The reaction I get from healthcare workers when im wearing my elastomeric mask and they have none is one of either surprise or shame.

Surprise means theyre uninformed about post-viral illness, cognitive impairment in 10-30% of COVID incidences, and limited duration of immunity to covid.

Shame, when they know I know theyre harming their patients and family and thus are Unethical providers (and legitimately depraved people tbh).

#COVID19 #CovidIsNotOver #COVIDisAirborne

if youre asking whether i consider unmasked healthcare workers on the level of Unit 731 doctors/scientists, or Something similar, the answer is: no.

ive no evidence Unit 731 ever acted as invasive vectors toward their own family.

(a bit glib and tongue in cheek, but tis the only way to cope with human anti-society).

to me, human uncivilization is all ive ever known.

Asthma age 8? 4/5 family members smoking without ventilation like chimneys for their 1980s-90s Marlboro Points.

Human uncivilization is epitomized by healthcare providers unmasking. may as well stop washing hands.

#COVID19 #CovidIsNotOver #COVIDisAirborne

@hannu_ikonen me too. Also, my asthma was untreated because “you can’t have asthma, it doesn’t run in MY family.,..”
@hannu_ikonen oh and, “are you done rolling our cigarettes?!” Because my hands were smallest.
@kthornton @hannu_ikonen on Saturday afternoons in 1980s Britain we had "World of Sport" and "Grandstand" on the telly, and all our dads/uncles sat round the telly watching sports (usually sportsball/wrestling/motor and horse racing and snooker and smoking cigarettes), all the sports were sponsored by tobacco companies, so of course when we reached teenage years half of us took up smoking as it was normal..

@kthornton @hannu_ikonen

I mistyped some punctuation so it reads like "snooker and smoking cigarettes" was part of the same sport; but during the 1980s extent that genuinely was the case (I used to jokingly call the tournament the "World Smoker Championship")

@kthornton @hannu_ikonen

My parents thought allergies were "made up". Not mine (I didn't realize I had them back then) - *all* allergies. Ironically, I'm pretty sure my mom had MCAS (had problems with itch, hives, nausea, headaches) & fibromyalgia ("aches & pains") & IBS-C.

@Rhyothemis @hannu_ikonen yeah, i ended up with ra….

@kthornton @hannu_ikonen

"... active and heavy tobacco smoking ... is the most important environmental risk factor for [rheumatoid arthritis] with its attributable risk sustained for up to 20 years after discontinuation ..."
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12950-015-0092-1

#RheumatoidArthritis #autoimmunity #AutoimmuneDisease #health

Is air pollution a risk factor for rheumatoid arthritis? - Journal of Inflammation

Rheumatoid arthritis is a chronic inflammatory debilitating disease triggered by a complex interaction involving genetic and environmental factors. Active smoking and occupational exposures such as silica increase its risk, suggesting that initial inflammation and generation of rheumatoid arthritis-related autoantibodies in the lungs may precede the clinical disease. This hypothesis paved the way to epidemiological studies investigating air pollution as a potential determinant of rheumatoid arthritis. Studies designed for epidemiology of rheumatoid arthritis found a link between traffic, a surrogate of air pollution, and this disease. Furthermore, a small case–control study recently found an association between wood smoke exposure and anticyclic citrullinated protein/peptide antibody in sera of patients presenting wood-smoke-related chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. However, reports addressing impact of specific pollutants on rheumatoid arthritis incidence and severity across populations are somewhat conflicting. In addition to the link reported between other systemic autoimmune rheumatic diseases and particulate matters/gaseous pollutants, experimental observation of exacerbated rheumatoid arthritis incidence and severity in mice models of collagen-induced arthritis after diesel exhaust particles exposure as well as hypovitaminosis D-related autoimmunity can help understand the role of air pollution in rheumatoid arthritis. All these considerations highlight the necessity to extend high quality epidemiological researches investigating different sources of atmospheric pollution across populations and particularly in low-and-middle countries, in order to further explore the biological plausibility of air pollution’s effect in the pathogenesis of rheumatoid arthritis. This should be attempted to better inform policies aiming to reduce the burden of rheumatoid arthritis.

BioMed Central
@Rhyothemis @hannu_ikonen and I never smoked. By the way, my parents were huge Rethuglicans. Racist, terrible humans. I ghosted them forever ago. Narcissists before anyone knew what that was. Total psychos. Have no idea how I didn’t inherit that. I did inherit the RA gene, but I’m grateful that I avoided the Sopranos-esque psych profile, at least.

@kthornton @hannu_ikonen

I can relate. It's very painful to grow up in a family like that. My mom grew up in what was then known as Danzig during the Nazi era. I remember her saying, voice full of contempt, 'You always were a sickly child'. But she had similar health problems 'Yes, but I'm old - I wasn't like that when I was young'.

/1

@kthornton @hannu_ikonen

Interestingly, I think some of the health issues relate to being a gene carrier for familial Mediterranean fever. I have the rare variant that is most commonly found in the Ashkenazi Jewish population. I also carry a gene for a fatty acid oxidation disorder (MCAD) - which is most common in ppl from England, so I'm guessing that was from my father. 2/2