|
|
|
|
|
by mike_hearn
358 days ago
|
|
You're claiming healthcare advice is an emergent phenomenon and also agreeing that people who spread "verifiably false" misinformation lost their license - a totally non-emergent phenomenon. I get that your faith in authority is so strong you don't really believe there were any mistakes made there, and thus that the people who were fired for opposing public health mandates weren't really part of the healthcare system at all in some sense. But they were a part of it, and mistakes were made by public health officials, many of which they later admitted to. Again: pick your side. Advice motivated by career-ending penalties for non-compliance cannot be said to be an emergent phenomenon. |
|
How many allow their doctors to relay verifiably false medical information with their patients? Roughly zero.
Is this because there's some big conspiracy of all 60 licensure boards getting together to suppress information, or is it because each of them has independently reached the self-evident conclusion that licensees spreading false information destroys the credibility of the profession?
Emergent phenomena, amigo.