There is much buzz in the media about President Trump’s new pick for Surgeon General, Dr. Casey Means. She sprang into the spotlight, and the hot seat, just a few days ago when President Trump withdrew from consideration his first nominee, Dr. Janette Nesheiwat. Apparently Nesheiwat publicly misrepresented her medical schooling, and was also receiving strong criticism for supporting the Covid-19 jab during the pandemic. As such, they cancelled her confirmation hearing that was supposed to take place last Thursday, and instead President Trump appointed RFK, Jr. ally, Dr. Casey Means.
The sharks are circling, questions and criticisms are swarming pertaining to Means, everyone searching for some dirt or juicy storyline about this doctor. Honestly, that’s all fine and good, and they can all do their familiar tap dance if they like. But my question isn’t “Who is Dr. Casey Means?” or “Is she qualified for the position?” No, my question is much more cynical – esoteric even. My question strikes at the very heart of the cnidarian medusa head. I don’t want to know about the person who might possibly fill the seat. Instead I question the seat itself. I ask, “Do we even need a Surgeon General at all?”
The position of Surgeon General is not so much a functional position as much as it is a symbolic post. After all, the Surgeon General isn’t out there treating patients and performing surgeries across the country as the title may insinuate. No. Instead, the position symbolizes a very unhealthy and unnatural relationship between government and citizen. It is the foundation of the dangerous psyop that conditions the minds of Americans to believe that the government should tell you what to do, how to do it, when you can do it, and why. It is the poison seed of totalitarian control that is so cleverly disguised that scarcely a soul questions it.
Surgeons General warn us not to smoke tobacco, nor to consume alcohol when pregnant, don’t have sex without a condom, and so on. Seems harmless enough. I mean, they’re trying to help us, right? If that is what you are thinking, then you are missing the mark. You need to take a step back and look at this through a different lens. You need to see the forest for the trees.
Click HERE to continue reading the full article on the Brownstone Institute.