A very reasonable assessment. I'd define deaths from medical malpractice as deaths that occurred either due to negligence or malevolence. Deaths that could have been prevented by having a higher skilled doctor indicate that the knowledge aspect of medical education needs to be further improved. Deaths due negligence or malevolence are an issue of moral character; these indicate an inability to take the Hippocratic oath seriously. This happens when medical personal are non-white and have a relatively underdeveloped prefrontal cortex (e.g. niggers), or when they are white and happen have sociopathic traits due to a malfunctioning amygdala. Either way, to me the moral aspect of being a doctor seems self-evident, but apparently there is a need to heavily enforce this throughout both education and via issuing severe penalties.
A very reasonable assessment. I'd define deaths from medical malpractice as deaths that occurred either due to negligence or malevolence. Deaths that could have been prevented by having a higher skilled doctor indicate that the knowledge aspect of medical education needs to be further improved. Deaths due negligence or malevolence are an issue of moral character; these indicate an inability to take the Hippocratic oath seriously. This happens when medical personal are non-white and have a relatively underdeveloped prefrontal cortex (e.g. niggers), or when they are white and happen have sociopathic traits due to a malfunctioning amygdala. Either way, to me the moral aspect of being a doctor seems self-evident, but apparently there is a need to heavily enforce this throughout both education and via issuing severe penalties.
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