Dr. Mehmet Oz: “BRINGING SWEDENBORG INTO SURGERY”
Turkish spy Mehmet Oz’s 18th century alien-loving cult leader
h/t #KAnon, #BethAnon
Oprah Winfrey made Dr. Oz a household name and allowed him to get rich snookering middle-aged white ladies into buying all manner of fraudulent bullshit over the years, including a number of products that may have caused injury and/or death to people.
Here are their hilarious escapades after “55 shows” grifting together.
Regardless, it’s good that Oprah Winfrey finally endorsed John Fetterman, who is an actual human being from the state of Pennsylvania, and not a Turkish spy living in New Jersey who did ads for Cambridge Analytica.
But little known fact: Mehmet Oz is a Swedenborgian, which is not a made up name, it’s an actual pseudo-religious cult that popped up around an 18th century scientist named Emanuel Swedenborg who seems to have had a psychotic break in adulthood and started to write entire books based on his “visions” later in life.
There are an estimated 6,000 “Swedenborgians” in the United States.
Mehmet Oz doesn’t want anyone to see this article from the October/November 2007 issue of “Spirituality and Health” where he describes his devotion to the ideas of Emanuel Swedenborg but the Wayback Machine saved it for him.
In the article Mehmet Oz makes a number of startling admissions, like this one where he admits concealing the fact that he introduced the ideas of his cult leader Emanuel Swedenborg (1688-1772) “into surgery” from his heart patients.
BRINGING SWEDENBORG INTO SURGERY 😬
Here is Emanuel Swedenborg who probably knew a lot about heart surgery maybe. Ok, no they didn’t have heart surgery then:
Swedenborg’s visions, which came to him in dreams that he considered actual memories, included a variety of subjects, including humans living on other planets and the Moon.
Here’s an article from the late great Martin Gardner, describing Oz’s relationship to Swedenborg along with some of the more entertaining aspects of “Swedenborgianism.”
http://www.swedenborgstudy.com/articles/life-on-planets/mg10.htm
Swedenborg weighed in on all manner of subjects, including, as you can see, a number of books devoted to his visions about “Moon-men,” life on Mars and a variety of other astronomical bodies.
Swedenborg's most worthless book, Life on Other Worlds, contains—fasten your seatbelt!—detailed accounts of his out-of-body travels to the five then- known planets, the Moon, and five planets outside the solar system. On each of these worlds he was able to chat with the human inhabitants and the bodiless spirits of deceased humans who serve the inhabitants. He also visited the heavens and hells of some worlds, where he spoke with humans who became angels and humans evil enough to become demons. Some of these trips "lasted a day," he writes, "others a week, and yet others for months."
Swedenborg’s “visions” were very specific and could be lifted from any number of secret societies and cults, for example the Freemasons or Scientology.
Swedenborg's first visit was to Mercury. Its spirits were able to invade his brain, searching for facts and knowledge but having no interest in ideas or opinions. The most notable spirit he meets is none other than Aristotle. We are told he was a wise man in contrast to his many "foolish" Earth followers.
The human inhabitants of Mercury are slimmer than earthlings. Their women have smaller faces. Their clothes are tight fitting. In spite of Mercury's nearness to the sun, its atmosphere shields the planet from the sun's heat, producing a climate "not too hot or too cold."
Swedenborg then visits Jupiter. Its land is called "fertile." (Swedenborg had no way of knowing that Jupiter has no land.) Its inhabitants' main concern is bringing up their children, whom they dearly love. They are free of all evil impulses, such as stealing and greater crimes. They know nothing of wars but are a "gentle and sweet" people who live in a state of "blessedness" and "inner happiness." Their clothing is made of "bluish bark or cork." When they sit down to eat they do not use chairs or benches but instead sit on piles of fig leaves. Their horses resemble ours, only smaller.
While being in a para-religious cult is not necessarily disqualifying to be a Senator I guess, I think hiding the fact that you are bringing your cult beliefs INTO SURGERY is.
Hopefully John Fetterman is aware that his opponent is even crazier than he looks and less ethical than he seems. Dr. Oz is a dangerous grifter and should not be within a ten mile radius of Washington DC.
#ArrestMikeFlynn
Holy smokes. What the actual "F" ?
There’s so much beyond which us humans can know and nothing more scary and discomforting than the unknown. Unfortunately people are willing to believe almost anything than to face this fact of human existence. Even worse, there are always charlatans, grifters and “holy men”ready to take advantage of it. It’s a real predicament.