Wednesday, April 1, 2015

Cutting This Post Loose Was Tit

I can still use that word, right (no picture, of course)?

Angelina Jolie’s latest medical decision resonates with women

"But?" 

You can go and get inside that agenda-pushing piece of self-mutilating sickness if you wish regarding someone who truly looks like she is part of the Satanist Illuminati Cabal as some would describe the perverted elite. Maybe you think she is Maleficent, but there are certainly plenty of opinions to the contrary out there.

"Analysis of breast biopsies scrutinized; Subtle cases can elude detection" by Denise GradyNew York Times  March 18, 2015

NEW YORK — Misinterpretation can lead women to have surgery and other treatments they do not need, or to miss out on treatments they require.

The new findings, reported Tuesday in JAMA, challenge the common belief that a biopsy is the gold standard and will resolve any questions that might arise from an unclear mammogram or ultrasound.

Reminds me of what the great Jean De La Bruyere once said: 

"The exact contrary of what is generally believed is often the truth."

Certainly is in the 21st century.

In the United States, about 1.6 million women a year have breast biopsies; only about 20 percent of the tests find cancer.... 

Did you get your test or has that been rationed out? 

--more--"

Maybe mommy can explain things to you, kids, because I sure can't. Cutting off what make women so unique and beautiful (not to mention a crucial life-giving set of organs) based on what might happen (might not) seems ill to me, and part of a larger effort to transgender and homogonize the whole culture. I'm not the only one that sees it, either.

Sorry I wasn't able to make it to second base with you, readers, but the blog search servers are either off or censoring things because they are turning up nothing for links to key words that cannot be mistaken.

NDU: 

"She’s a major Hollywood celebrity and what happens to her is news, whether it’s a cancer scare or a wardrobe malfunction. But let’s put this in perspective." 

I did.

UPDATES: Breast cancer overtreatment costs $4b a year, analysts say

Don't let your teens grow up to cut off their tits.