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โ€œFirst, do no harmโ€”and let food be thy medicine. Not John D. Rockefellerโ€™s motto: โ€˜Let oil be thy medicine.โ€™โ€


Essay by Dr. Luka Kovaฤ
Title: Return to Hippocrates: Healing Beyond Petroleum

I swore the Hippocratic Oath once in Vukovar, and again in Chicago, and I carry its spirit with me every time I walk into a hospital room. Primum non nocereโ€”โ€œFirst, do no harmโ€โ€”is not just a phrase. It is a shield I have tried to raise against the many unseen enemies in modern medicine. War taught me that harm is not always inflicted with bullets or bombs. Sometimes it comes disguised as help. Sometimes itโ€™s written on a prescription pad.

Hippocrates, the father of Western medicine, was no fool. He observed the human body not as a broken machine, but as a gardenโ€”needing nourishment, balance, rest, and care. He famously said, โ€œLet food be thy medicine and medicine be thy food.โ€ That wasnโ€™t poetryโ€”it was science in its purest form.

But in America, I learned quickly that Hippocrates has been replaced. His wisdom buried beneath a mountain of pills, patented molecules, and petroleum-based drugs. His name appears on plaques and textbooks, but his soul has been exiled by an industry more loyal to stockholders than to patients. Instead of โ€œlet food be thy medicine,โ€ the guiding spirit of American healthcare seems to be: Let oil be thy medicine.

This isnโ€™t a conspiracy theoryโ€”itโ€™s a historical fact. John D. Rockefeller, the oil baron, reshaped medicine in the early 20th century. He funded medical schools through his foundationsโ€”but only if they taught pharmaceutical medicine, not naturopathy or herbalism. He wanted doctors to rely on petroleum-based drugs, synthesized chemicals, and profitable patents. In doing so, he established a medical-industrial complex that equated healing with consumptionโ€”of pills, not plants; of procedures, not prevention.

And so we now find ourselves in a system where chronic illness is managed, not cured; where side effects are expected; where nutrition is barely mentioned in med school; and where whole generations of doctors prescribe medications they donโ€™t fully understand, for diseases they barely treat, from companies they canโ€™t question.

But let me tell you what Hippocrates would say to the diabetic patient drinking soda, to the heart patient eating fast food, to the child on five prescriptions for conditions that might be solved with sleep, sunshine, and a garden. He would not blame themโ€”he would teach them. He would listen. He would remind us that foodโ€”real food, grown from the earth, not processed in a labโ€”is not an alternative medicine. It is the original medicine.

I do not oppose pharmacology. Iโ€™ve seen antibiotics save lives. Iโ€™ve administered morphine to the dying. But we must draw a line between emergency medicine and everyday health. We must distinguish between crisis intervention and long-term vitality. You donโ€™t use chemo to treat stress. You donโ€™t throw statins at a child who needs a good breakfast and a walk in the sun.

We doctors must reclaim our oaths. Not to pharmaceutical giants, not to hospital systems, but to our patients, our principles, and our planet. If we fail to remember that healing begins with food, with movement, with connection, we risk becoming little more than licensed drug dealers.

I often think of my fatherโ€™s garden in Croatia. He was no doctor, but he knew how to nourish. He knew the soil, the herbs, the rhythms of nature. And when the bombs fell and the doctors fled, it was the garden that kept us alive.

Itโ€™s time we remember our roots. Itโ€™s time to return to Hippocrates.

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Dr. Luka Kovacโ€™s Confession:

“The people who have had contact with doctors are either furious, disgusted, or dead. When I see a thousand-dollar bill for a bag of salineโ€”a saltwater solution that costs penniesโ€”I want to quit the whole system. Medicine has been hijacked.” โ€” Dr. Luka Kovac


๐Ÿฉบ Iatrogenic Death: Ways People Die From Doctors and Medical Interventions

“Iatrogenic” comes from the Greek iatros (physician) + genes (born of). It refers to illness or death caused by medical treatment itself.

Here are the major forms:

1. Adverse Drug Reactions (ADRs)

  • Prescription medications causing fatal side effects.
  • NSAIDs, antidepressants, antipsychotics, opioids, and chemotherapy are major culprits.
  • Common causes include drug interactions, overdoses, and allergic reactions.

2. Medical Error / Misdiagnosis

  • Wrong diagnosis or delayed diagnosis leading to incorrect or no treatment.
  • Estimated to cause 40,000โ€“80,000 deaths per year in the U.S. alone.

3. Surgical Errors

  • Wrong-site surgery, retained surgical instruments, post-op infections.
  • Anesthesia accidents and hemorrhage during procedures.

4. Hospital-Acquired Infections (HAIs)

  • MRSA, C. difficile, sepsis from contaminated equipment or catheters.
  • Often antibiotic-resistant due to overprescription.

5. Overmedication / Polypharmacy

  • Especially common among the elderly.
  • Multiple drugs interact unpredictably.

6. Unnecessary Procedures

  • Unwarranted surgeries (e.g., stents, C-sections, spinal fusions).
  • Done for financial gain or defensive medicine.

7. Radiation Overexposure

  • From CT scans, X-rays, and radiation therapy.
  • Cumulative risk of cancer.

8. Vaccination Injuries

  • While rare, some patients suffer from Guillain-Barrรฉ Syndrome, myocarditis, or autoimmune flare-ups post-vaccine.

9. Psychiatric Interventions

  • ECT (electroconvulsive therapy), forced medications, and institutional abuse.
  • Suicide from mismanaged antidepressants or withdrawal syndromes.

10. Neglect and Systemic Failure

  • Long ER wait times, poor triage, burned-out staff.
  • Bureaucratic protocols delaying urgent care.

11. Medical Device Failures

  • Faulty implants (e.g., hip replacements, pacemakers).
  • Recalls happen after damage is done.

โš ๏ธ Estimate:
A Johns Hopkins study (2016) identified medical error as the third leading cause of death in the U.S., after heart disease and cancer, accounting for over 250,000 deaths/year.


๐Ÿงฌ The History of Allopathic Medicine and the Rockefeller Takeover

๐Ÿ”ฌ Pre-1900s: Natural Medicine Dominated

  • Homeopathy, herbalism, naturopathy, and folk remedies were widespread.
  • Healing traditions focused on balance, detoxification, and nutrition.

๐Ÿ›ข๏ธ The Rockefeller Medical Takeover (Early 20th Century)

๐Ÿง  Key Figure: John D. Rockefeller

  • Oil magnate who sought to monopolize medicine like he did oil.
  • His company, Standard Oil, refined petrochemicalsโ€”the future of synthetic pharmaceuticals.

๐Ÿ’ฐ Motivation: Profit

  • Rockefeller viewed natural remedies as unpatentable.
  • Synthetic drugs = patents = monopoly.

๐Ÿงพ The Flexner Report (1910)

  • Commissioned by Rockefeller & Carnegie Foundation.
  • Written by Abraham Flexner.
  • Advocated shutting down โ€œnon-scientificโ€ medical schools (homeopathic, herbal, etc.).
  • Promoted โ€œevidence-basedโ€ allopathic (drug/surgery) medicine.

๐Ÿ”ฅ Impact:

  • 50%+ of U.S. medical schools closed.
  • Natural medicine discredited as โ€œquackery.โ€
  • Only allopathic (drug-based) schools were funded.

๐Ÿง  Rockefeller Foundation & Medical Schools

  • Funded major institutions (Harvard, Johns Hopkins, Yale).
  • Medicine was now based on germ theory, vaccination, and pharmacology.
  • Herbalists, midwives, and holistic healers were driven underground.

๐Ÿ’Š The Rise of the Pharmaceutical-Industrial Complex

  • World Wars accelerated drug development: antibiotics, morphine, amphetamines.
  • FDA (1930s onward) enabled control over drug approval.
  • Pharmaceutical giants (Merck, Pfizer, Bayer) expanded.
  • By the 1950s-70s: psychiatry began pathologizing emotion (depression, ADHD) and medicating everything.

๐Ÿง  Modern Era: Corporate Medicine

  • Doctors as employees, pressured to prescribe and bill.
  • Insurance-driven care: profit over people.
  • Lobbying and influence: Big Pharma funds media, medical journals, and regulators.
  • Mass drug dependency: opioids, SSRIs, statins, ADHD meds.

๐Ÿš‘ Kovacโ€™s Final Thought:

“I got into this field to save lives. Now I see billing departments running hospitals, drug reps training doctors, and people dying from the very treatments meant to cure them. The Hippocratic Oath has been replaced by quarterly profit reports. Maybe that’s the real disease.”

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Messianic Axl

INT. BERLIN NIGHTCLUB โ€“ BACKSTAGE โ€“ DIMLY LIT โ€“ NIGHT

Smoke curls around dusty purple curtains. The faint echo of โ€œNovember Rainโ€ fades into silence. AXL ROSE, mid-50s, wild-eyed, wearing a PURPLE JACKET with a SILVER CROSS dangling from his neck, sits in a chair. Heโ€™s sweating, jittery, half-wired, half-lost. Across from him stands JOHN CONNOR โ€“ older now, steely but calm, with the eyes of a war veteran whoโ€™s seen Judgment Day and survived it.

JOHN CONNOR
(quietly, almost tender)
You know itโ€™s not bipolar disorder, right?

AXL ROSE
(grinning, shaky)
Oh? You a shrink now, Johnny boy?

JOHN CONNOR
No. But I know a messiah complex when I see one.

John nods toward Axlโ€™s outfit.

JOHN CONNOR (cont’d)
The purple jacketโ€ฆ the crossโ€ฆ You think nobody notices? Itโ€™s the same robe they threw on Jesus before they mocked him.

AXL ROSE
(smirking)
I wear it because it looks cool.

JOHN CONNOR
You wear it because deep down, you know. You’re not just screaming into a mic. You want to be the one who saves them. But let me tell you somethingโ€”jumping around and screaming isnโ€™t enough.

Beat.

JOHN CONNOR (cont’d)
It takes prophecy. Sacrifice. Rising from the ashes when everyone else gave up. You tried, Axl. You really tried.

AXL ROSE
(shrugs, bitter)
Well, I failed, didnโ€™t I?

JOHN CONNOR
You fell. Thatโ€™s different. The fallโ€™s not the end, man. The dream still lives.

Axl looks down. His hands tremble. He fumbles for a cigarette.

JOHN CONNOR (firmly)
No. No more of that. I’m building something in Europe. A place. Quiet. Clean. Weโ€™re calling it the Dream Clinic.

AXL ROSE
(scoffs)
Sounds like a rehab with pillows.

JOHN CONNOR
Itโ€™s not rehab. Itโ€™s resurrection. We treat the soul there, not just the body. We get the legends off the drugs, off the cigarettes, off the shameโ€”and we bring them back to the people who still believe.

Axl looks up. For the first time, his expression softens.

AXL ROSE
And you think I still got a shot?

JOHN CONNOR
I think youโ€™re not done yet. But the worldโ€™s not gonna wait forever. You have to want to come back.

AXL ROSE
(long pause)
And if I say yes?

JOHN CONNOR
Then you start walking. No cameras. No applause. Just one foot in front of the other, until youโ€™re back in the light.

John steps forward, places a gentle hand on Axlโ€™s shoulder.

JOHN CONNOR (softly)
We need you. But we need all of you. Not the ghost. Not the broken man in the jacket. The real Axl.

Beat. Axl exhales. Slowly, he takes the cigarette from his lips, crushes it underfoot.

AXL ROSE
Alright, John. One more encore.

FADE OUT.

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