The claim is compelling. But the author's writing style–punctuated with needless character assasinations, e.g. the dig about not being a lumberjack, or hyperbolic rhetorical questions–makes me wanting for a better source. (Author says, at the end, they have experience as a journalist, so I want to underline that I'm going off style alone right now.)
> The following newsletter has been rewritten using AI based on my original script for the video posted above—in the case of inconsistencies please defer to the video.
I have worked for some rather wealthy seniors living on waterfront property. Of all that pursued expensive stem cell injections, not one of them said the injections had solved any of their prior problems.
I'm reminded of "Dr. Death" aka Paolo Macchiarini, the former stem cell surgeon who washed plastic tracheal implants in a "stem cell bath" that did absolutely nothing to the plastic then inserted in people's throats only to cause them to choke to death. He was sentenced to 2.5 years in prison by a Swedish court for aggravated assault against patients he treated, but before the medical board finally took action against him he was heralded as a stem-cell revolutionary.
The claim is compelling. But the author's writing style–punctuated with needless character assasinations, e.g. the dig about not being a lumberjack, or hyperbolic rhetorical questions–makes me wanting for a better source. (Author says, at the end, they have experience as a journalist, so I want to underline that I'm going off style alone right now.)
> The following newsletter has been rewritten using AI based on my original script for the video posted above—in the case of inconsistencies please defer to the video.
I have worked for some rather wealthy seniors living on waterfront property. Of all that pursued expensive stem cell injections, not one of them said the injections had solved any of their prior problems.
I'm reminded of "Dr. Death" aka Paolo Macchiarini, the former stem cell surgeon who washed plastic tracheal implants in a "stem cell bath" that did absolutely nothing to the plastic then inserted in people's throats only to cause them to choke to death. He was sentenced to 2.5 years in prison by a Swedish court for aggravated assault against patients he treated, but before the medical board finally took action against him he was heralded as a stem-cell revolutionary.
https://www.science.org/content/article/disgraced-surgeon-pa...
Answer: faulty stem cell injections from "stem cell injector to the stars" Dr. Adeel Khan
“ They even discussed opening a mutually-branded clinic together in Abu Dhabi.”
Going after the big money, fad-following elite? Or does the locale mitigate the (financial) risk?