The Starry Messenger's Warning

Galileo, the Perils of Suppressed Truth, and Modern Medicine's Own Inquisition on Free Discourse, Autonomy, and the Value of Life?

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A Message from Dr. McMillan

Every so often, an interview comes along that shifts everything.

In 2021, it was Geert, Dr. Chetty, and Dr. Robert Malone. Voices that challenged the mainstream and changed how many of us understood what was really happening.

Now, it’s Lisa Miron. A seasoned legal mind with the courage to speak clearly, Lisa has uncovered one of the most profound and dangerous traps being laid for the world. One that affects not just medicine, but freedom, sovereignty, and speech itself.

It demands your time. It deserves your full attention. And it may just be one of the most important messages you’ll hear this year.

Watch it. Share it. And most importantly - be part of the fight to keep your freedom.

Dr. Philip McMillan

In this week's May 23, 2025 update:

  • COVID-19: Galileo and the perils of suppressed truth

  • Vejon: This week’s featured Vejon video

  • Health: Global pandemic accord without U.S. participation

  • Infographic: The starry messenger's warning

  • News: Medical news in brief

  • Education: McMillan - Masterclass Live

    Read time: 6 minutes

FEATURE ARTICLE

COVID-19

  • Galileo's persecution parallels modern suppression of clinicians who challenge official COVID narratives or vaccine policies.

  • Medical regulators are increasingly policing speech, creating fear and silencing dissent within the profession.

  • Clinicians may face moral distress as bureaucratic systems and AI undermine their autonomy and patient relationships.

  • New laws threaten free expression in healthcare, risking ethical erosion and state-driven decisions about life and death.

Why this is important: When truth becomes subordinate to authority, medicine risks becoming a tool of control rather than care. Silencing dissent, eroding clinical autonomy, and codifying speech restrictions could transform healing professions into enforcers of ideology - undermining trust, ethics, and the sanctity of the doctor-patient relationship.

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RESEARCH

  • Despite its recent implementation, the new global pandemic agreement offers little more than aspirational goals to bolster pandemic preparation.

  • The U.S. did not participate, intending to withdraw from the WHO, following an executive order.

  • Could the agreement's aim to share intellectual property actually disincentivize crucial pharmaceutical innovation for future treatments?.

  • Doubts remain about its capacity to meaningfully improve flawed disease surveillance or address the chronic global shortage of healthcare workers.

Why this is important: As this pandemic accord moves forward without US backing and with unresolved disputes over critical resource sharing, these conclusions cast serious doubt on whether the world is truly better prepared for the next global health crisis.

INFOGRAPHIC

EDUCATION

Join the live Masterclass sessions twice each month with priority Q&A access. Led by Dr McMillan, these cover a broad range of health and wellness topics. Also get unlimited access to the full library of recorded Masterclass sessions.

MEDICAL NEWS IN BRIEF

NEWS HIGHLIGHTS

🚥 FDA Shifts COVID-19 Vaccine Strategy to Prioritize High-Risk Groups Only: By narrowing vaccine access to only high-risk groups, the FDA shifts focus from public health strategy to individual risk management. The decision marks a pivotal turn in pandemic policy with far-reaching implications for trust, access, and preparedness.

🚥 What We Can Learn About Longevity from the Life of a 115-Year-Old Woman: Living to 115 is rare, but the habits linked to longer, healthier lives - like daily movement, plant-rich diets, regular sleep, and strong social ties - are accessible to most. While genes play a part, everyday choices shape much of our health span, offering a roadmap to resilience even when longevity itself can't be guaranteed.

🚥 US Bird Flu Cases Halt Abruptly, Prompting Concerns Over Surveillance Gaps: 
The abrupt halt in U.S. bird flu cases highlights weaknesses in surveillance, potentially masking undetected infections and complicating efforts to prevent future outbreaks, especially among vulnerable farmworker populations whose health concerns might remain hidden.

🚥 Antidepressants Show Promise in Boosting Immune Response Against Cancer: Repurposing SSRIs (Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors), already widely used and well-tolerated, could revolutionize cancer treatment by reactivating immune cells and enhancing tumor suppression - potentially transforming both standalone therapies and the effectiveness of current immune checkpoint treatments, all without the high cost or time burden of developing new drugs from scratch. [SOURCE]

🚥 How to Rebuild Your Focus in a World of Constant Distraction: A shrinking attention span isn’t inevitable - it's reversible. With simple, intentional habits like active breaks, focused single-tasking, and meaningful goals, we can retrain our brains, reclaim concentration, and rediscover the pleasure of deep focus in a world designed to distract.

🚥 Why Morning Showers Might be Better for Your Skin and Health: Choosing when to shower isn't just personal preference; showering in the morning significantly reduces overnight microbial buildup, limits daytime odor, and minimizes allergenic contaminants from bed linen, underlining the vital connection between daily hygiene practices and skin health.

BOOK NOOK

"Disease X: Are You Prepared?" is your comprehensive guide to navigating the uncertain future of global health. Drawing from experience and the latest scientific insights, this book offers:

  • Practical strategies for personal and community preparedness.

  • Lessons learned from COVID-19 and other outbreaks.

  • Actionable steps to boost resilience against emerging health threats.

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