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26. No, I Do Not Have PAD

Originally posted as "No, I Do Not Have PAD (Peripheral Artery Disease)" at ej-rim.blogspot.com on November 1, 2021

I never had any major medical issues in my life.

Someone(s) out there is feeding bogus medical information to the public.

Why would anyone feed this bogus medical information to the public so an advertiser can pick up such bogus medical information from the public domain? Or was it a direct mailing from the doctor in the medical institution? If it was a direct mailing, where did it get my name and address from?

I do not know the exact number, but at least two open-card advertising mailings were sent to me in the latter half of 2021. The year 2021 was the most dangerous year for me; so many deadly attacks on me occurred by institutional terrorists and RICO gangs.

This is why I think this could be the preparation for a premeditated murder plot to kill me.

No, a heart issue was not the cause of my mother's death. 

How she passed away more than 50 years ago is unknown and will never be known unless the culprits confess before they die. 

I do not believe a medical condition was the primary cause of her death at the beginning. Frankly, I believe she was murdered in disguise of medical issues that she did not have until 1966.

No, I do not have hereditary heart problems. We were brainwashed into thinking that somehow our maternal side had some sort of medical problem. That's not true.

There are many reasons why people die early. Just like right now, someone(s) could be trying to set me up with a premeditated murder plot to kill me with externally induced heart failure.

Just for the record, I never had any medical issue, an illness, or been prescribed any drugs for all my life on any prolonged-term basis. I am as strong and healthy as an ox. 

I was constantly reminded of my weak physical status when I was a child and a teen growing up without my mother. That was misinformation and a lie that was propagated by my personal enemies even before I reached adulthood.

I was a top recruit as far as physical stamina and endurance were concerned while I was in military service. 

My healthy body and mind are lifelong gifts from my mother, who passed away over 50 years ago.

Now someone(s) is pushing for bogus medical information about my health status into the public domain database. That is very concerning.

Why would anyone send me an invitation for a medical study for PAD at the address where I only resided for a few months, with my exact name matching to the suffix, which I rarely use? 

There were no physical examinations, for whatsoever that showed that I had PAD in the past. So they do not have any basis for assuming that I have PAD (peripheral artery disease).

I can perfectly understand the legitimacy of such advertisements in public places, like in mass transit train cabins, where I often saw such advertisements on Chicago's CTA trains.  

Is it even legal to send out an open postcard with a specific disease (PAD) named on it? A medical research participant recruiting advertisement with your name printed on it. 

I do not think so. Even if it is legal, that's one terrible form of medical study participant recruitment advertising.

Then everyone will think I have a heart condition when they see that open postcard advertisement with my name on it. If nothing else, the advertiser who sent me the postcard using fake medical information will keep using that database listing.

This could be used as preparation for a premeditated murder by an induced heart failure.

So why would they, if they were indeed planning such a crime?

  1. It could be related to life insurance fraud. You may have life insurance you do not know you have or are a part of.
  2. It could be satanic death cult murder to retaliate you as a part of their hate crime for profit.
  3. It could be an attempt to conceal their crimes that they think you know of.
  4. It could be just a murder plot to keep everything in the status quo so that everybody can enjoy their lives at the expense of your life.
  5. It may be some sort of death threat that they often sent me in the past in Georgia. i.e., they often sent me unsolicited funeral house cremation service advertisements.
  6. There may be many other reasons.


This unsolicited medical research invitation postcard is just a bad thing. It shouldn't have been sent out in the format it has, and I believe it may have been sent out intentionally as a threat and to propagate bogus medical information into the public domain, neighborhood, advertisers' databases, and to be flagged by future medical insurers' attention.

This could also provide a cover for premeditated murder by externally induced heart failure.

The worst part is that having this kind of false medical information in the public domain will make it easier for those who commit life insurance claim fraud to evade future investigations.

Nowadays, the majority of investigations conducted by investigators in any field are conducted online.

Leaving any prejudicial information intentionally, whether it is correct or not, is just bad, or even worse, a criminal practice.

 

 

I was the perfect patsy.

I was the perfect patsy, designated to take all the falls for all my enemies' wrongdoings, crimes, and secrets from many groups of my en...