 As most of you know, we live in a world where people value authority, the majority being told their whole lives who to trust, even putting their own health in the hands of someone else. In many cases, an official title is more of a shroud, as when you understand the person's credentials, what they actually did to get that title. It's fairly underwhelming. And the doctor isn't going to exactly tell you they only received 20 hours of nutritional training in the entirety of medical school when you ask them a question. Most doctors will appeal to the conventional wisdom that diet doesn't matter, kind of boomer-esque. Some of them might refer you to a gastroenterologist or a dietitian. The more honest doctors, still not honest, might say, hey, the diet isn't really related to your illness. You have to take this pill or do this procedure. When in actuality, diet is the most likely root cause of your problem. So the titles can be a little confusing, because if someone goes to college and gets a doctorate in engineering, they might call themselves doctor, but we really mean doctor of medicine, MD, or physician. All receiving minimal nutrition training, and there is an excellent, excellent study on this. You couldn't really ask for a better one, status of nutrition education in medical schools. Numerous entreaties have been made over the past two decades to improve the nutrition knowledge and skills of medical students and physicians. However, most graduating medical students continue to rate their nutrition preparation as inadequate. During 2004, we surveyed all 126 U.S. medical schools accredited at that time. So literally every single medical school that a doctor could have possibly come out of. A total of 106 surveys were returned with a response rate of 84%. 99 of the 106 schools responding required some form of nutrition education. However, only 32 schools, which is 30%, required a separate nutrition course. On average, students received 23.9 contact hours of nutrition instruction during medical school anywhere from 2 to 70 hours. Only 40 schools required the minimum 25 hours recommended by the National Academy of Sciences. Most instructors, 88% of them, expressed the need for additional nutrition instruction at their institutions. Patients routinely seek physicians guidance about diet and the relation of nutrition to the prevention and treatment of disease is well known. However, practicing physicians continually rate their nutrition knowledge and skills as inadequate. It also is no surprise that more than one half of graduating medical students report that the time dedicated to nutrition instruction is inadequate. What's funny is it's not even 24 hours of pure nutrition training. It's half biochemistry, physiology, and some other stuff. Now I don't really know anyone who has put as many hours into objective nutrition research as I have. Well over a thousand YouTube videos, thousands and thousands of hours of reading research papers, experimenting and thinking about nutrition. But I'm sitting here barely getting any consultations, having to focus my efforts on other business ventures while some doctors with less than 2% of my nutritional knowledge are making literal millions of dollars per year with far less effort and success with their clients. I know that, so I don't really bother pushing consultations or care about them. I know it's not in my wheelhouse because of that authority. Most people are willing to cough up the money for a doctor that's not going to fix their health instead of considering someone like myself. With a full head of hair, I must say, fucking cock suckers. As ugly on the outside as they are on the inside. So despite almost anyone knowing more about nutrition than doctors, these doctors are using their MD credentials to make boatloads of money while giving people poor nutrition advice. Kind of ironic considering that dietitians, the actual government trained nutritionists make very, very little money in comparison. Granted, it's much less schooling overall. There are far more hours of training to be a dietitian in nutrition compared to a doctor. You need a bachelor's degree that have some science and nutrition courses in it, biology. After that, you go through an internship of 1200 hours supervised practice experience and 900 hours in professional work settings. Then you can take the RAD, registered dietitian exam, and compare it to the measly two dozen hours of training a doctor is getting, it makes you wonder why this isn't spoken about more. No one looked into the specific numbers apparently. It's not all bad though. With any sort of education, there are things you'll learn as a dietitian even as a medical doctor that can be applied to nutrition. Problem is, the training is heavily geared towards modern pharmaceutical treatment of health issues combined with symptom alleviation as opposed to making the person truly healthy. Even if a dietitian or doctor breaks free from that echo chamber, they will be at risk of their license being revoked. It's not that they don't want to, they can't. Which is why most of these professionals keep their practice private and public presence minimal. There are a few shills here and there that are allowed to speak on certain topics to an extent. But if they were actually against big pharma or modern health advice, their professional career would be shut down yesterday. The majority of doctors are likely just brainwashed in that echo chamber. Some of them will fully ignorant and some just crooked and evil trying to make as much money as possible. Like the scumbag that fried my grandmother's brain with statins. But the real reason doctors make so much more is that they're in the club. I've had a few people comment on my channel, oh my brother was going to be a doctor, they made him fail his board exams. There's a lot of crooked stuff going on to become a doctor. But if you're curious what dietitians actually do, like regulating blood sugar in certain diabetic patients, lowering cholesterol in people taking statin medication. Maybe someone has high blood pressure or kidney problems and they're reducing the salt in their diet, help people lose weight with seco and treat eating disorders. But because the dietitians' knowledge is similar to the food pyramid and veggies, grains. They don't really know what they're talking about. We've made so many videos on Abby Sharp, Trash talking her after she had six miscarriages. So there's a reason for that. So here we have, I'm not sure how to say it, the caduceus, aka staff of Hermes, two snakes and the symbolism seems pretty obvious to me. So the powers at B will poison our food, water, air, radiation, make us sick. That's one of the snakes. And then the other snake is them coming to treat us with more poison. That's why it's two snakes. When you call someone a snake, it's not a good thing. When people try to say, oh no, it's a good staff, it's a good symbolism, dude. I don't care what you say to me. You're not going to convince me a snake is a good thing, okay? And doctors are snakes. So it's a perfect symbolism. Hey, listen, look, I'm generalizing a lot. There are some reasonable people out there, but unfortunately most of them are rotten apples. So thank you guys for joining me today. If you could please drop a like on the video, leave a comment down below, subscribe so that YouTube can unsubscribe you next week, and be sure to check that notification bell so they don't notify you of my videos. Therefore, guys, go to frank-to-the-file.com to support me through all of my businesses. Thanks again for joining me, guys. It's funny because I went to get the plates and my jaw removed, and for some reason, when I was in that hospital, people there, like I could tell the doctors knew something about me and they didn't like me, but whatever, maybe my brain is just a little too big.