image credit: mikelweisser.org
Robert Graboyes has a disturbing piece at Discourse Magazine,
“A new guidance document for medical professionals emphasizes critical race
theory and social justice at the expense of patient care.” Here are some extracts:
In October, two of the most
powerful medical organizations in America—the American Medical Association
(AMA) and the American Association of Medical Colleges—released “Advancing Health Equity: A Guide to Language, Narrative and
Concepts,” or AHE. Its 54 densely packed pages admonish American physicians
to regiment their speech to conform with woke terminology. The document
implores doctors to abandon ordinary expressions in favor of politically
charged, politically correct circumlocutions.
Medical professionals are now expected to traverse a linguistic minefield, abandoning hundreds of familiar expressions and replacing them with tortured academic cadences. Failure to conform, the document implies, is a severe moral failing.
This is not merely replacing the
simple with the sesquipedalian. The doctor’s every utterance must contain an
air of accusation. When someone is ill, it is because someone else is to blame.
Previously, a caring doctor might have told an African American patient that
his lineage makes him especially vulnerable to diabetes. No more. In
woke-speak, the word “vulnerable” is verboten. Now, the doctor must refer to
the patient as “oppressed,” “made vulnerable” or “disenfranchised.” Someone, or
some grotesque societal failing, is to blame for the patient’s
higher-than-average risk of diabetes. The explanation for this particular
lexical shift is representative of AHE’s tone and worldview. . .
. . .
The entire document reads like
final exam essays written by a student who forgot to study—endless strings of
half-remembered vocabulary words assembled randomly in hopes that the professor
will count the words but not read them. Every med student, every doctor in
America must endure hundreds of such homilies and conform or be weighed in the
balance and found wanting. Doctors must abandon the notion that a patient bears
some individual responsibility for his or her health status. Whatever ails you,
somebody out there did it to you. In the search for scapegoats, AHE taps into
the fashionable academic catechisms of critical race theory and intersectionality
and swears fealty to both.
. . .
In “We Got Here Because of Cowardice. We Get Out With Courage:
Say No to the Woke Revolution,” Bari Weiss masterfully describes
the wokeness phenomenon. While she does not specifically address AHE, her
descriptions provide a valuable lens on the document. Woke ideology “begins by
stipulating that the forces of justice and progress are in a war against
backwardness and tyranny. . . . [P]ersuasion . . . is replaced with public
shaming. Moral complexity is replaced with moral certainty. Facts are replaced
with feelings. . . . Ideas are replaced with identity. Forgiveness is replaced
with punishment. Debate is replaced with de-platforming. Diversity is replaced
with homogeneity of thought. Inclusion, with exclusion.”
. . .
Public health exhibits a recurring
pattern: (1) Declare that X is now a public health issue. (2) Declare that X is
in crisis. (3) Flout legal and constitutional norms to quell said crisis.
During the pandemic, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
declared that housing evictions were within the realm of public health and that
evictions in high-infection areas constituted a crisis. The CDC therefore
assumed authority to ban residential evictions, nullifying state property laws
nationwide. (The U.S. Supreme Court eventually curtailed the CDC’s
presumed authority.)
Full article is here.
RELATED: Ted Noel,
MD: "The NIH Is Going Full Gestapo" at TruthBasedMedia.