Why doctors and dentists are condemned on Judgment Day

And why nearly all extant practices of medicine and dentistry must be denounced as malpractice

Conservative people are totally excluded from these professions by the outrageous and excessive tuitions and fees charged at their respective rotten and morally decadent graduate schools, and by the free availability of easy loan money for this purpose. Only a liberal and foolish person could possibly even consider taking out a loan and submitting by degrees to such and such bondage and corruption for such a large sum of money and not to buy or build a house or something of equivalent tangible value and immediate practical and beneficial use to everyday living for the money, rather than drugging or maiming or mutilating the human body.

Liberals who enter professions of medicine, dentistry, psychology, psychiatry etc. do so mainly out of lust for the carnage of human flesh for which they have admittedly sacrificed their net worth. There is no moral authority to guide these professions, and their universal overriding goal of evil, by any use of the knife so admitted, is to cause as much murder, mayhem, mutilation and malicious disfigurement of human flesh as possible for the money, and with bloody vengeance on the innocent ones to excise and extract that requisite pound of flesh whenever and wherever possible, by any and all available means.

The use of the knife, or rather, its misuse, is mentioned most explicitly in the Hippocratic Oath. So is the fraternization of medical malpractice with legal malfeasance, namely the injustice done to patients along with the bodily harm inflicted by such malpractice.

Greek Medicine
HMD Greek Medicine Exhibition

The unhealthful regimens of mind-altering and other hard drugs so unnecessarily prescribed add insult to the injuries so intentionally and ignorantly inflicted on patients under common standards of less-than-perfect care.

God does not accept less than perfection. Doctors and dentists should first do harm, and only then perform those good works which they are able to the best of their knowledge and skills.

With respect to ability to pay, doctors should refrain from offering or performing unnecessary services or surgical procedures to poor people, unless the services really are necessary and essential to save people's lives or vastly improve their lot in life, given the vast mountains of medical debt they are likely to incur by making any use or even mere inquiry of such services.