I’m sure many of you are familiar with Dr. “Zev” Zelenko, who passed away yesterday. Dr. Zelenko was one of the first to speak out against what I sometimes refer to as the “Covid Nonsense” (an overly kind phrase for the lies and coercion that have caused untold damage to millions of lives), and was rewarded for it by being “cancelled” on social media.
But that didn’t stop him from continuing to spread the word and to help others. Before he passed, he had helped to create FreedomMed - “a healthcare model designed to provide doctors and nurses with a vehicle to deliver best of breed healthcare, with the shackles and binds of overarching politics and corporate gain removed.”
Since March of this year, FreedomMed has “…grown to be able to cover every state in America. We have created our own pharmacies, designed and manufactured our own products and built an operational infrastructure which exceeds through passion, as much as innovation.”
I had reached out to FreedomMed, and was planning to have either Dr. Zelenko or another spokesperson meet with my new membership group to talk about how they are doing what they’re doing, what we can learn from them, and how we can help to support them. I still plan to do that, as I believe that FreedomMed is one of the most exciting “parallel” ventures getting started now, and that Dr. Zelenko would want it to flourish in his absence.
For now though, I wanted to share a couple of touching tributes to Dr. Zelenko from some who knew him:
Dr. Paul Alexander writes:
“Dr. Zelenko was determined and fearless. Where others would have turned their back on the Hippocratic oath, Dr. Zelenko could have done the same but instead chose to show great fortitude and passion to help those in need. He often did this with no financial gain, reaching into his own pocket to help, showing his benevolence. He did this not for glory, praise or recognition but merely out of the kindness of his heart. You did not know so I am telling you. Many times, I would call him and write him and tell him of someone whose doctor refused to treat and they were desperate and wanted early treatment. At first he would go through me but then he got comfortable and he would just ask me to give him their telephone numbers and address. I grew to know (as many were all over the world and even clinicians who did not want it be known they were reaching out to me for early treatment drug algorithms as we had published lots, for their patients or to connect with a clinician) that Zev was packaging the treatments up and shipping to the people I linked him to, with his money. He gave it to them and became their doctor. He took no money from them. I was shocked and it happened over and over, some were people I knew and they told me. And they all, he may have treated 80 -90 folk I referred to him, and today, I can say all lived! All recovered!”
And Rabbi Michael Green writes:
“In a time of unprecedented darkness and mortal risk, he seized the moment and saved thousands and millions of fellow human beings from death.
“From the onset of covid hysteria, Dr. Zev was a solitary voice of reason. It was almost unheard of… a physician who dared to speak the truth, risking his career and reputation. But by the time he passed away on 6/30/22, he was longer a “lone wolf,” but had empowered and inspired millions of people worldwide.
“…At a crucial time in history, Dr. Zev seized the moment and left a legacy that’s larger than life. Now that the sun of his mortal life has set, it’s time for all of us to reflect his light and bring his life’s work to fruition. Seize every opportunity to assert truth, defy tyranny, and embrace liberty. Let us seize back the narrative and topple all genocidal tyrants once and for all.”
Rest in Peace, Velvel Wolf Zev.
I was so sad to learn of his illness and now his passing. He was a courageous and good man. The world is poorer without him.
I read once something like this:
"When there is a birth, one cries and many laugh.
When there is a death, many cry and one laughs.
That is the sign of a well lived life."
I don't know where I read it.