Life To The Full Podcast

 

PODCAST TRANSCRIPT | EPISODE 289: A Culture of Death

LIFE TO THE FULL w/ Nancy Campbell

EPISODE 289Epi289pic: A Culture of Death

Another life is taken prematurely. They took away every chance he had to survive. Becky Leski joins me today to tell the story of her physician husband, and how he died at the hands of the medical profession.

Announcer: Welcome to the podcast, Life to The Full, with Nancy Campbell, founder and publisher of Above Rubies.

Nancy Campbell: Hello, ladies. Today I have a very special visitor with me. I know you love it when I have someone with me here. It’s always a surprise who it will be. Today I have Becky Leski with me from Georgia. She is going to share with us with us today a tragic story, a story, though, that I know we all must hear. In fact, I hope that you can pass this podcast onto many others, because it’s something that we must know.

Becky’s husband was a doctor. Sadly, he’s not with us today. She’s going to tell you the story about that. He was a doctor, Dr. Mark Leski. He started his practice as a doctor in family practice. He was 27 years in sports medicine. He taught sports medicine also at Columbia Hospital in South Carolina.

Then he moved into specialized medicine of wound care, treating patients with wounds from diabetes, radiation, and infections often after bone surgery. Plus, he had such a high rate of infections coming from the ICU, where he worked in the Newman Hospital in South Georgia. He had been doing this for ten years.

It’s amazing how many people get hospital infections in the ICU. He was kept very busy. But he was really a genius in his field and had a great gift of healing. In the hospital he had three hyperbaric chambers. He would often use God’s wonderful healing remedy of manuka honey! But I’m just introducing her husband. Now I’m going to introduce Becky. Hi, Becky.

Becky Leski: Hello. Thank you for having me.

Nancy: So great to have you with us. Well, that’s what Dr. Mark was like, a great doctor, a man who poured his life into his patients. Do you want to say anything more about that, Becky?

Becky: I think you covered it pretty well. He was an excellent, excellent physician, because he cared and because he believed in healing. He loved people. He loved his family, and he loved his patients.

Nancy: This is back in the covid plandemic. Both Becky and her husband Mark got colds. Of course, he, being a doctor, he had to be tested as to whether he could go to work or not. You both got tested, and it was positive, wasn’t it?

Becky: It was a home test, and we were both positive.

Nancy: Yes, you were positive. But you just felt like you had a cold. You got better, but then, Dr. Mark had some problems with his respiration. Can you share what happened?

Becky: He was struggling a little with breathing. He didn’t want to go, obviously, to the hospital, because he knew what was going on. But I pressured him there, at the last, to go. I thought we could go and get some antibodies, and get him some oxygen, and we’d get back home where he could mend. But that’s not what happened.

Nancy: So, when he got there, they said he had to stay. What happened?

Becky: Initially, on that Monday, we went to the ER where he was employed at that hospital. They did some x-rays, did a CT scan. They said that he had pneumonia. He asked for the antibodies. They denied him. He wasn’t vaccinated and we felt that that was a big part, that played a huge role in that refill. They sent him home, basically, with nothing. Just a Z-Pak.

Nancy: They didn’t even give him antibiotics?

Becky: They gave him the Z-Pak antibodies, but they didn’t send him home with oxygen, steroids, nothing. It really was a wasted trip.

Nancy: Wow! Because of the pneumonia, he was getting worse. Then you found that he needed help with breathing.

Becky: He did.

Nancy: You got him to hospital. He didn’t really want to be there.

Becky: He didn’t.

Nancy: He was seeing a lot of things that were going on. But I think he thought he could most probably handle it. He was a doctor, also, in that hospital, and he could let them know what he wanted.

Becky: Right.

Nancy: But it didn’t happen that way, did it?

Becky: It didn’t. His biggest fear wasn’t covid. It wasn’t anything to do with covid or pneumonia. His biggest fear of not wanting to go there was because he was afraid he would catch an infection that would become septic, which is what happened.

Nancy: He was constantly having to fix up infections from the hospital.

Becky: Correct.

Nancy: There he was. You were very, very blessed that you were able to stay with him, weren’t you? Was that because he was a doctor there in the hospital?

Becky: I do believe we did get that permission because he was pretty demanding about that. He would not go unless we were allowed to stay with him. To our knowledge, at the time, the Piedmont Hospital System had not allowed a family member to stay with a covid patient full-time. We were the first family, to our knowledge, that was allowed to be with a covid patient full-time. We never, for 31 days, we never left his side. We saw, we heard, we experienced, some horrific things during those 31 days.

Nancy: So, you were right there. That, I think, was one of the saddest things during that plandemic time, because it was a plandemic, that no one was allowed to be with their loved ones. I think people were made to believe that that was because it was a plandemic, that more people would get sick. But the reason was, they did not want anybody to know what was happening and what they were doing to their patients.

Becky: That’s my belief. Absolutely, 100 percent, that’s my belief.

Nancy: So, here you are. Your husband’s fit, well, healthy, but he got pneumonia. I got pneumonia earlier this year. It took quite a long time for me to come right, actually. But I didn’t need to go to the hospital.

Of course, I think too, in that time, because great fear came upon everybody. If somebody couldn’t get their breath, they were rushing to the hospital, thinking they were dying.

So, you were there and knew what he needed. But everything that he needed you found they were doing the opposite?

Becky: Right.

Nancy: Tell us the story.

Becky: We all knew by that time; even non-medical people knew that the antibodies were working. They refused him the antibodies, not just at that hospital, but even locally, at our local hospital. Once he was asked if he was vaccinated, he was denied. We could only assume that was the reason, because we had neighbors that had gotten them at these same places.

But what was interesting was, he was credentialed at this hospital, he had privileges at this hospital, he was an employee there. He had really not much say in his care other than some things, he denied treatment. He wouldn’t take remdesivir, which is a whole other story. He refused the ventilator.

When he got there, within probably an hour of being in the ER, they were pressuring us to sign a DNR on him.

Nancy: Which means “Do Not Resuscitate.”

Becky: Correct. Here he is, sitting up in the bed, talking and conversing, saying, “I would never consider signing that. I’m fine. I’m going to beat this. I’m going to get out of here and get back to my patients and my family.” But that was not their plan and that’s not what happened.

Nancy: So, even though he didn’t sign it, they still went ahead with what they wanted to do. When I was talking to you on previous occasions, I was amazed at how they treated him, and their standards of cleanliness and so on, which was obviously purposeful. Can you tell us about some of those things?

Becky: Again, I’ll preface my answers with this is what our family believes, based on what we saw, what we experienced. This is our opinion, what we believe happened.

He was first admitted to what they called the “step-down unit,” which is not ICU, but it’s a step down from ICU. He was given, we didn’t know at the time, way too much oxygen. They blasted him from the very beginning. Now we know that it was too much. He would ask that, and they would ignore him, or they would give him a reason why. They said they would bring him down later; they would wear him down. But he never got a satisfactory answer.

He was constantly trying to be the teacher, because in the step-down unit, a lot of the staff were new, fresh out of school, or not skilled properly. They would come in and they would stick him for one blood draw, sometimes he would be stuck eight or nine times, because they couldn’t get a vein.

He would ask, as a patient, as a physician there, he would ask, he wanted a central line put in so they could draw most of everything from that central line. They refused the entire 31 days. I’m getting ahead of myself, but he ended up acquiring several hospital-acquired infections, which is the second cause of death.

Nancy: Of course, he went in with no infections.

Becky: None.

Nancy: You were saying that they dropped something?

Becky: This happened multiple times with different departments, from the phlebotomist, teachers, blood, to the nurses, to the respiratory therapists. There’s a suction tube that was on the side of the bed, for if we needed to suction him, or clear out his nose, whatever we needed to do, it’s called a “Yankauer.” Multiple times during his stay, they would drop it on the dirty floor.

Even once we moved to the ICU, the care got much worse. They would drop it, and then put it right back on his bed. They didn’t bring a new one; they didn’t wipe it with alcohol. They would put it right back. We were constantly having to be involved in his care.

I had to clear my daughter … The day he was moved to ICU, the room was so filthy. It was covered in blood splatters and vomit stains. It looked like a third-world hospital room. I used hot water and towels, and I cleaned the room on my hands and knees. It was so filthy. Blood on the bed they put him in.

He had phlebotomists who would come in who would have their masks down. They would clearly have a cold, and they would wipe their ungloved hands on their nose to wipe their nose, and then touch the things they were getting ready to use on him. We had a nurse who had a long wig that she wore down which is not protocol. That is a no-no in a hospital, especially in an ICU, where people are very vulnerable.

By this time, he had wounds, and several wounds. I was helping her bathe him. Her wig continued to roll across his wounds. He would look at me, and he would say, “They’re going to kill me. They’re going to kill me with infections.” We were at their mercy. We could sit here all day, and I could give you examples.

Nancy: I can’t even believe what I am hearing. In fact, didn’t you try to have a meeting about it all?

Becky: I did. Not just about the lack of protocol not being followed, but the treatment from some of the respiratory therapists and some of the nurses. The lack of care, the negligence. It was the communication from one shift to the next. If you saw a nurse for hours, and this is ICU, if they knew he needed something, they would just continue to wait for the next shift to do it and pass the buck along. He would decline when we would have those type of people.

So, I called the meeting with the department heads. I begged them. I told them I would pay them. I would pay the salaries of the people, if we could just have the handful of people, the staff members who really wanted Mark to live. They cared truly and were administering care to him. We would pay. We would donate. We would do whatever. I was begging for his life.

The doctor that was in charge of his care was in charge of the meeting. He described Mark as if he were giving rounds to his students. He described him as “non-responsive,” naming all these things, that he should be a DNR, but his family is resisting.

I said to him, “It concerns me that you’re his primary doctor, and you don’t know that right now, he’s in the room with an occupational therapist sitting on the side of the bed, trying to do exercises. He’s very much responsive.” But that was the type, even in his medical records, that one moment, a nurse would have him unresponsive, and another nurse or respiratory therapist or the doctor would have him doing exercises at the same exact time. But there were no changes.

Nancy: So, it just depended on the nurse, whether they were going by the protocol, hoping, doing everything they could to help him live.

Becky: Yeah, it was. . . When you were living it, when you were in it, it was so surreal, but I think the biggest thing that Mark, myself, and my daughter, who was an ICU nurse at that time at a different hospital, was the evil that we had never seen or experienced before. It was a level of coldness and callousness that I never, I never thought could happen in our hospital systems, our healthcare system.

Nancy: What gets me is the fact that they could do that in your presence with you there, and to one of their own doctors. What were they doing to people who they never allowed loved ones in? They were just doing the protocols.

Of course, the protocol for most was remdesivir, which poisoned the kidneys, which was a poison, which was planned by Dr. Fauci, and became the protocol through every hospital. And then onto the ventilator. Rarely did a patient come off the ventilator.

Becky: Sadly, it’s still the protocol today.

Nancy: That’s what I can’t believe. This is still so you get the message. If you have little Miss C, (I will never call it the word, because I am not giving into their narrative in one way). It was all planned.

If you would, I would hope you wouldn’t go to the hospital for that, but if anybody, or friends are going, you’d better let them know what the protocol is. It’s remdesivir, and then the ventilator. Both kill. And yet, there were remedies that so many doctors who were seeking to bring healing to patients, some were absolutely, always healed.

Becky: He asked for certain vitamins. They would order it in such a way that he couldn’t take it. I called down to the pharmacy at the hospital to ask for different vitamins to be put in a bag. They said it wasn’t possible. Why aren’t vitamins possible in the hospital when we knew that C and D and zinc work very well in helping build the immune system.

Nancy: Absolutely!

Becky: We knew from the very first that they were . . .

Nancy: They could have intravenously put vitamin C into him.

Becky: Oh yes, yes. The nutrition they denied him. His staff brought over a very high protein, because of being in the wound care center, they brought him high-protein drinks. The ICU nurses confiscated it and threw it in the trash can, because the hospital itself didn’t give it to him. But yet, the drinks they were bringing up were just sugary-nothing drinks. Then they denied him anything, water even. It was an unbelievable, horrific experience.

Nancy: Unbelievable all right! I guess most of you do know that ivermectin has been found to be such a great remedy. I think it is a good idea for people now to stock up, because we don’t really know what’s ahead.

They did this, and we realize now that it was part of the plan of depopulation, because that is the number one list on the plan of the World Economic Forum and the New World Order. In fact, on the Georgia Guidestones, in your state . . . of course, the Georgia Guidestones are no longer there, praise the Lord! God did a mighty miracle there and wiped them out. It was obviously God because they were wiped out with lightning. Nobody has ever found anyone who had anything to do with it.

But on the top of their ten commandments for the New World Order was to reduce the population of the world to 500 million. The current population of the world is eight billion. So, they have got a lot of billions to get rid of! They are wanting to get rid of them. This is their plan in their deceived, evil brains. This plandemic was part of this plan.

In fact, they were really wanting to bring in another one this fall. I can remember Biden and many others saying there is going to be another pandemic coming, and you will have to wear masks again, and you will have to be vaccinated. But there was such a pushback. You could go onto Facebook, Instagram, and everybody was, “Not me! You’re not fooling me again!” Pushback, pushback.

Now we’re hearing nothing. It shows you that standing up for truth does work. But there are still people who are so vulnerable and somehow believe these things. I don’t know how. But we have got more and more to stand up against them. We must stand up, because we have to know their insidious plans, what they are trying to do.

We do have to be prepared, that when they try to bring in these things, we will resist. Also, that we are prepared. I think we can, on this transcript of this podcast, we can put sites. You’ve got some sites, haven’t you, where they can get ivermectin? There are other things too, which are important to stock up on. We do have them, and we have used them. I think that is important. Now, I remember your telling me that when this was all happening, you tried to get ivermectin, and it was $500 a dose!

Becky: We did. I was able to get it, I think, the Wednesday after being at the ER, on Monday. $500 apiece for both of us, but by Friday he was in the hospital, and I couldn’t give it to him in the hospital.

Nancy: You were able to get it for yourself.

Becky: I was. I took the full dose.                                                                      

Nancy: And you were just fine. But imagine that! Because they did not want anybody to get it, and you could hardly find a place where you could get it. I know friends who got it from overseas, and down in Mexico. They were getting it from everywhere, because here in the USA, they would not let you get it. But you can get it now. It’s time to get hold of these things, isn’t it?

Becky: Yes, it is, it is. Also, this is a different strain now. What they called the Delta variant that Mark had, it did need, because of clotting, the whole thing with covid is micro-clotting. Even in the ER, they wouldn’t give him anything to break up those clots in the lungs.

His own doctor, who was also an employee of Piedmont, had to sneak. . . My daughter had to pick up, like it was some type of spy movie, in a brown bag, medication, because the hospital wouldn’t give it to him. It was the very thing he needed.

Nancy: Oh, I know. It’s so sad. Of course, since that time, your case is not an isolated case.

Becky: It’s not.

Nancy: You have been to a conference earlier this year, where there were 650 widows who have been through similar circumstances as you. Women who are crying, and who are bitter, and who are desperate, because their loved ones were taken away. They were taken away insidiously. It is unbelievable.

And there is no recourse. You have tried. Every one of these women have tried. Even just recently, you’ve been working with a lawyer, a very, very good lawyer. He said, “There is no way. Every loophole is tied up.” Before even this covid plandemic was released, they had it all tied up in the law courts so that no one could come back on them.

Becky: They knew what they were doing.

Nancy: When it was happening, I was often thinking, “Wow, there are going to be thousands and thousands of lawsuits, because of all these people who had these loved ones die, who were not meant to die.” But now, no lawyer can take it on. This is so unbelievable. I think the only thing left is that they can get hold of these stories. If they have the right person who can take it to Crimes against Humanity.

Becky: That’s our hope.

Nancy: Is there a place where people can send their testimonies for this?

Becky: Yes. If anyone in your audience had a loved one die with a covid diagnosis, or of covid, they can go to a website. You want me to tell it?

Nancy: Yes. Say it now.

Becky: OK. It’s https://chbmp.org That’s Covid-19 Humanity Betrayal Memory Project. There are hundreds, hundreds of cases of stories just like my husband’s. But the interesting thing is, social media has since heard so much about the c-word that it’s been difficult for widows and widowers to reach out to find each other. There are pockets, and there are sites popping up where there are 1,000 here, 500 hundred here, 1600 here. They’re everywhere. If your audience could share this . . .

Nancy: I will put that website on the transcript. If you have a story yourself, or know someone, they can send it in there. That is really only the last recourse there is, because the courts are completely tied up. They made sure that happened, because they obviously knew it was going to happen. But I think that if this could happen, it would be good, because justice has to be done. When you think about it, it has been murder.

Becky: That’s right.

Nancy: It is beyond serious. People who have been quite happy to murder patients are still there, still attending to patients! Help! It is so scary!

Becky: I think it’s easy for people to move on. Covid fatigue was a real thing. People were tired. They didn’t want to be masked anymore. They were so thankful to let covid be behind us. But we can’t forget what happened. We have to keep it. Just like the Holocaust, we can’t let it happen again. We can’t forget these people who gave their lives.

Nancy: Even DeSantis has shortened the time. There used to be a time of up to two years from grievances in a hospital of people who died, where they could go to the court to share them. But now he has shortened that to one year.

Becky: He did, he did.

Nancy: Why?

Becky: That’s a great question. I would love to be able to ask him that face-to-face.

Nancy: Because as you have found when you go through something as devastating as this, and your loved one dies, it takes so long to even be able to think straight again and get yourself together to do something like this. Then the time has passed when you can do something.

Becky: I had two years. Georgia has a two-year statute of limitations. Although I had my daughter, we talked to over 50 attorneys in two years. But your mind is so foggy and cloudy. You’re trying to grieve, and tell this story every day, over and over to people, to listen, to get help. But there was no help.

Nancy: Now, your husband actually went into the hospital, and really, all he needed was help with breathing. But he ended up with four infections, which he got in the hospital.

Becky: He had multiple hospital-acquired infections.

Nancy: And hypoxia, which came through the inadequate care.

Becky:  Correct. That’s exactly what we proved. We didn’t find out until we got his medical records a couple of months later. It’s just how sinister things were.

Nancy: And, he actually didn’t have covid. They never tested him for covid, ever.

Becky: They never tested him for covid, ever.

Nancy: But they did put that as number three on the list of why he died, because they had to get their money.

Becky: They did.

Nancy: Because if they put covid, they got money. If they gave remdesivir, they got money. If they put him on the ventilator, they got money. And now, the hospitals where this happened, they have made $100 million dollars.

Becky: I don’t know the exact number, but they are building a massive addition to this hospital.

Nancy: Hospitals everywhere are rebuilding out of the money, out of covid deaths, because everyone, they got money. They were out to get them.

Becky: An interesting thing is, right at the beginning, in 2021, when this first hit the scene, I think it was the beginning of March, beginning of April, when they approached my husband and the other physicians at this particular hospital, that they were in such dire straits, and their finances were not good at the time. They asked the physicians if they would be willing to donate 30% of their salaries towards this pandemic that was coming.

We didn’t know at the time what was going on. He gladly, even though he had some doubts of what was happening from what he was reading in his research, but yet he cared enough, he had a heart of gold. He donated 30% of his salary for months to that hospital. And now they’re building.

Nancy: You can’t believe that, can you? But then, we get back to really where this hit you personally, and the grief you’ve been through. But when you went to that conference with all these women, you saw such bitterness there. You knew you couldn’t live like that, so tell us, how have you have been able to forgive what happened? When they took your husband from you.

Becky: Forgiveness has been a journey, for sure. I remember being at the conference. That conference you’re talking about was in San Antonio in March. Some of the women were doing OK, but they were very active in politically trying to make sure this never happened again.

Then there were some who, you could feel the bitterness off of them. They were just devastated, and very, very angry. I remember looking, and talking, and thinking on the way home, flying back. Thinking, “God, I don’t want to go into bitterness like that.” I was pretty bitter. I was very angry. I’m still very angry. But I, in my heart, I knew that I would become just like those people who treated him that way if I didn’t forgive.

I was at the conference in Florida, and Allison Hartman’s husband spoke to me about forgiveness after I had talked and given Mark’s testimony there. Some of the things he said to me that day really, I took to heart, and I went back, and I prayed.

I said, “God, I don’t have the emotions to go with this prayer. I don’t feel like forgiving. I don’t feel like releasing this to You because it almost felt like a bomb. The hate and the anger. But I was able to say that I’m willing to give it to You.” Then I came to this fellowship here, not long after that, and I was able to take communion for the first time in two years because I felt like I was at a place where I wanted to forgive them.

Nancy: Thank You, Lord. I know it’s not an easy thing, but it’s such a powerful thing, isn’t it? Forgiveness is just, it’s that God’s way is always the right way. It’s what blesses us personally. Yes, praise the Lord.

Oh, thank you, dear Becky, for sharing this. You were saying that just recently you’ve met someone else who hav through exactly the same thing at the same hospital.

Becky: The same hospital, the same floor, the same doctor. Most of the same nurses, same respiratory therapists. We can finish each other’s sentences on the treatment. Both of her parents died there within weeks of each other. The same treatment, identical treatment. And that’s all over the country. The stories are nearly identical.

Nancy: So, precious ladies, who have listened to this story, and the heartache of Becky losing her wonderful husband, this is what we have been facing in these last two or three years. But let’s be aware. Let’s not cave into their evil narratives. Let’s be those who will stand up for truth, and for righteousness, and for justice, and not give in!

Many can think, “Oh, wow.” They give into the narrative that all these people had covid. Actually, it was so interesting. There was not one flu case that whole time. It was really just another strain of the flu. There are thousands and thousands who get the flu each year. In fact, I got the flu during that time. Oh, I was so proud. I said, “Wow, I am amazing! I’m actually famous! I’ve got the flu! No one else has got it!” [laughter] Because I knew what it was.

Thank you so much for sharing, and also sharing the greatest victory that you have, in being able to forgive.

‘Lord, we come to You. Lord, it’s so sad to hear about these situations. Not just Becky’s, but there are hundreds and hundreds and hundreds, Lord God. Oh, Father, we pray that You will be with everyone who has lost loved ones, and You will help them, and You will comfort them and encourage them.

“And Lord, help us all to not be deceived, Lord. Save us from deception. Help us to see through what things are happening. And Lord, to rise up and be those who will stand for truth, no matter what. It’s not easy to stand for truth, Lord God. It has consequences and persecution, but we pray that You will help us, Lord.

“We want to be practical. We want to be ready for the time, whether it’s in our generation or the next, or the next, when we do face the mark of the beast. And when no one will be able to even eat if they don’t take the mark. Where many, Lord, will be martyred because they will not give in.

“But we dare not ever give in. We dare not. Help us, Lord, to practice now in not giving in. We ask this in the precious Name of Jesus. Amen.”

Blessings from Nancy Campbell

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Transcribed by Darlene Norris * This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

 

Tell other wives and mothers about these podcasts and transcripts!

 

Further references:

Live.children’shealthdefense.org

Covid origins

https://www.facebook.com/100000130826957/posts/pfbid0Gvp3KcsSXcUYLkJWWDgTG5kMsGcVXbycxnVvs2PsiXaQEtVPVURhMqBLcnkzV8Skl/?mibextid=cr9u03

RESOURCES FOR COMBATTING VIRUS

https://formerfeds.substack.com/p/covid-variants-preparing-in-advance?fbclid=IwAR04cuSM2zaT76gBJqg2pToBJWw0oNMR0XMVNF6EFro0pVRcgTgqzyeOBB0_aem_AWSoJ8xeHfB1ztFcXdNnR7ZCHInSCBDNKp3M7J7GePs-rhvpGrfkbzpafCtPtdna2eI

STORIES OF DEATHS

Go to this site to read stories of those who were treated wrongly and most given remdesivir.

You can also share your story of a loved one who was taken from you unnecessarily.

https://chbmp.org/?fbclid=IwAR0mxJYE9MwXO7WheXyBcdYPLMbl8t2-vFMDI-OsaLPHTQ_z9YfTo_Cngdw_aem_AWQqbxiYpDdq2BtY9hn48VQjg3daIFw3FYS3dsyKMUp4WqDfQmGqRRcnUDLh1XhE1XQ

 

 

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