Maine Medical Board Drops Allegations of “Misinformation” Against Doctor Critical of Government Covid-19 Methods
Dr. Meryl Nass

A Maine doctor whose practice was suspended in January by the state for straying from the government narrative on Covid-19 has received some good news. In late September, the Maine Board of Licensure in Medicine suddenly withdrew all charges of “misinformation” against Dr. Meryl Nass, a physician from Ellsworth.

Nass is still facing charges of violating various state rules in the treatment of patients with Covid-19, including prescribing ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine for the virus. Nass’ attorneys have asked the board to dismiss all of those charges and apologize to the physician.

At the time of her suspension, the board was worried that Nass constituted “an immediate jeopardy to the health and physical safety of the public who might receive her medical services.” The State of Maine also ordered her to undergo a psychiatric evaluation.

The doctor admitted to lying about a diagnosis, but only to procure potentially life-saving treatment for patients with Covid-19 symptoms because pharmacies were forbidden to dispense ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine for the treatment of Covid-19.

Nass is considered an expert in anthrax, bioterrorism, anthrax vaccines, Gulf War syndrome, and epidemics. She has testified to at least seven congressional committees on bioterrorism, vaccines, anthrax letters, and Gulf War syndrome.

Yet, somehow, the 70-year-old physician apparently doesn’t know how to diagnose and treat Covid-19 in her private practice, according to the State of Maine.

Nass’ attorneys argue that the main reason for her struggle with the Maine Board of Licensure in Medicine is her criticism of the experimental vaccines that are being used, supposedly, for suppression of the Covid-19 virus.

“Dr. Nass is here only because she criticized the safety and effectiveness of the vaccines distributed and promoted by the Federal and State government,” her attorneys, Gene Libby and Tyler Smith, wrote in a recent statement.

Indeed, Nass’ attorneys argue that the doctor is being persecuted for exercising her First Amendment rights: “Dr. Nass is facing discipline only because she exercised her free speech rights against what Thomas Jefferson called ‘the civil authority.'”

They also point out that it’s not her patients complaining about the doctor, but the government: “The only complaint lodged against her was initiated by the Board of Licensure in Medicine (‘BOLIM’), no patient has complained about her outpatient prescriptions for Ivermectin and Hydroxychloroquine. No patient has complained that they received Dr. Nass’s services for these medications without their informed consent.”

There is definitely reason to believe that the action by the licensing board is a political persecution of Nass rather than a patient- or conduct-related problem, as the doctor has not been shy about criticizing the government’s vaccine programs.

In an interview with The New American in September, Dr. Nass explained some of her problems with the new booster shots being pushed internationally.

“On the same day that the CDC [Centers for Disease Control and Prevention] authorized this rollout [of Covid-19 booster shots], the health regulatory agencies of Canada, the European Union, and Switzerland rolled out their new bivalent vaccines,” Nass said. “So, you’re talking about roughly … a billion people in the West” who will be offered the new boosters.

Nass also pointed out an extreme lack of testing of the new boosters on humans — especially in the United States.

“Why would you do that? Who is pulling the strings?” Nass asked. “Somebody is telling all these countries, ‘you have to go for it and this is the day you do it.’ And we don’t know what that entity is. Who is pulling the strings of the FDA, the CDC, the European Union’s EMA … who is doing this and why?”

“Somebody, above the level of our governments, is giving the orders,” Nass concluded.

So, it would seem that the state’s concerns about Dr. Nass may be more politically motivated than patient related. The Covid-19 vaccines and boosters are a sacred cow that cannot be questioned — especially by a highly qualified expert in epidemics.

Dr. Nass’ hearing before the Maine Board of Licensure in Medicine is scheduled for Tuesday, Oct. 11, 2022 at 1:00 p.m. Eastern time; it can be watched on the internet here. Dr. Nass is being supported by Children’s Health Defense, an organization looking to end childhood health epidemics.

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