To be honest, I think we are only partly understanding each other.

but there are some things I agree with.
Doctors need to be sued less not more, many good doctors are persecuted by people who want someone to blame. For example my neighbor growing up was a pediatrician, I was a kid when he moved next door. A highly intelligent and dutiful man, as good as they come as a neighbor and friend. He retired at 53 because two lawsuits within five years (none before) involving misdiagnosis (lab error in one) made him effectively un-insurable. A total waste and loss of a really good doctor.
On the opposite end of the spectrum there are money grubbing sociopaths in medicine. One I know in Ireland caused huge harm by offering homeopathic treatments for cancer in a fancy and expensive private clinic. He fought for years but was finally struck off the medical register. So he started flying in Japanese and other non-English speaking patients (his history harder to discover) for his expensive treatments and bottom of the class doctors assisting him. This was in Ireland, not Mexico. Over a decade later he appealed and using lawyer brute force got his medical license back! As corrupt and wrong as it gets.
Anyway the good can be taken out too easily and the bad just double down over and over. As in politics.
The practical problem with chasing people like Anna is they use the internet to reach an international audience. They will always have people who defend them wasting time. Cancer is riddled with enthusiastic Dunning Kruger effect people, people who don't know what the don't know but are extremely confident as a result. Same with UFOs, 'quantum' people and whatnot.
Richard Dennis.. well he is what he is. At least the Turtles Experiment gave us the movie "Trading Places".
I think our dialogue is coming from "touching a different part of an elephant", as in this ancient story posted here #2056
https://www.elitetrader.com/et/threads/in-search-of-god.308024/page-206 and so life is offering to us different experiences.
I am sorry for your pediatrician neighbor... In my life, the doctors in Germany made a number of the wrong decisions which lea to the death of my mother.. so. , I certainly waiting for them to be sued...
Another example was in Italy a doctor was taking patients with terminal illness and saved some of them... then it was discovered that his diploma was fake and he was persecuted. I never understand why? Instead of making him finish his degree in medicine and be thankful, because if he was able to save at least one life where the traditional medicine gave up, what is wrong with that? We are losing our mind in today world because forgetting the heart. A mind if left to be the governor is very dangerous, it feeds the ego.
I did not know exactly how to address this our polar conversation, so left in the hands of Universe and as often the answers came in the form first of this interesting yoga-teacher and his new book "Warrior Pose: How Yoga(Literally) Saved My Life by Brad Willis, whos carrier remind me yours, there is even Columbia
" From covering the front lines of the Gulf War to investigating Colombian drug lords to living with freedom fighters in the mountains of Afghanistan, war correspondent Brad Willis was accustomed to risk. But when mortal danger came, it was from an unexpected direction..............
At the pinnacle of his career, a broken back and failed surgery left Willis permanently disabled and ............."
And I thought that top Richard Dennis we all own the possibility to know about trading accessible to everyone? Mr. Leo Melamed and The CME group made it accessible to everyone, but he was the first to show that it is possible without been local or Harward graduated?
And to complete this discussion about true or not true certain healers etc, this beautiful dialogue from one of the most fascinating books came to me:
“– But here is a question that is troubling me: if there is no God, then, one may ask, who governs human life and, in general, the whole order of things on earth?
– Man governs it himself, – Homeless angrily hastened to reply to this admittedly none-too-clear question.
– Pardon me, – the stranger responded gently, – but in order to govern, one needs, after all, to have a precise plan for a certain, at least somewhat decent, length of time. Allow me to ask you, then, how can man govern, if he is not only deprived of the opportunity of making a plan for at least some ridiculously short period, well, say, a thousand years , but cannot even vouch for his own tomorrow? And in fact, – here the stranger turned to Berlioz, – imagine that you, for instance, start governing, giving orders to others and yourself, generally, so to speak, acquire a taste for it, and suddenly you get ...hem ... hem ... lung cancer ... – here the foreigner smiled sweetly, and if the thought of lung cancer gave him pleasure — yes, cancer — narrowing his eyes like a cat, he repeated the sonorous word —and so your governing is over! You are no longer interested in anyone’s fate but your own. Your family starts lying to you. Feeling that something is wrong, you rush to learned doctors, then to quacks, and sometimes to fortune-tellers as well. Like the first, so the second and third are completely senseless, as you understand. And it all ends tragically: a man who still recently thought he was governing something, suddenly winds up lying motionless in a wooden box, and the people around him, seeing that the man lying there is no longer good for anything, burn him in an oven. And sometimes it’s worse still: the man has just decided to go to Kislovodsk – here the foreigner squinted at Berlioz – a trifling matter, it seems, but even this he cannot accomplish, because suddenly, no one knows why, he slips and falls under a tram-car! Are you going to say it was he who governed himself that way? Would it not be more correct to think that he was governed by someone else entirely?”
― Mikhail Bulgakov, The master and Margarita