I hate this stuff, because it’s a typical case of how, in my grandma’s words, “the devil feeds you a pound of truth so that you swallow a teaspoon of lies.”
Yes, there is a problem of the medical industry focusing too much on profit and limiting liability. But nobody needs to make anyone sick to do that; it’s less likely to end in scandal if they wait for people to get deathly ill the normal way and make money off that.
I might even go farther and say that the fallacious assumption that anyone taking unfair advantage of a crisis in a way that doesn’t help to fix it must have caused the crisis forms the root of most of the conspiracy theories posted here. That’s circumstantial evidence. Just like following the bandwagon and all the other informal fallacies, it’s a good rule of thumb if you have nothing else to go off of, but not proof.
And the other grating part of modern conspiracy theories: turning around and doing just what they accuse the establishment claims. The medical establishment provides false hope to people near the end of life? Clearly evil, but it doesn’t stop Craig Johnstone from offering false hope to people with genetic disorders, the galling claim that “everything is curable,” and appealing to God. Why, then, won’t God heal amputees? Or, for something less extreme, why did not wearing glasses and not visiting a hospital at all for two years not cure my nearsightedness (my sister has gone even longer, and hasn’t gotten better either).
Also, this site sells “miracle cures” like chlorine dioxide. Boorish hypocrites, all of them.