144. The Courage to Stand Alone: Scott Miller's Story

21 days ago
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In this conversation, Dr. Sam Sigoloff interviews Scott Miller, a physician's assistant who faced significant challenges while advocating for medical exemptions to COVID-19 vaccinations. Scott shares his journey from treating pediatric patients to navigating the complexities of COVID-19 treatments, the political landscape surrounding healthcare, and the consequences of speaking out against established medical protocols. The discussion highlights the importance of patient advocacy, the challenges within the hospital system, and innovative approaches to treatment during the pandemic. In this conversation, Scott Miller shares his harrowing experiences as a frontline doctor during the COVID-19 pandemic, detailing the unfounded allegations against him and the subsequent investigations that ensued. He discusses the emotional and professional toll of these challenges, the burden of responsibility he felt for his patients, and the miraculous moments that reinforced his faith. The dialogue highlights the complexities of medical ethics, the impact of legal battles on healthcare providers, and the resilience required to navigate such turbulent times.

Here is Scott’s book:
https://a.co/d/4pNM4Ie
The Most Dangerous Man in WashingtonbyScott Millershares his extraordinary journey from a pediatric practitioner to a reluctant hero during a global crisis. Facing personal loss, professional trials, and relentless adversity, he recounts stories of lives saved, systems challenged, and the sacrifices that shaped his path. This is a raw and inspiring testament to faith, resilience, and the power of one person to make a difference

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144. The Courage to Stand Alone: Scott Miller's Story
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Scott Miller, P. A.: [00:00:00] I think it's safe to say now, because I don't care, but I would go over to people's homes and show them how to make smoothies and we would dump everything, I mean, hydroxychloroquine, ivermectin, colchicine, methylprednisolone, azithromycin, montelukast, you know, high dose thiamine, vitamin D, vitamin C, and make this smoothie up.

Scott Miller, P. A.: So we'd have a bag of supplements. So it seems like, okay, well, can you at least give them the smoothie? So they didn't think we were trying to put anything in the, in the drinks. And so we did that for hundreds of people and it was pretty, it was crazy. Um, but yeah, the ones that we couldn't get to, um, they, they all died.

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Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Check out MyCleanBeef.com/afterhours. That's MyCleanBeef.com/afterhours. MyCleanBeef.comafterhours. If you've noticed, I've been wearing this t shirt for a few episodes now. I have them available on eBay. Check out the links below to get your size.[00:02:00]

Nurse Kelly: Welcome to After Hours with Dr. Sigoloff. On this podcast, you will be encouraged to question everything.

Nurse Kelly: And to have the courage to stand for the truth.

Nurse Kelly: And now, to your host, Dr. Sigoloff.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: All right. I want to thank you for joining me again. I first want to give a shout out to all of my Patreon subscribers. We've got two tough giving 30 a month. We have an anonymous family donor giving 20 and 20 cents a month. We have the pandemic reprimando tier at 17 and 76 cents a month with Ty Charles Stanley, Dr.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Anna Frank. Brian, Shell, Brantley, Gary, and Janine. We have the self made level with Kevin and Patton Bev at 10 a month. The refined not burned tier at 5 a month with Linda, Emmy, [00:03:00] Joe, Rebecca, Marcus, Elizabeth, Dawn, Ken, Rick, Amanda, and Stephanie. I'm sorry, Sandy. We have Addison Mulder giving 3 a month. Frank giving 1.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: 50. And then the Courage is Contagious tier at 1. 00 giving a month is Jay, SpessNasty, Darrell, Susan, BB King, Caleb, and Sharon. Thank you so much for making all of this possible. Also, I want to encourage you to check out MyCleanBeef. com slash After Hours for some of the best tasting beef I've ever had. So the guest that I have today is Scott Miller.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: He's a PA. He's in Texas. And he had a similar issue with the COVID shots that I had. So he was. One of very few in the world who was giving medical exemptions for the COVID shot, and he certainly paid dearly for it. Scott, thanks so much for coming on.

Scott Miller, P. A.: Thank you for having me. I, sorry, I'm making sure my phone is shut off here.

Scott Miller, P. A.: Um, I just hearing your story. Um, [00:04:00] it's such a, it's such an unusual thing to hear, especially in the military, hearing somebody having the courage to, to write exemptions for people. It's, it's amazing.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Right. And so, you know, we talked a little bit beforehand. I gave you some of my stories, some of my, um, subscribers and, and listeners may have heard some of my story before, but basically I was the only military provider that in all of DOD, they gave medical exemptions for the COVID shot.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: And the basis of those exemptions was that the lipid nanoparticle in the COVID shot itself So, um, yeah. Per the manufacturer, it's not valid for human use, not even for veterinary use. And, which, it blows my mind that anyone would inject themselves with anything that is not intended for human use. And just because the FDA says, hey, it's okay now, doesn't change the characteristics of, of the, the shot itself.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: And, uh, an episode that I'm publishing before this, I stuck, I talked to Richard Hirschman and he was talking about how he's finding all these long clots in people, these, these fibrous clots. And he believes that it's from the [00:05:00] phosphorylation of the lipid nanoparticle, the phospholipid nanoparticle. And it's causing this amyloid to build up in the bloodstream.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: And it's just absolutely terrifying. So I encourage you to go. back and check that episode out. But tell us some of your story. Tell us what, what helped you want to give exemptions? Who did you give exemptions to? What was the basis for your exemptions? And then what kind of, um, injury did you sustain, you know, financially, uh, professionally amongst your peers?

Scott Miller, P. A.: It's, it's a bit of a lengthy story, but so I had my own pediatric practice. So I was single provider, single owner, pediatric practice in Southwest Washington. And when it was on my birthday, it was March 12th. And, um, I was watching NCA basketball, the tournament and everything, all of a sudden it's like news is breaking and they canceled the tournament and Fauci and Burks and well, I think Fauci initially talking about COVID and how there's, there's no treatments.

Scott Miller, P. A.: There's basically nothing [00:06:00] we can do. You have to, you know, just everybody needs to stay inside. Um, and then within, within days, like the schools, you know, our schools are getting shut down. Um, and I just, I remember when I heard him say there's literally no treatments for it and I thought that doesn't make any, how can there not be any treatments at all, or at least something we can do to boost our immune system.

Scott Miller, P. A.: Um, and I just started studying. I went back and looked at the data on, on SARS one and MERS, like looking at kind of the, kind of the, the pathology of it, And on March 15th, I came across a paper out of Italy. It was, it was in Italian. It basically was like COVID pneumonia and the melatonin connection. And I'm like, what?

Scott Miller, P. A.: Like, it was like, that doesn't make any sense. So I opened it up and hit translate. And it was 37 pages of data from China, like China, Singapore, Taiwan, and It was like the blueprint of how SARS, you know, how it binds to the ACE receptor and, you [00:07:00] know, like the different proteases that cleave S1, like these are words that I didn't even know.

Scott Miller, P. A.: I'm like, what am I, what am I reading here? And I just kept reading and reading and reading. I was talking about, you know, who is at most risk and why, I mean, the comorbidities, but then the why of it. And then it finally got down to the data that they had. China were basically 10 and under, there's zero fatalities, kids were basically unaffected by it.

Scott Miller, P. A.: And since I had a pediatric practice, I thought it'd be good for me to really investigate that. And so I was like, wow, like they have nine times the amount of melatonin than a grandparent has. And then it broke down in a very specific, you know, very thoughtful breakdown of the, um, the antiviral and, and, um, you know, immune modulatory.

Scott Miller, P. A.: Aspects of melatonin. And I, I had no idea. I was blown away by it. And they, and they were breaking down other things, like vitamin C, zinc, um, You know, acetylcysteine, glutathione, [00:08:00] and so I just dove in. I had, you know, probably 30 references, so I clicked on all of the references and I just spent hours and hours, um, combing through as much information as I could find.

Scott Miller, P. A.: And then I started listening to a YouTube called MedCram. Um, Dr. Roger Schwelt out of Loma Linda, California, would do these med crams. And, um, so I just was watching those. And then Dr. Syed Mobeen, who was doing his own YouTube. So I watched as many of those as I could. And, um, you know, in April, April 7th of 2020.

Scott Miller, P. A.: I saw a video on ivermectin, the Australian in vitro studies of ivermectin. I'm like, it's amazing. I use that all the time in kids. I'm like, could it, could that really work? I'm like, that's cool. And

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: can I pause you for a second?

Scott Miller, P. A.: Yeah.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: You know, what did you use ivermectin for in children? This, this alleged horse pace that's, that's dangerous and shouldn't be used in humans and all, you know, the crazy stories we've been hearing.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Um, and I, What kind of dosage would you give children? [00:09:00]

Scott Miller, P. A.: It's no, I mean, I, I use the 0. 2 milligrams per kilogram. So what, where you would consider the, at the time, I mean, as, as. 21 started ramping up. I was increased. I increased the dose to 0. 4, then 0. 6, but I used it in head lice. Um, we had like some resistant head lice strains in Washington state.

Scott Miller, P. A.: So scabies and head lice, I used it ubiquitously.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Yeah. Everyone in society was taught to fear ivermectin and here you are for years before using it in children. It's amazing.

Scott Miller, P. A.: Yeah, it was, it was interesting to watch the politicization of it. But, um, and what was interesting too, especially like in Washington, because I think we had the first case, um, in, in King County.

Scott Miller, P. A.: But, um, what was fascinating, I would have parents bringing their kids in. And I remember the first time I thought something was wrong and I'm, I'm listening to this dad just coughing and coughing and I'm like, what's going on with your cough? And he said, I [00:10:00] don't know. It just, it won't go away. It's been a couple of weeks.

Scott Miller, P. A.: I've been to the ER twice. They put him on antibiotics, gave him an albuterol rescue inhaler, and I asked him if I could listen to his lungs. And I didn't, they sounded horrible. And he said, I can't, I just can't fill my lungs. So I did a nebulizer treatment of albuterol and it didn't touch it at all. It was like completely ineffective.

Scott Miller, P. A.: And I thought, huh, well, I'm going to try some Budesonide. So I got Budesonide and he started nebulizing it while I was, you know, doing the e gals on his kids. And he pulls the mask down after like a minute, minute and a half. And he said, Whoa, I feel like I can, like, I feel like I can breathe better. I'm like, what?

Scott Miller, P. A.: How is that possible? It's not a rescue, it's a maintenance. I figured, you know, maybe in a couple hours he might notice some difference. Um, and again, thank God he had asthma because we were, so I made him a patient, prescribed singular at Montelukast. Hydroxyzine and then, and then had him, you know, prescription for [00:11:00] Budesonide and it was either the next day or the day after he called and told my front office that his symptoms were gone, like that cough that he'd had for two weeks was basically gone.

Scott Miller, P. A.: I was like, that's, and so I just started doing that for, for these parents that were coming in that were sick, that weren't, you know, they were basically treatment resistant. And when the antibody tests came out, I remember talking to my office manager, I'm like, wait a minute. Right. Those people, I think those people had COVID like we were treating COVID.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: It's almost like a reversed, uh, a poisoning or a toxin.

Scott Miller, P. A.: It was amazing. Um, and, and then I came and then seeing the information that I had been reading and then just diving deeper and deeper into it. And then my first patient that I saw with a parent, um, with, with COVID, I put her on the ivermectin and it was, I mean, it was like by that, I mean, the other stuff too, but by that evening, she said her symptoms were gone.

Scott Miller, P. A.: And so I'm like, this seems like a no brainer to [00:12:00] use. And so I, I didn't start speaking out right away, but, um, I was invited to go to this underground gathering and I was very intrigued by it because again, nobody was, nobody was hanging out. Like we were the only house where it's like all the neighbor kids would come over because we had a, we had a pool.

Scott Miller, P. A.: So I just told all of our friends, I'm like, listen, that you don't have to isolate. Like, do not only do you not have to, you shouldn't like get outside play and. And, um, and anyway, so I was asked if I would speak at a rally at a, like a minute at a freedom rally in Olympia at our Capitol and everybody was like, Scott, don't do it.

Scott Miller, P. A.: My wife was freaking out. Cause it's like, you know, you're flying under the radar. We're Clinton, you know, the clinic's finally viable. We're doing well. And I remember specifically that night we kind of got in a little argument and. I pray. I was just like, okay, Lord, I'm not driving. I'm not going to get in the car at 5m and drive to Olympia.

Scott Miller, P. A.: So [00:13:00] if you want, if. If this is what you want me to do, then you can have somebody come and drive me. And, um, about 5. 15 the next morning, there was a knock at the door and two women were standing there and said, Hey, we heard you needed a ride to Olympia. And I'm like,

Scott Miller, P. A.: I guess, I guess. And so that was the beginning of kind of the beginning of my downfall. Um, and, and the state started investigating me and then, so I was like, screw it. So I just started getting a little more prolific. I was speaking out on as many platforms as I could trying to, you know, Encourage parents to unenroll their kids and defund public schools.

Scott Miller, P. A.: And they were so just staunch on critical race theory and all of these, I mean, you know, pronouns. And I'm like, people like, don't get your kids out of that environment. Like, don't, don't do that to them. Um, so I, you know, I ran some campaigns to try and, you know, open parents eyes. And, [00:14:00] um, and then I started, right.

Scott Miller, P. A.: I did a mass. mask exemption campaign to allow, you know, kids and parents to exist without having to have facial coverings on. Um, so it just, it created a lot of, um, Problems for me, uh, as far as, you know, the state investigating and investigating, and then people started writing, um, articles about me that weren't weren't favorable, which was fine.

Scott Miller, P. A.: What happened with those was all these people realized, Hey, there's somebody that's treating. So we ended up, you know, over that course of time, and we ended up getting thousands and thousands of phone calls from people locally and all over the country asking, you know, asking for help. And, and, um, it was, it was.

Scott Miller, P. A.: It was crazy. It was, it was a fascinating time. Um, but yeah, they started all of a sudden the complaints started pouring in. Like I would get stacks from the, you get one complaint and that's a problem. Like I would [00:15:00] get 15, like a batch of 15 complaints on me from, none of them were patients, it was like, we read an article where Mr.

Scott Miller, P. A.: Miller says, I'm like, I didn't say those words, the reporter said I said them. But so they would just, you know, twist things around to, to make it look, you know, pretty. Um, and so yeah, I, and then I started getting asked to, to advocate for people in the hospital because in our, our ICUs in Vancouver, and I was talking to, you know, some, some critical care nurses.

Scott Miller, P. A.: And she said, Scott, we've got at best a seven to 10 survival rate if they go into the ICU. And, and I'm like, that's not good. Um, and so. And so people started asking, they're like, my husband just went into the hospital and they're here, you know, they're, they just, um, transferred him to the ICU, can you help?

Scott Miller, P. A.: And, um, after my first couple of calls with these, with the doctors and I realized like, wow, [00:16:00] a, and I don't want to be rude. They don't know anything. I mean, cause they were, it was the protocol, the CDC list. So there was no critical thinking at all. And so we had to try and figure out how to trick them into putting them on, you know, Monteluca.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Yeah. One, one thing about the, that. That protocol, as I spoke to a survivor of that protocol, and they actually scheduled morphine for him. They woke him up in the middle of the night to give him morphine. I mean, if he has an alleged respiratory illness going on, you would not give something that depresses your respiratory drive even more.

Scott Miller, P. A.: And you never schedule

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: morphine.

Scott Miller, P. A.: And it's, it's, it's shocking. I've gone through a ton. I mean, like tens of thousands of pages of hospital records, like medical records of people that have died. And. People will ask, can you look through these and just give me your thoughts? And every single one of them read like a horror story.

Scott Miller, P. A.: And, and, um, and even though I was steeped in it and I probably spent at this point now, probably [00:17:00] 1100 hours on the phone with calls to different hospitals across the country. Um, but what was funny was these nurses started, so there's, my name was kind of being whispered around, but every time, like for the patients that I was calling and advocating for, like three or four days later, they'd walk out of the hospital and they would, they're like, how come every time he calls?

Scott Miller, P. A.: Those, those patients get out, you know, get off high flow or off the ventilator and they leave the hospital. But what we were, what we were doing was, um, when we realized it was very difficult to get the doctors to change anything, it was, we got to a point where it's like, okay, they're not gonna, we got to find a way to get it in.

Scott Miller, P. A.: And get all that stuff in. So, um, I think it's safe to say now, cause I don't care, but so I would, I would go over to people's homes and show them how to make smoothies and we would dump everything, I mean, hydroxychloroquine, ivermectin, colchicine, methyl prednisolone, azithromycin, montelukast, you know, high dose thiamine, like 400 milligrams of thiamine, vitamin D, [00:18:00] vitamin C, you know, all this stuff and make this smoothie up.

Scott Miller, P. A.: And, um, you know, and we would, what, what we do is create a diversion. So we would. Have a bag to drop off at the hospital for a nurse to take up. So we'd have a bag of supplements. So it seems like, you know, we're like, well, we can't really, we can't give you, we can't give those to them. And it's like, okay, well, can you at least give them the smoothie?

Scott Miller, P. A.: So it's kind of, so they didn't think we were trying to put anything in the, in the drinks. And so we did that for hundreds of people and it was pretty, it was crazy. Um, but yeah, the ones that we couldn't get to, um, they, they all died. So. It was pretty, um, but the hospitals found out and then they stopped all outside food and beverage.

Scott Miller, P. A.: They, they had, so then we had to try and figure out other ways. And the thing that's crazy, this is so, this is what's so nuts of all of the things that are crazy about it. There's a doctor, a pulmonologist. [00:19:00] Who, um, we, we got, we got a smoothie in this, this dude shows up in my house with a dually, with a generator and a blender picks up this man's life.

Scott Miller, P. A.: They drive over to the hospital parking lot and they're mixing up, mixing up the smoothie. And, and, um, he was about to be put on a ventilator and they got the smoothie into him. And the next morning he was sitting up, talking, eating breakfast, like FaceTiming with his wife. And the doctor comes in and she was like, wow.

Scott Miller, P. A.: You, you're looking pretty good. And she opens the chart and she said, Oh, so tell me about this smoothie. So what somebody, and she goes, I know what was in that. And she goes, listen, that's going to cause liver failure and you should not, you should not do it. And so he stopped, stopped drinking. I didn't find this out.

Scott Miller, P. A.: So a little later, but I'm like, for her to say that, like for her to see the turnaround, like that shocking, I mean like overt turnaround and then for her to go, Oh, I. [00:20:00] I know, it's the smoothie, like there's, there's stuff in the smoothie, you might, you should have been like, holy crap, that's amazing, we should look at doing this for all of our patients, but nope.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: And the patient's, the patient's in respiratory failure, like, it doesn't get any worse. 20 percent risk of death right there. Now they're sitting up talking and they might maybe get some liver issues. Okay.

Scott Miller, P. A.: Yeah. But they're not from remdesivir or tocilizumab or baricidinib. Really? Like that's your, that's your concern is the, I mean, it's just such a safe medication, but, um, yeah, it was like, that was, and I realized that's the only word I can think of.

Scott Miller, P. A.: It's like, that's the level of evil. It hit me where I'm like, we're going up against something that's pure evil, like in terms of. The hospital system and what the, what many of the doctors were doing. Cause that was fairly ubiquitous for if they started to get better, they would stop the things that we were able to get them to do, like if [00:21:00] we could convince them, like, can you put them on, you know, instead of a children's dose of dexamethasone, can you put them on an actual therapeutic dose of solumedrol and you know, some other things.

Scott Miller, P. A.: And then the next day they're like up walking around and now we have a discussion, well. We're, we're going to need to take him off the solumedrol and put him back on dexamethasone. I'm like, why would you do that? You were about to vent him last night. Now he's up walking around and now you want to switch back to the stuff that you were already giving that wasn't working.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: There was a man that I know that he called the hospitals during COVID. He called them the killing fields of America and that couldn't be more accurate.

Scott Miller, P. A.: Yeah, I, I, I, in my book, I, my father in law's practiced medicine for 55 years and we weren't, he's a, he's an ER doc. And, you know, I had those, I'm like, I didn't call him, I called him murderers.

Scott Miller, P. A.: I, you know, I did, you know, in the book and I said that I said, how did our hospitals become these killing fields? And he's [00:22:00] like, eh, you might want to tone, you know, tone that language down a little bit. And I'm like, why? I mean, I did, but I'm like, why would I do that? I mean, that's literally what, that's literally what they are.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Exactly. 100%. I mean scheduling morphine, that's the first thing I learned in residency. The first day is you never schedule pain in a narcotic. You have it as needed. You never wake someone up to ask them what their pain is, to see if they need morphine. You let them sleep. And I know a man who, he luckily survived.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: He was, Bless by God and had a, um, the respiratory therapist was like an angel watching over him and prevented him from getting intubated in a private room where how do you, how do you watch event if it starts ringing because it's not flowing air when it's in a private room, you can't, you die. But you do get to bill that private room as an ICU room, which is interesting enough.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: And then you wash, rinse, lather, and repeat with the next patient until, you know, you've knocked off quite a bit of the population.

Scott Miller, P. A.: Well, and yeah, and, and, [00:23:00] you know, the things that we were seeing were, I mean, it was, you know, where they would put them on high. So I had, I sent somebody to the hospital to get imaging.

Scott Miller, P. A.: And and lab work because I was very concerned about clotting and and they're showing signs of potential clotting and um, Sure enough like so he was day 18. We did a rapid covet at home. He was negative. He went to the hospital He was negative. So they started him on loganox. They were doing you know, the doctor talked to the wife She's like he's going to be fine the day before he was to be discharged home A new doctor came in retested him for covid said it was positive stop the meds put him in the covid ward and You And then he, like, almost, I mean, within a day, he was on high flow, like 60 liters, which.

Scott Miller, P. A.: The highest I, you know, and I had patients that were satting in the mid sixties, low seventies all the time. And we were able to get them from, you know, which isn't good, obviously, but yeah, but we would joke, it was like, Oh, eighties, the new [00:24:00] 91, you know, it's like seventies, the new 78, right. Cause we knew what would happen if we sent them to the hospital.

Scott Miller, P. A.: And so, and you know, we were able to get all of them better very quickly. Um, but. And thinking about what that must be like to have 60 leaders blasting on you. So what would happen is they would get anxious, try and take the mask off. So they would give them Ativan and zip tie their wrists to the bed, right?

Scott Miller, P. A.: Like it's, it's, it's, it's. Just shocking. I'm like, sorry, I'm looking at, I think it's light shining in. Um, but yeah, there's, and people don't, people can't fathom it. I mean, I, unless, unless it happened to you or for me where I was like, where I was having direct, you know, experiences talking with these doctors and working with, with critical care nurses, it's just so hard to fathom that like, why or why, how, why would they do this?

Scott Miller, P. A.: And. And [00:25:00] I'm, I'm like, I don't know, the only thing I can think of is, is, is. Either the money or the, the way that they would speak. I mean, by mid 21, the way doctors and nurses spoke about patients that didn't get the COVID shots was pure diabolical, like they would say things like they deserve to die. Now I would put them all out.

Scott Miller, P. A.: There's like an overflow 10. Like I saw one message. That said, we should put all of the unbacks in the tent and light it on fire.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Wow.

Scott Miller, P. A.: Like what?

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: That's just evil. I mean, pure evilness.

Scott Miller, P. A.: Not, not take it out. I'm so sorry. She said, can I go fishing on the pontoon boat? Um, but yeah, and it was, and that was what was interesting where the hospital started writing complaints about me to the medical commission. I didn't realize it at the time until I did a public records request, but they [00:26:00] were, They were coming after me, I mean, really aggressively, um, saying that I was part of, I was part of like the prayer, proud boys and prayer warriors and that I was a, I was a, um, an alt right extremist and I was dangerous and I mean, I'm reading through this and they said, we're considering getting the FBI involved and local, like local authorities.

Scott Miller, P. A.: I'm like. Like just, I'm a regular guy, like with a clinic in Washugal that takes care of kids and that when people that are sick call me, I say, yes, I help them. Like I'm not threatening, you know? But, um, yeah, they were, they, ugh, they, that,

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: that's, that's mind blowing because I tried to get the local pd local sheriff, local FBI, I tried to get CID, which is criminal investigation division.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: It's the army's equivalent of this. FBI involved in a commander who was a nurse who was practicing medicine without a license and nobody cared. And here you are doing the right thing for the patients and, and you got all those involved with you. I'm trying to do the exact opposite. So I was, [00:27:00] I was getting all of these people, tried to, I tried to get them involved so that they would.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Yeah. Stop a nurse from hurting patients by rejecting my medical exemptions that I provided and she rejected them and thus practice medicine without a license is what I accuse her of and have accused her of since the day that I've, I've seen this happen and I've yet to get anyone to investigate her for practicing medicine without a license.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Thanks.

Scott Miller, P. A.: See, and what's fascinating, like when I hear that story after I lost it, so, so I had an emergency suspension of my medical license on October 12th and 21. And we had just opened, we opened a portal for monoclonals for Regeneron because I was hearing, I was sketchy about it at first. Cause you know, if they're doing this with the shots, you know, I was, you know, do I trust this?

Scott Miller, P. A.: But I heard so many people. Talking to me, you know, like, like anecdotally, like, you know, people where it's like, you know, 47 and, uh, you know, 35 and, and, or 42 [00:28:00] year old husband and wife and the great grandma is 91 and she goes and gets Regeneron and she's like out gardening the next day while they're doing the treatments.

Scott Miller, P. A.: And they were in it for, you know, it took about four or five days, but they were pretty sick, but I'm like, really? And I kept hearing that. So I thought, let's, let's get some of this. And we had just started to get, get the monoclonals when I had my license suspended, I had, you know, probably five nurses that were now volunteering.

Scott Miller, P. A.: It was amazing. Like what we were able to do, but now I'm like, Oh, I mean, by, by the time I got to the office and found the packet, we had a whiteboard that had, it had all of the names. So we'd have the names and we'd have the, the time zones of where they live. Like, so we had their names and how critical they were and then time zones, because I knew that I needed to start with East Coast first and then work my way back to make sure we could get them before the pharmacies closed.

Scott Miller, P. A.: And, um, and I was like, what, uh, like, how am I going to take care of these people? Um, [00:29:00] but I had already had the pharmacies and when you talk about practicing medicine, so I had that happen with pharmacists. Where they were like, they're like, well, we can't prescribe that. Um, amantadine. I'd added the pharmacist saying, I'm not going to prescribe amantadine.

Scott Miller, P. A.: I'm like, why? Or dispense it. He said, that's for Parkinson's. I'm like, it's an antiviral. I use it for kids and kids with oppositional defiant disorder because of its ability to regulate dopamine, you know, all this stuff. And he just, he wouldn't, he's like, can you give me the ICD 10 codes? And so I did. And he's like, no, I just can't do it.

Scott Miller, P. A.: Um, and I'm like. It's the wrong dose, or if there's a contraindication, that's your job to inform me or to make me aware. You withholding it is practicing medicine, and that's illegal.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: I had that happen with a pharmacist who refused to dispense hydroxychloroquine. And, not just refused to, but yelled at me and then slammed the phone down.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Wow. [00:30:00] So guess what? I never sent any more prescriptions to that particular pharmacy.

Scott Miller, P. A.: Exactly. Um, but yeah, it was, it was fascinating to watch, watch that shift. And I knew, like, I knew a lot of these pharmacists, um, like we weren't buds, but they, like I was, Until that time, I was fairly respected. So it was, I mean, the shutdown of availability of care got, it just became increasingly difficult.

Scott Miller, P. A.: So I had previously when I was seeing, I wouldn't prescribe hydroxychloroquine because it was too big of a red flag for me. So I called, I called the facility. Um, not that far from me and the, he, this man owned his compounding pharmacy and he had heard about some of the stuff I was doing. And so he just sent me like a thousand tabs of 24 milligram ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine and prednisone and stuff.

Scott Miller, P. A.: So I had a stockpile. Of meds to get to people in case, you know, if it took a few days for [00:31:00] the pharmacist to dispense the meds and stuff. So we had stuff in place, but it was like, now what do we do? So I had to get it. I called a friend of mine to call again, like, Hey, are you cool doing standing orders?

Scott Miller, P. A.: And she's like, sure. She's like, what does that mean? I'm like, do you want to know? And she's like, not really. So as my office manager may get this, but this is that like mid morning when I called her and she's like, yeah, I heard what happened. And so, so then we did that. And we got a nurse to use another doctor's credentials to open up a new portal for Regeneron.

Scott Miller, P. A.: And another doc who had a clinic about an hour from us, we heard that they were giving it and they had probably a hundred extra vials sitting around. So I sent somebody out to Longview to pick it up and came back. And so by that, by about one o'clock in the afternoon, we had turned my clinic into a monoclonal antibody infusion center and just started bringing everybody in and hitting in with IVs and, you know, cause they needed [00:32:00] fluids.

Scott Miller, P. A.: I mean, these people were sick, sick, and so, um, But in the problem, the reason I'm saying that in the process of doing these things, um, I got a complaint about me and then a complaint about my wife because she's a nurse. And it simply, it simply said Miller's followers are going around the, we heard, you know, Miller's followers are going around to the back of his office, back of his clinic, and he's illegally giving them monoclonal antibodies.

Scott Miller, P. A.: And I talked to my doctor, this is the complaint, I talked to my doctor and he said there was a shortage. So it's either counterfeit. Or it's, it's either, uh, oh my gosh, this is in the complaint. So it's either, um, Oh, um, black market or counterfeit, you know, medication. No investigation, right? They didn't investigate it.

Scott Miller, P. A.: They didn't ever investigate the veracity of it. You could have Googled like Miller family pediatrics. Um, you know, like, uh, not even monoclonal, but, but infusion. And we were fourth on the list, [00:33:00] like in the state, it was like, didn't it? There we are. Right. Like they could have looked into any of that. They didn't.

Scott Miller, P. A.: And it said, Oh, by the way, his wife is a nurse. She should be investigated too. And because of that, just simply. Saying his wife sinners. They opened up a full investigation on her. I mean, I was like, guys, look, I feel like I'm keeping you busy. And, um, yeah, it was, they just didn't, they, there was no search for, for the truth.

Scott Miller, P. A.: There's like, looking for any veracity in the complaints. So people, so there was a group called Shots Heard Around the World. There were people were getting paid to file complaints against me and Mary Talley Bowden. So and I, somebody found that out and included me and I was like, okay, that makes, it's weird, but it makes more sense because I had over a hundred complaints on me, which is a lot.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: That's interesting to know because I've had Mary Talley Bowden on here and, um, Robert Apter have both been on this show before [00:34:00] and Oh nice! Yeah, I'm glad to have you on the show as well. I'm very, very proud to be a place where she's

Scott Miller, P. A.: just there she is I love her. She's awesome.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Yeah,

Scott Miller, P. A.: but yeah, it's been so we we had to pivot and Anyway, yeah, it's just it was absolutely fascinating to watch how they can manipulate You know, it's like, it's like lawfare, but it was like watching a bad movie.

Scott Miller, P. A.: Cause it didn't matter what I say. It didn't matter if we had affidavits from other people saying that this isn't actually what happened when you look at the statements of charges that they would write up, it ignored all of those things. And just continued to come back that, that no, he did these things.

Scott Miller, P. A.: I'm like, I didn't even know the patient. I mean, like I was accused of having a wife and brother get a, get a man, get the husband out of the ICU to go home to take ivermectin. I'm like, I was in a boat in the middle of the road river. [00:35:00] I didn't know that who that man was or did he existed or he was in the hospital.

Scott Miller, P. A.: And they still in the complaint and the statement of charges against me, it still says that I was the one. It encouraged them to take him out, like, you can't fight that.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: And, and if he lived and who was harmed, if all of these people did better after they saw you, where's the harm to that would require investigation?

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: That's,

Scott Miller, P. A.: that's a great, I mean, that's a great point. That's interestingly, the one thing during my, I had a five day hearing. I'm sorry. The sun is just, um, I had a five day hearing and they would ask, I got in trouble for going into people's homes. Um, so if they

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: sound,

Scott Miller, P. A.: well, I mean, I didn't care, but what, what was interesting is they, they heard stories.

Scott Miller, P. A.: You know where I'd go in and you know somebody's standing in the 70s and not once and they didn't [00:36:00] end up having to go to the hospital and they did better. Um, not once did they ask like their their question wasn't what was the outcome of those patients that you saw in the homes. They asked who do you think you are to go into those homes of people that are so sick?

Scott Miller, P. A.: And I was like,

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: wow, that used to be standard care to go to someone's home.

Scott Miller, P. A.: Like, sorry, I mean it. Like, who do I think I am? I'm like, I don't, I don't know how to answer that question. I'm just a regular guy.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Yeah, rendering aid and helping when no one else is willing to. Wow.

Scott Miller, P. A.: Um, but yeah, it's, I, I, I have some, I have some pretty fun.

Scott Miller, P. A.: It's funny because my, my wife, Obviously knew a lot of stuff going on, but I had her reading some chapters and she looked at me one day, um, in part of the, it was probably mid book, and she came out here and she said, Uh, what the hell? And I'm like, what? And she's like, this is what you [00:37:00] were doing? And I'm like, yeah.

Scott Miller, P. A.: I'm like, what did you think I was doing? And she's like, Scott, nobody knew. Like you'd be gone for two days, you know, all this stuff. Right. And she, and she was like, she was like, do you remember the fight we had that night? I'm like, yeah, yeah, I do. You were angry at me. And she's like, I had no idea. I'm like, you didn't want to know.

Scott Miller, P. A.: Like you said, I don't like plausible deniability, all this stuff. Like she had a go bag. kids and her, we were getting death threats. Somebody had shot holes through my, in my office, you know, the windows in my office and yeah, I was, uh, things kind of escalated. And so I was like, love, you did, you literally told me, don't tell me.

Scott Miller, P. A.: I'm like, Which, you know, I love telling the stories. Like I wanted to, I was like, hon, listen to this. This was bad ass weird, but it worked. And if she just stood there, she was like, it's fascinating that I, I just, I just didn't [00:38:00] know. And I'm like, Yeah, and she's like, it's very eye opening reading your book.

Scott Miller, P. A.: Just, it's funny coming from her to say that, um, I mean, she was actually like for her, what, you know, and even her taking over helping run the monoclonals. And, and I mean, she, I don't know how many, I mean, probably a couple hundred lives that would have been lost if it weren't for her, what I consider heroic efforts, but yeah, we had people coming to our house.

Scott Miller, P. A.: It was almost like a meth house. Because I would hang bags next to our mailbox full of meds, you know, like, cause it's, if it's nighttime and the pharmacies are closed, talk to people and they're like, Hey, well, should we come tomorrow? I'm like, Tomorrow's a long time away. Like, I would come right now. And so people would just pull in our driveway, and I'd usually go out and talk to them.

Scott Miller, P. A.: So we had to make the rounds and talk to our neighbors to let them know. I mean, [00:39:00] technically it looked shady, but I was like, we're not, we're not distributing anything illegal.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: So, so what does life look like now, uh, you know, you said you're in Texas now, is that, is that where you live? Are you in transit or?

Scott Miller, P. A.: Well, we, we had to leave. So, um, end of, so it was, end of November begins to, you know, the beginning of December of 20. Um, our attorneys called me because they kept getting calls from the attorney general.

Scott Miller, P. A.: Um, uh, because of stuff that I was doing and they're like, you have to leave. Like, like don't tell anyone. Just don't like go dark. No social media. Don't say anything. Just pack up and leave. And I was like, I was like, whoa, like Shelley, my wife's like, uh, she's like, what did you do? And I'm like, literally, like I didn't do anything.

Scott Miller, P. A.: Um, I mean, new. And so, you know, And so my wife grew up here. Her parents are near here and we were in law fair, so [00:40:00] we had to file for bankruptcy and the judge knew who I was. So for almost 20 months, she held our house in bankruptcy. She wouldn't, they wouldn't discharge it. So we couldn't do anything with it.

Scott Miller, P. A.: It was, it's kind of, that was crazy too because we had toxic mold in the house, which we found out right before my license was suspended. So we couldn't refi the house and do, you know, like remediate. So, and she was a trooper. So we ended up living in tents in our backyard for 20 months. Yeah. And it was like, we're coming into December.

Scott Miller, P. A.: And I remember Shelly saying, all right, uh, you winterize our tents again. And I'm like, As a dude hearing my wife say, again, right, like, this is another winter that

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: in Washington state. Yeah.

Scott Miller, P. A.: And I'm not doing a very good job of adulting and being a good provider, but God just opened up. I mean, miracle after miracle, like huge miracles that all happened right in a row.

Scott Miller, P. A.: And [00:41:00] we were able to. Um, we were able to get out, they discharged the house, we were, like, middle of the night type of thing, fled out to East Texas where she grew up, and so now we're, um, I'm basically have taken a year hiatus, um, to just regroup and be a husband and dad again, because I, I literally wasn't, I was gone for, you know, For 22 months.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Yeah. You know, what's interesting is most people that I've talked to, um, during this time is talking to them. It's almost like they were at war. You know, I've talked to, I've never been to combat, but I've talked to many combat veterans and Markate. Okay. I left at this time. I came back at this time. And, and the way you're talking about this is I left my family.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: You were still with your family, but you left your family and then you came back at a time. And it, it's very reminiscent of, of how war is talked about.

Scott Miller, P. A.: I think I, I looked at it [00:42:00] where, I mean, it's just instead of, you know, instead of active bullets, but you know, the, you know, I, I told the story and I, in, in part two and book two, where.

Scott Miller, P. A.: You know, like looking at athletes, you know, where they, you know, come in second and they still get a trophy and one point some million dollars, like you still win and watching them feel depressed, you know, like feel bad or, you know, they missed the putt and they didn't win the masters or whatever. And it's like, if I was wrong, like my second placement, somebody's dead.

Scott Miller, P. A.: And it was just, it was always scary. The line of, I have, I have a, this is Debra. My, my daughter named my phone. So this is Debra. So this is one that I had one of three that I had during, like throughout 21. And at one point in November of 21, it had 764 unread

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: texts. And I

Scott Miller, P. A.: look at it and I'm like, F me. I mean, like, what, what do I do with that?

Scott Miller, P. A.: And so I would have, I had nurses [00:43:00] triaging my phone. All the time, like just searching for like, who's seen, who seems like the worst, you know, who's the sickest. And it was just, it never ended. The whiteboard never ended. The texts never ended. The emails, the telegrams, the signals that, I mean, it just, it never stopped.

Scott Miller, P. A.: There was never a point where there wasn't somebody that was asking for help. And it was, it was scary. I mean, like failure, you know, my wife would knock me out. She would take some hydroxyzine like every maybe week and a half. Cause I'd go 70, easy 70, 70 plus hours without closing my eyes. And it would get to the point where I would start hallucinating.

Scott Miller, P. A.: So I'm talking on the phone or I'm in clinic. My eyes would close a little bit and I would vividly dream. And then I would say. The most nonsensical things to like a month, I'd be like, Whoa, what did I just, I'm like processing, like, how do I turn that into something applicable to what we were discussing?

Scott Miller, P. A.: And there are times where it's [00:44:00] like, you can't, it's too circuitous. So I'd have to say, okay, I am so sorry. I may have just fallen asleep. I just for a second. And I'm like, I am sitting there like. Right. You're good. We, like, you took care of us last week when we were, I was like, okay, I'm like, It was so, it was harder than that.

Scott Miller, P. A.: You can't, you know, you can't. So she would take my phone, she would knock me out. So I would sleep for about five or six hours and then do that again. And then she would knock me out and then I would do that again. And it just, it was, it was interesting. It was, um,

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Wow.

Scott Miller, P. A.: But like a lot of times I'm like, God, stop, like, come on, blow it down, guy.

Scott Miller, P. A.: Like, really? Like, this is not, it's, it's, it wasn't tenable. It was, it was, it just, I have a story where I literally went down to my mom's for labor day at 21. There was no service, like maybe a couple places once or twice, but, and I was pretty freaked out, um, cause I was on the phone the entire five and a half hours going down there and thank God, my daughter said, [00:45:00] daddy, can we go fishing?

Scott Miller, P. A.: And I'm like, you know what? That sounds nice. It was about six o'clock, five 36 o'clock, cool boat out to the middle of the rope river, dropped the anchor, started fishing. And all of a sudden my phone just started. Bing, bing, bing, bing, bing, bing, bing, bing, bing. That one area I had self service. So I sat in that stupid boat over the course of the next few days for 31 hours managing, managing texts and phone calls.

Scott Miller, P. A.: And it was like, I remember that night I rode my daughter back in. So I'm like, all right, Parker, you go in. I rode back out and I stayed out there until about 630 in the morning, went in, laid down for a couple hours and then hung out with my family and then got right out in the boat and sat there for the rest of it.

Scott Miller, P. A.: You know, it just, It was, it was absolutely unhealthy, unhealthy country.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Yeah. Yeah. Balancing that with family trying to be, [00:46:00] you know, the father, the dad, the provider, the, the, the husband, and then not let people feel left alone to die alone. That's, that's gotta be a horrible place to be.

Scott Miller, P. A.: Yeah. It's. I mean, I, I, you know, I mean, like I failed people.

Scott Miller, P. A.: I mean, like, I know I did and you see the impact on, you know, it's not just, here's, here's somebody that passed away, it's how they went. And the ice, I mean, like where the family's blocked out, like I. It's so different than in any other time where somebody, you know, dies after they've exhausted everything and you're there being able to advocate for them when, you know, because of the way it happened in the isolation.

Scott Miller, P. A.: It's like, you know, my wife walked into the ER and I never saw her again, you know, like that's insane. You just, you know, I hear that story over and over. Um, so, you know, and all of a sudden it was people that I knew. Right. Most of the time it was strangers, but now it's like friends of mine or colleagues of mine [00:47:00] that are getting sick.

Scott Miller, P. A.: And like, I always thought, okay, just please don't let this be your, your first mistake, your first whoops, you know, but some of you know, and care, not that I didn't care about, I think maximal effort. It's just, man, it was, it was, there's a lot of, it felt like a lot of responsibility.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Yeah. It's an unimaginable burden that you carried for years.

Scott Miller, P. A.: I wouldn't encourage, I mean, it's not something that I would, I wouldn't encourage it for, for anybody to do it. It was, it was. I mean, like I said, God, like I had a lot of discussions with God, you know, like how, I mean, just like, how do you think I can do this? It's not like it's, and I, I would say the word unfair and I hate the word unfair.

Scott Miller, P. A.: I'm like, at a certain point, this is a little unfair. Like I, I may [00:48:00] have spoken to him a little too, um, casually or conversation. I'm like, Hey, bro, come on. I'm just like, and then I'd have to apologize for saying that to our, our, you know, creator of the universe. Um, but there were times where it was literally, I remember it was where I'm like, I can't take another call.

Scott Miller, P. A.: I just, I don't have the emotional ability. You know, it was only when I say only, it was like four, it was actually 4 12 AM and I'm standing in our back 40 with a pitchfork digging up blackberry bushes, I had just gotten off a phone call with a very, just a very, very, very, um, challenging and, and sketchy.

Scott Miller, P. A.: It was a sketchy experience and it was like literally fingers crossed. If I'm wrong, she's dead. If I'm right, we're good type of thing. And, um, and I'm like, I can't. And it was just this. wave, I don't know what to call it, but this wave came over me and it was almost like, yeah, you can, there's, I have, there's more for you to, [00:49:00] you know, there's more for you to take care of.

Scott Miller, P. A.: And I just, that, that exhaustion, like the feeling, just wanting to just crumble and just, I just wanted to curl up in the dirt and the fetal position and shut life out, you know? And And this wave came over me and then, boom, my phone rings about a minute later. My phone rings and it was, you know, somebody else.

Scott Miller, P. A.: And I'm like, okay, I got this. We're good. Okay. All right. We're good. And I remember later I had gone in and I was telling Shelly the story and I did a, I'm a fan of prayer, but I just remember thinking, how to be able to have all of those experiences and, and they would, there is answer to prayers for so almost immediate that it felt like walking in biblical times, right?

Scott Miller, P. A.: Where people are like, well, how do you have faith or trust? It might, because. Because the creator of the universe, [00:50:00] when I say, Lord, I need help, right? Like we've got so many, like I called somebody or I got a call from somebody and they're like, Hey, like our neighbor, um, their ex neighbor, they'd moved. But I got a call from his wife and he's, he's not doing well.

Scott Miller, P. A.: And so she gave me the number. I called, he couldn't speak. He was so abundant. It was so epoxic that he can no longer talk. And so I had my wife call our friends back and ask if they could get some. Equipment. And I remember telling. I told my friend Jerry, I said, I don't care, find an asthmatic. I don't care.

Scott Miller, P. A.: Steal their nebulizer, just whatever it takes, just, just, just get one. And so she put out this call to people. And while I'm talking to, to the wife assessing, you know, trying to get an assessment of how this man's doing and thank God they didn't have to have a pulse ox because if they would put it on, I think I would have been, you know, I would have had to have sent him.

Scott Miller, P. A.: Um, but while she's talking to me, the door doorbell, [00:51:00] she opens the door and it's a neighbor from two houses down that I had treated a week and a half before it heard that they needed nebulizer and had the neb in all of the, all of the meds.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Wow.

Scott Miller, P. A.: And I was like, like that. And I'm like, how did you do that?

Scott Miller, P. A.: Like the coordination and the timing of all of, you know, just of all of that. And I just was, I remember telling Shelley, I'm like, God, I mean, just the, what we would look at as possible coincidence, like that was literally God moving pieces of life around to save this man's life and the way he used people in the trust that we had in each other to do it.

Scott Miller, P. A.: I'm like, I got to see that every day. I mean, it was so beautiful. It was like a beautiful thing. It's um, like, I'm like, I get like, he let me do that. Like he let me be in that. And, In that hellscape, and in the process of doing that, I got to see the beauty of how, how [00:52:00] he uses us to serve.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Yeah. I mean, we are God's hands and feet on this earth.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: That's what we're to be is to be the body of Christ. And to do that, he puts us in these dark positions, but we get to see his light shine the brightest in those dark places. And it's absolutely a miracle. Wow.

Scott Miller, P. A.: Yeah.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: What great stories.

Scott Miller, P. A.: No, there's, I've had, I've had, um, I've had a lot of, I've been asked to do a lot of A lot of what would be, uh, I've been engaged in a lot of things that people would not consider traditional in the context of managing life.

Scott Miller, P. A.: So it's been, it's, um, It's been a fun story to, to, to write and, and share.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Well, Scott, thank you so much for, for coming on and sharing your story. Tell us where we can get your book.

Scott Miller, P. A.: Well, you can, Amazon, um, it used to be through my, my wife's website, but she got [00:53:00] banned. I got banned immediately and then hers just got banned.

Scott Miller, P. A.: So it's just, just right off of, right off of Amazon. So I have actually, she, she bought this for me for Christmas, but it's, yeah, it's the, Most dangerous man in Washington. That's not what I, that's what the attorney general and the Washington medical commission had called me at one point, they said, I was, I was like, me, like that, what a beautiful marker.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: You're, you're dangerous to the evil that was trying to take over.

Scott Miller, P. A.: Yeah. I'm like, I was like, almost like, thank you. for. I appreciate that. Um, you know, I look at that as high praise,

Scott Miller, P. A.: but yeah, that would be it. It's a good, i if you look at, if people look at the review, I just went and somebody said, I wrote a review for you, and I, I went on and, and started reading 'em, and I just, I had to stop and I gave 'em, I gave 'em to my wife. I'm like, because it's, it, it's emotional for me. And just the kindness that, that, [00:54:00] that people have gifted me in, in being part of the journey.

Scott Miller, P. A.: But I've been told, it's, um, I've been told it's.

Scott Miller, P. A.: Impossible to put down, which is probably the coolest thing. So,

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: so check out his book, buy it, give him a rating, give him some comments, send some love his way. And Scott, you're going to be in our prayers that the God continues to restore you and your family, and that he puts you in more positions of trust.

Scott Miller, P. A.: I appreciate that. And I, one thing I just, For people that are like what is in the background? So I have I apologize. It's We didn't have yeah when we we had to leave most stuff we didn't have we didn't have a lot of means So when you actually really quick when you asked what happened when they took my medical practice, you know I didn't lose my job, you know my license.

Scott Miller, P. A.: I lost we lost everything. I mean like everything was just instantly gone so we've been I mean guys always support us, but we've been we've been living on mana [00:55:00] and um, And uh, you know Um, I can be crafty in some areas, but no, it's been, we've been blessed, uh, even to watch God, to watch God. We've never been hungry.

Scott Miller, P. A.: We've never been, well, I mean, cold, but not like crazy cold, you know what I mean? Like we've just been, you know, he's taking, but, but so yes, this is, this is kind of a storage area. So I am not, I'm not living in some untidy filth. It's just the only place I have here. So.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Well, Scott, thank you so much for sharing. Thank you for sharing everything. And, and, you know, God bless you. We'll be, I'll be praying for you and your family. And I hope many of the listeners will be praying for you as well. Well,

Scott Miller, P. A.: thank you so much for having me. And thank you for taking the time to do this.

Scott Miller, P. A.: I appreciate your time.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Of course.

Scott Miller, P. A.: Just[00:56:00]

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: a reminder for everyone out there. Duty uniform of the day. The full armor of God. Let's all make courage more contagious than fear.

Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Doesn't dinner sound great as it's cooking? This dinner is from River Bend Ranch. Which always provides prime or high [00:57:00] choice. has never been given hormones, never been given antibiotics, never been given mRNA vaccines. It's raised in the USA. It's processed in the USA. In fact, it's fully vertically integrated, which means that they own the cow, it gives birth to the calf, it's raised on their fields, and then taken to their butcher, and then shipped to you.

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