CHARITY | Tag flyer to substitute face-to-face solicitation

Instead of soliciting charity recipients face-to-face, who stand outside a San Jose courthouse, waiting for the county's legal self-help service that only offers assistance with one form of defense against eviction suits, I'll be posting this tag flyer just outside, hoping it'll be more effective at reaching out to people who need help staying indoors during this already harsh winter weather:


Read about my initial failed attempts to provide free legal services to the would-be homeless in CHARITY | Second campaign to save the would-be homeless launched.

Charity initiative serves dual purpose
While I'm back on the subject of charity, I'd like to point out something I glossed over in the other posts, which has to do with my charity initiative's complementary role in demon-fighting.

I can't stop fighting demons just to be a nice guy; that would turn nice guy into stupid guy. The problem persists, and I see no one standing behind me ready to pick up wherever I might leave off.

To that end: my new charity initiative might look like a nice gesture—and, it is; but, it's also a test run of an upcoming tactical maneuver against the demonic agenda, which will be designed to supplant county services that purport to help county citizens fight injustice perpetrated by other county agencies and services (VMC, Superior Court, County Counsel, etc.), but instead surreptitiously preclude any sort of justice at all by failing to aggressively (timely, and in full) all avenues of recourse for the victim.
NOTE | Overall anti-demonic strategy at work: go on the attack to minimize being under attack.
Specific examples of this at work abound, but, one can easily infer the veracity of my claim using two key facts: all legal self-help services feed from the same county coffers as do the county agencies that perpetrate wrong on county citizens, and not one testimonial or case study has been produced by any such service that proves their effectiveness at obtaining a favorable resolution for any of its clients.

AIDS | PACE-case attorney clarifies objectives, direction

Today, in spite of infuriating mistakes made by the dictation feature on my iPhone—none of which appeared in any of these e-mails prior to sending, but only after—I tried a different tack in obtaining a clearer vision of the road ahead for my legal initiative against VMC/PACE from my attorney: namely, honey instead of vinegar:
Before I describe the results of this e-mail, which I sent this morning, I want to point out another place where demons fit into the picture: As a professional writer, misspellings and (whoa!) entirely missing words are an anathema to me, and ever since the last two battles involving me and demons (not recounted on this blog), my phone has been acting strangely whenever communication with third-parties are involved (in fact, this is the reason for the second battle, casualties for which are still being counted even today). Do not f*ck with the phone is the message, although I'm not sure it's going to be received. The problem manifests itself when using dictation, which, when modified by demonic detractors, translates words and phrases spoken into the iPhone when composing e-mails and text messages, returns absolutely ridiculous results:
The word is availing...The word is Silicon...
What's more, is the dictation software will alternate the translation of my speech between the right and a wrong word or phrase three or four times right before my very eyes, sometimes choosing a wrong one just as I touch the Send button. The two examples above do not even begin to show the absolute nonsense I put up with all day when composing e-mails and texts. Sometimes, it makes more subtle mistakes: surreptitiously singularizing the plural or later omitting words it spelled out at first (as if there was no grammar check on auto-correction).

When it happens, it occurs overnight, and always following a series of bitter-pill responses (demonic vernacular) to a given defeat of demons by me in a battle [see ESPAÑOL | Demonios ardientes con el fuego; see also SCIENCE | What it looks like when a demon dies] or challenge of some kind.
NOTE | I recently negated (CIA vernacular) a stockpile of noggin' crunch ammunition, and to great effect.
Anyway, back to my results with the attorney assigned to the case; they are quite encouraging, in that some action has been taken, and it looks to be comprehensive at first glance. I'm not used to somebody doing something at all on my behalf, so I'm a bit giddy over these:
It would appear that things will progress in one direction or another relatively soon, which is what desperately needs to happen. In the past, not having required that deliverables be identified and due-date expectations set has wasted a tremendous amount of my time. I believe that demanding this from Joseph Nazarian, who bowed out of the Crapo case right after he was asked to update me on his progress, ended that relationship in short order.

In sum, demons and their people don't do timelines and project schedules because those would reveal their agenda (to waste your time, nullify your options, deny your rights, etc.):
Idle hands are the devil’s workshop.
While that may not sound at all as nefarious as the murders demons and their people perpetrate in tandem all the day long, believe me, it's part-and-parcel to same.

AIDS | Crapo-case attorney fizzles, PACE-case attorney wonders aimlessly

Stanford doctor will overrule ban from Stanford Positive Care
As mentioned in AIDS | Former PACE Clinic doctor bars me from Stanford Positive Care Clinic, a former PACE Clinic (San Jose) physician, Dr. Edward Brooks, now working at Stanford's equivalent, Stanford Positive Care Clinic (Palo Alto), announced via his receptionist that I am also barred there. He declined to state a reason, but the implication made that all but unnecessary.

Today, at my first visit to Stanford Medical Group in nearly 10 years, my former—and now current—primary care physician, Dr. Paul Ford (i.e., man of gold), stated that he would work around whatever issue Dr. Brooks presented, and in short order:
Outside Dr. Ford's office at Stanford Medical Group (Hoover Pavilion)
Although the aforementioned clinic has yet to contact me regarding my first appointment, I did notice that Dr. Brooks was listed as a contact in the MyHealthOnline app developed by Stanford Medical. The app only lists doctors treating a specific patient as recipients of messages sent through it:
Only treating physicians are listed in the recipients list in the MyHealthOnline app for Stanford Medical
It stands to reason, then, that the issue was likely quashed; however, only a scheduled appointment will ultimately determine this.

Useless attorney bows out via illogical rationale
Joseph Nazarian, the attorney assigned to the all-important Dr. Crapo case [see AIDS | Dr. Crapo lies, gets caught in same], crapped out, which is absolutely no surprise:
Lack of communication......followed by nonsense excuse
Since "taking on the case" over two months ago, he has done nothing, not even so much as resubmitted my county claim—which merely meant filling out a form [see AIDS | Santa Clara County lawyers skirt Dr. Crapo complaint]—and was failing to respond to multiple requests for status updates on same. I ended up delivering the resubmitted claim myself, which consists of only one difference, specifically, line 5 now states the date of loss as 8/18/2015, whereas the first claim stated ongoing:
The resubmitted Dr. Crapo-related county claim form specifies the date of loss at 8/18/2015, whereas the first claim—which was rejected for an unspecified date of loss—stated that the loss is ongoing
After about two weeks of phone calls and texts, he stated that he can't work because of "family issues."

"We're-just-waiting-on" attorney deadlocks progress
Denise Miller, the attorney assigned to the PACE Clinic case [see PREVIEW | AIDS | Second lawyer retained in VMC debacle; see also AIDS | Second claim against VMC served on county], is "waiting on" the adverse party to move my case forward in a timely manner, specifically, she's waiting for the director of PACE to arrange a meeting with her to discuss my future, anticipated and demanded acceptance as a patient (it's not negotiable):
The problem is, this isn't the only step to take, and it's not an exhaustive one; the county claim and hospital grievance, already in progress, are priority right now—a fact this attorney cannot seem to understand or accept
NOTE | Highly suspect is that this attorney wants that meeting to be private, which would be insane for me to allow from my perspective as a future plaintiff in an action against the county. Again, these people feed from the same trough, and I can't allow her to jeopardize my future litigation potential by saying (or not saying) anything in a meeting in which I didn't monitor and/or participate.
Meanwhile, I continue to dance circles around her by discovering additional administrative remedies, and by acting on them to completion. For example, by and through my call to my district supervisor's office [see AIDS | District supervisor to act against VMC-PACE obstinacy], I was able to ascertain a single-point-of-contact at VMC, Jenny Howard, with whom I will discuss my former VMC primary care physician's refusal to treat my terminal illness, even upon learning that the PACE Clinic was refusing treatment:
A new revelation by the district supervisor's office points further to malpractice, a fact I expect to be ignored by my attorney for as long as she represents me in this case
NOTE | The latter points to the termination of at least two doctors, and grounds for a lawsuit.
Hopefully, she'll be useful in getting HealthTrust to simply take my intake information, so I can get this Ryan White certification she claims is necessary in order to represent me.

Just a side note: I'm not really as stupid as I must look, presenting all these problem people with the problems they present; I'm simply mapping the path for others, and attempting to show anyone who is facing or may face these same issues what to expect—and, hopefully, how to handle them correctly.

Attorney problems are not new
When it comes to demon-related legal issues, problems with attorneys—strange, unusual problems—abound. Take, for example, the Kaye-Scholar debacle, which tanked a multi-million dollar case against police officers with a history of unwarranted and unlawful physical violence against otherwise complicit suspects of accused of menial crimes for attacking me.