I should have used a different example. I didn't intend for it to go down that route.
It’s pretty clear that you have a problem with the medical profession, and with dentists in particular.
If you think it’s such a scam, and you think it’s so easy, why don’t you join them?
In this thread, and in the previous one, you clearly think that you are smarter than the dentist with whom you were dealing. You know more about their profession than they do.
All you need to do is go get your college degree, be in the top 1% of your class, get into medical school, borrow about $300,000 to do that, and then spend six years in residency, not getting paid very much, barely able to make your student loans.
In 14 short years, you can be in the position of power, and you can command the salary that they do.
Since you’re so much smarter, you don’t have to do it the way they do, you could allow people to diagnose themselves, and then simply perform the procedure they want, whether or not they need it done, right?
What’s really annoying about your set of suppositions is that you assume that the dentist is not actually practicing his profession, but in fact he is, he is protecting the patients from their own misdiagnoses, their own errors, their own misconceptions, and all of the wild guessing.
Your Google search, your understanding of your condition, does not equal a medical degree. The doctors have a responsibility to ensure the condition, to actually diagnose what is going on before they perform any operation. To do less than that would be unethical.
So, you went to see a doctor and you paid for his expertise and you paid for his diagnosis.
You got a bargain. Even if you don’t recognize it.