Joe: You know, Ghost with Patrick Swayze is like the ultimate “friendly ghost” movie.
Emidio: Yeah, man, totally. He’s dead, but he’s not haunting anyone in a scary way. He’s just trying to protect Demi Moore and solve his own murder.
Joe: Exactly. He’s got unfinished business, but he’s all heart. Like, he doesn’t go poltergeist on anyone—unless they deserve it.
Emidio: Oh, for sure! That scene where he messes with the guy who killed him—classic. He’s like, “If I gotta be a ghost, I’m gonna make your life hell.”
Joe: And the whole pottery scene? That’s gotta be the most romantic ghost moment ever.
Emidio: Yeah, but if you think about it, it’s kinda creepy too. She doesn’t even know he’s there at first.
Joe: True, but Whoopi Goldberg’s character kinda balances that out. She’s like the comic relief and the bridge between the living and the dead.
Emidio: Yeah, she steals the show. But Swayze? Man, he made ghosts look cool.
Joe: If all ghosts were like him, we wouldn’t need exorcists—we’d need more pottery wheels.


God ain’t to blame for the death of Patrick Swayze. It was Wild Bill Rockefeller’s snake oil cure that did him in. They sold him a dream, but all he got was a slow death. Big Pharma’s been pushing their magic potions for years, and too many good men have fallen for it. Swayze was a fighter, but even the toughest warriors can’t beat poison disguised as medicine.
Wild Bill was bad, no doubt, but his son John D. Rockefeller? Man, he took snake oil to a whole other level. Turned it into an empire. He wasn’t just selling fake cures—he reshaped the whole medical industry to push his petroleum-based ‘medicine.’ And once he had the doctors and universities under his thumb, natural healing got labeled as quackery. Swayze never stood a chance against that machine.
Spring is coming, and the dandelions will bloom for all those suffering from cancer. A free, abundant cure straight from nature—no profit in that for the Rockefeller WASP elite medical monopoly. They call it a weed, but it’s been medicine for centuries. While they push their toxic treatments, the real remedy grows right under our feet, waiting for those wise enough to use it.