A Florida nurse recently crossed a bright red line on social media, publicly pleading for foreign countries to “come in and attack” the United States to remove what she called the “regime” of President Donald Trump. This wasn’t satire or a clipped rant shared in private; it was a viral TikTok that forced the nation to confront how far radicalized medical workers have wandered from their oath.
The woman, identified as Joyce Schulz-Killian, urged Canada, the U.K. and China to “help us” and even later placed the video on private after it spread and drew outrage. Her own statement to reporters tried to recast the stunt as a constitutional protest about “unchecked executive actions,” but asking foreign powers to attack your own country is not protest — it is reckless, unprofessional, and dangerous.
Schulz-Killian runs a patient advocacy business and presents herself as a credentialed nurse with years in the field, which makes this spectacle all the worse for patients who trust caregivers with their lives. Americans deserve to know that the people leading bedside care respect the sanctity of the nation and the rule of law, not cheer for foreign intervention; private-business credentials and p.r. statements don’t absolve a healthcare worker of professional responsibility.
Conservative viewers are right to demand accountability: hospitals, licensing boards, and employers must act swiftly when a medical professional openly endorses violence against our country. If the left’s mantra of “tolerance” means protecting employees who call for foreign attack or sabotage, then institutions are choosing ideology over safety — and voters should hold them accountable at the ballot box and in the court of public opinion.
This episode is another reminder that the culture war has infected professions once respected for neutrality and service. Patriots must push back hard: defend our hospitals, protect patients, and insist that anyone who publicly prays for our ruin answer for it — not be cheered on by canceling consequences or dismissed as merely “voicing concerns.”



