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Legendary Dallas Cowboys guard and Super Bowl winner Larry Allen has died suddenly at the age of 52 while on vacation with his family in Mexico.
"So that bit about non vaxxers being a hazard to the vaxxed? The
vaxxed are a pool of blood contagion now."
The total number of excess deaths in 47 countries of the Western World was 3,098,456 from 1 January 2020 until 31 December 2022. Excess mortality was documented in 41 countries (87%) in 2020, 42 countries (89%) in 2021 and 43 countries (91%) in 2022. ...
Excess mortality has remained high in the Western World for three consecutive years, despite the implementation of containment measures and COVID-19 vaccines. This raises serious concerns. Government leaders and policymakers need to thoroughly investigate underlying causes of persistent excess mortality.
A front page headline you probably didn’t think you would read for another few years - “Covid jabs may be to blame for increase in excess deaths”!
The article in the Telegraph says “Experts call for more research into side effects and any possible links to mortality rates”.
Lafayette, Louisiana, firefighter passes away at the age of 29
Firefighter Darion Whetstone passed away after a lengthy battle with cancer and now the entire firefighting community is mourning his passing. Not only was Whetstone serving the Lafayette community as a firefighter, but he also served our country proudly by being a member of the U.S. military. Engineer Whetstone joined the department in July of 2014.
Lafayette Fire Department receives the COVID-19 “vaccine”: https://tinyurl.com/4ur2msm7
17-Year-Old Who ‘Loved Flowy Outfits, Music and Art’ Died 2 Months After Second Pfizer Shot
In an interview with The Defender, Shanna Carroll shared the heartbreak she experienced when her 17-year-old daughter Aubrynn suffered cardiac arrest, followed by major complications — and died less than two months after her second Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine.
Aubrynn, who had no known health issues, died in August 2022, less than two months after her second Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine.
Her medical records, which her mom shared with The Defender, show that Aubrynn was diagnosed with COVID-19, myocarditis and other heart and lung complications, and she experienced three cardiac events.
Her death certificate listed COVID-19 and multi-organ failure as cause of death, her mother said.
Shanna said that as a socially concerned young person, Aubrynn, like so many members of the general public, was taught and believed that masking and getting vaccinated were ways to protect others.
They lived in Michigan, which had no vaccine mandates for schools. Aubrynn didn’t initially get the vaccine. However, in early 2022, she and her friend Rachel were selected to go on a summer trip called Pilgrimage for Youth. To participate, they were required to get the COVID-19 vaccine.
The program, sponsored by the Odd Fellows, is a competitive program open to 16- and 17-year-olds interested in learning about government, politics and international relations.
It was to be Aubrynn’s first and only trip away from home.
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/06/04/covid-vaccines-may-have-helped-fuel-rise-in-excess-deaths/
"may have"
"possible"
"partly to blame"
However much you hate the media, it's still not enough.
Greyson Follmer, 19 Year-Old Athlete with Severe Heart Inflammation and 15 ER Trips
April 10, 2023
https://rumble.com/v2hfaqa-greyson-follmer-talks-about-his-covid19-vaccine-injury.html
KEN RUETTGERS: Greyson, why don't you introduce yourself a little bit. Tell us about your experience that you've just had.
GREYSON FOLLMER: Yeah, so I had covid in September of last year. I mean, I got over the virus fine, it was about two weeks where I was just, you know, I had flu-like symptoms, and was completely fine after that, went back to school, did all the sports stuff. I mean, I was exercising continuously. And I was in ROTC[1], which I didn't mention because I was in school last year, too. But in order to go back to ROTC, since I had covid, they required me to get a cardiac MRI, and so they because they know covid does stuff to the heart, I mean, I got a cardiac MRI and it showed that, you know, my heart was just larger, wasn't inflamed or anything at all, just larger—
0:58
KEN RUETTGERS: But you know, I mean, I had the same thing when I went to USC and—
GREYSON FOLLMER: Yeah.
KEN RUETTGERS: —we were both athletes, so it's not unusual for athletes—
GREYSON FOLLMER: No [inaudible]—
KEN RUETTGERS: — to have slightly, yeah slightly enlarged, I mean, it's very common, so—
GREYSON FOLLMER: Completely fine, went back to school, heart's in perfect shape, I mean I was just exercising continuously, I had an enlarged heart because, I mean, I was an athlete which was perfectly fine. So I didn't think anything of it, got the shot. I have a little sister that has, just, congenital issues so, I mean, she got the virus, it wouldn't be good. So I got it basically for her sake. I got the shot. First shot, it was kind of, I mean, I was feeling just not very good. Heart started hurting a little bit. I didn't think anything of it, I just thought, you know, it was just, you know, post-shot symptoms.
And so I waited 21 days and then after the second shot, I mean, I couldn't, I was afraid that within probably 2 days after the shot, I was going to have a heart attack. You know, I was, the heart pain was worse than anything I could possibly imagine. Because I mean have problems before with broken bones and this pain was far worse than anything else I've ever dealt with in my life.
You know, every moment I just thought, like, could be the last because, you know, my heart was, heart was so inflamed to the point where I thought I was just going to, I was going to have a heart attack and die at any moment. And it didn't matter which day it was, what time it was, I just thought, you know, it was going to happen eventually.
Now thankfully I've, you know, I've found a very good doctor in my area who's helped me with this. But I know that there's a lot of people around me and around the country that are dealing with the same problems that I have, you know, they're just probably too scared to share their story. Like I was too, I mean, I was just, dealing with this now, but, I mean, it's important for all of us to open up, and you know, it's a scary thing. And —
KEN RUETTGERS:: Were you in the hospital?
GREYSON FOLLMER: I went to the emergency room probably 15 times throughout this 2 month span after the shot because you know, I just thought, any moment, when it got worse— It would come in spikes where it would just, you know, flare up to the point where my heart would start pounding, right, I would have heart attack symptoms. My left arm would start hurting. My blood pressure, I have a blood pressure monitor at my house. I mean, it was, it was continuously— I was an athlete, my blood pressure was always under the normal range, like 120 systolic pressure and then 80's diastolic pressure. But it was continuously, no matter what time of day, if was resting, or exer— I was never exercising, I couldn't even walk, but if I would walk up to get water or something my blood pressure would be, you know, 200, 210 over 130 which is, you know, that's heart attack blood pressure levels. I mean, just continuously. If I was resting it would be probably around 185 continuously systolic pressure and then diastolic pressure was like 110. You know, it was just crazy.
4:07
KEN RUETTGERS: I mean were you, I mean, you said you were concerned, you were, I mean, you were on the edge of death. What were some of your thoughts, you know, as you were, like—?
GREYSON FOLLMER: I was just, you know, like, why? Is this only happening to me? You know, I was concerned that it was just like something with my body. You know, I didn't think it was something of the shot at first, really, because there was no, no information coming out about it. I thought it was just me having problems with my heart, you know, it was just shutting dow for whatever reason. But then as, as, you know, more information started coming out, more people were dealing with this, then I started to correlate that, you know, as directly related to the shot I got.
4:48
KEN RUETTGERS: How did—
GREYSON FOLLMER: But you know I feel within, like, the potential for the little time I have left on the earth, and, you know, it's hard to think about all that stuff when you're dealing with, you know, unimaginable pain. So, I mean, a lot of it was just thinking about how bad I was hurting the whole time. So it was just crazy.
KEN RUETTGERS: And what about your mom? I mean, you must of scared her, scared her almost to death, huh? Was she pretty concerned?
GREYSON FOLLMER: She was actually, she said, she was more scared with what was going on with me because I was a completely healthy kid. I mean, there was nothing wrong with me before the shot. It was completely out of the blue, and how fast I, my body just started to deteriorate and how fast the potential was for something absolutely serious to happen to me like a heart attack. I mean, it scared the living daylights out of her, so I can't imagine the stress that she went through, too. So she was willing enough to, you know, sleep with me, because you know, I didn't even know, I thought it could happen when I was asleep. So she was, she spent two months just always by by side.
KEN RUETTGERS: Wow. Your mom, your mom, like, slept—
GREYSON FOLLMER: Yeah. My mom slept with me. Because I mean, I was that bad. I thought was, you know, I could have a heart attack at any moment. So she was always by me. You know, I can't thank her enough because just little you know, support, mental support you get from a mother, and you know, your family members, it can, it can go a long way. So.
KEN RUETTGERS: Hmmm. And what did doctors say, did the doctors say, I mean, you're perfectly healthy, did the doctors, what was diagnosis the doctors gave you?
GREYSON FOLLMER: So, yeah, I went to the ER several times, like I said. But at the ER, you get an EKG which is like an electro monitor thing of the heart where it kind of checks the, you know, how well your circulatory system's working, if you're pumping blood the right way. And those all showed up fine. Right? Because you know, what I'm dealing with is heart inflammation.
I'm thinking, you're looking at the doctors, like, why are you guys just giving me an EKG when we know that that's going to be fine because I haven't had something serious yet like a heart attack? Like, there's obviously some other problem because I'm dealing with crazy pain.
So you know, I just requested a heart MRI, which, this is 3 months behind the fact of, I'm starting to recover, right, or else I wouldn't be able to talk to you, but, you know, every single time I went I would just get an EKG. Now I did get a CT scan, but same type of deal as the EKG where it just shows, you know, how well, if you're still able to pump blood, there's no clotting or anything in the area which, I know that's fine because I haven't had a heart attack yet.
Some people have had a heart attack from this shot so far. I haven't because like I said, I had really good doctor that's helped me out with some nonconventional Western medicine. But, you know, but my, my ER trips, emergency room trips were just a complete joke. Waste of time, waste of money.
8:07
So finally I got scheduled with the cardiologist after, you know, 2 months. Took a long time. And I got an MRI scheduled here in like 4 days, I think. MRI scheduled in 4 days. And you know, that'll be able to show the tissue of my heart. Now if I got this 2 months ago, an MRI, I guarantee you, I would have the worst heart inflammation of all time.
Now the doctor that I have talked to, the cardiologist, he already said, yeah, you, you dealt with some pretty bad heart inflammation. I mean, you don't have an MRI to prove it yet but you have that based on your symptoms, I mean, if you're telling me what you think is, what I think is true, and what I'm seeing with everyone else, then you had pretty severe heart inflammation.
KEN RUETTGERS: [inaudible]
GREYSON FOLLMER: Now the MRI—
KEN RUETTGERS: So what do you think was the cause?
GREYSON FOLLMER: Oh, yeah, it was the shot. The shot caused a, for whatever reason, it's called myocarditis. You know, I don't know if it's, we don't know what causes it from the shot, I think it's they said spike protein or something like that. But, or it just might be an autoimmune problem. So I've gotten multiple blood tests done to see if I have any autoimmune issues to begin with, and they're coming back here in 5 days, I don't even know the results of them yet, but—
KEN RUETTGERS: So you, you're, you're convinced, you were perfectly healthy, you get the shot, and within a couple days, boom, you're, you're like in the worst pain in your life, and like you said—
GREYSON FOLLMER: Oh yeah. Yeah, yeah. A hundred percent. ...
TEXT ON SCREEN: https://c19vaxreactions.com/
@toobaffled
Dr. Rashid Ali Buttar Accurately Predicted Death of CNN Anchor Drew Griffin During Interview
Drew Griffin: 'I’m vaccinated. You think there is a ticking time bomb in me and I’m going to die?'
No mercy for the useful idiots?
https://t.me/tribunalsandexecutions/463885
toobaffled
Dr. Rashid Ali Buttar Accurately Predicted Death of CNN Anchor Drew Griffin During Interview
Drew Griffin: 'I’m vaccinated. You think there is a ticking time bomb in me and I’m going to die?'
Kansas City Chiefs defensive end BJ Thompson, 25, is reportedly on the road to recovery after suffering a seizure and cardiac arrest during a team meeting this week.
Waller addressed his decision in a YouTube video released Sunday afternoon. He mentioned his recent divorce from WNBA All-Star Kelsey Plum and described a frightening medical situation off the field last season that "forced me into a position to re-evaluate." ...
"Last season in New Jersey, we played the Jets on October 29," Waller said. "I got hurt that game. The following week, the Giants were playing the Raiders in Vegas. ... I started to feel like this fever coming on. ... The fever starts to build, I start to get the chills and stuff like that. By the time I pull into my parking garage at my condo and get out of the car, I'm, like, shaking pretty violently, like uncontrollably."
Waller said that he "couldn't breath" in his bed the next morning and called 911. He said that paramedics responded and that he ended up spending 3 1/2 days in a hospital.
"Was pretty clear I almost just lost my life," Waller said. "I don’t know if I really feel like if I would’ve died that I would’ve felt great about how my life was going."
Kansas City Chiefs defensive lineman BJ Thompson has been released from the hospital after he went into cardiac arrest last week, his agent told NFL Network on Monday night.
Thompson, 25, suffered seizures and went into cardiac arrest Thursday while in a special teams meeting at the Chiefs' practice facility. Thompson was sedated Thursday and through the night and was on a ventilator overnight to help with breathing. He regained consciousness Friday and was removed from the ventilator.
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