Many have been vaccinated, many more have had Covid. Many have had both Covid and Covid vaccinations. Is it Covid alone shredding heart tissue? Is it the vaccine damaging the heart? Is it a combo of the two? I personally assume it’s a combo. The medical establishment doesn’t seem too concerned with finding out the precise reason for the deaths. I’m sure if someone does do a study their findings will be disputed and panned until their careers are over so what does it matter. Seemingly healthy adults just die now. That’s our new normal!
The biggest issue is the excess death statistic. People die suddenly all the time, although there usually is some clear evidence as to the cause of death. Today, after the chicom crud culled many with weak and compromised immune systems, particularly the elderly, we should be having fewer deaths than average. Take Jim Fixx, he was running with clogged arteries which puts a lot of strain on an already compromised heart. But as stated, the American medical bureaucracy has no interest in determining the real unexplained death deaths. They just ignore the VAERS database. ==== Death Fixx died on July 20, 1984, at age 52 of a heart attack, during his daily run on Vermont Route 15 in Hardwick.[1] The autopsy, conducted by Vermont's chief medical examiner, Dr. Eleanor McQuillen, revealed that atherosclerosis had blocked one coronary artery 95%, a second 85%, and a third 70%.[4][5]
In 1986 exercise physiologist Kenneth Cooper published an inventory of the risk factors that might have contributed to Fixx's death.[6] Granted access to his medical records and autopsy, and after interviewing his friends and family, Cooper concluded that Fixx was genetically predisposed—his father died of a heart attack at 43 after a previous one at 35,[7] and Fixx himself had a congenitally enlarged heart—and had an unhealthy life: Fixx was a heavy smoker before beginning running at age 36, had a stressful occupation, had undergone a second divorce, and gained weight up to 214 pounds (97 kg).[8] Medical opinion continues to uphold the link between moderate exercise and longevity.[9]
It's OK though. I saw a post on the line with an article that said that everything in that video was untrue. And then that was backed up by hundreds of comments also saying it was entirely untrue, and anyone who thought it was true was a Q loving Trumptard.
It's OK though. I saw a post on the line with an article that said that everything in that video was untrue. And then that was backed up by hundreds of comments also saying it was entirely untrue, and anyone who thought it was true was a Q loving Trumptard.
It's OK though. I saw a post on the line with an article that said that everything in that video was untrue. And then that was backed up by hundreds of comments also saying it was entirely untrue, and anyone who thought it was true was a Q loving Trumptard.
So, don't worry about it. It's been debunked.
Same claim about dirty elections. It's been debunked. No attempt or support for an honest investigation. Came from a chicom wet market from some animal that we can't find unlike SARS and MERS in which we have the biological animal carrier identified in a few weeks. Our entire medical bureaucracy and MSM have absolutely no intellectual curiosity or honesty to deal with reality and a population of sheep that are happy to be led.
Comments
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Death
Fixx died on July 20, 1984, at age 52 of a heart attack, during his daily run on Vermont Route 15 in Hardwick.[1] The autopsy, conducted by Vermont's chief medical examiner, Dr. Eleanor McQuillen, revealed that atherosclerosis had blocked one coronary artery 95%, a second 85%, and a third 70%.[4][5]
In 1986 exercise physiologist Kenneth Cooper published an inventory of the risk factors that might have contributed to Fixx's death.[6] Granted access to his medical records and autopsy, and after interviewing his friends and family, Cooper concluded that Fixx was genetically predisposed—his father died of a heart attack at 43 after a previous one at 35,[7] and Fixx himself had a congenitally enlarged heart—and had an unhealthy life: Fixx was a heavy smoker before beginning running at age 36, had a stressful occupation, had undergone a second divorce, and gained weight up to 214 pounds (97 kg).[8] Medical opinion continues to uphold the link between moderate exercise and longevity.[9]
So, don't worry about it. It's been debunked.