Yesterday I was texting a young friend who’s been having chest pain from the second day of his first Pfizer jab - fit and healthy guy in his 20s - it’s day 16 now. He went to the emergency department yesterday as the constant low-grade pain was extremely worrying - he’s aware of the sports stars dropping dead on the field, etc., after the jab. The hospital said they have seen a lot of the same and they don’t know what it is, but he will be OK, they assured him. They said it could be stress by being hypervigilant about the vaccine side effects.
Now recently in the press and in publishing, as in the Sesame Street example above, there is a coordinated campaign to attribute vaccine damage to something else like stress, the virus, or it’s always been this way we just haven’t been paying attention.
Now there’s “Post-pandemic Stress Disorder”
As the Bad Cat correctly points out below, people in big cities like London during the blitz in World War 2, undoubtedly one of the most stressful situations you could imagine, didn’t generally get cardiac disorders like myocarditis and massive blood clotting like we are seeing today with so many. (Nor in Berlin, or any of the other cities that were bombed to hell during the war). In my own years treating people from a psychological perspective, myocarditis/pericarditis have not been a key symptom of highly stressful situations. But I guess we are going to hear from our psychological associations very soon that we’d just missed it for all these years - maybe an amendment will come our for the DSM-5.
Disgusting. Immoral. Cruel. Evil. To cover up what is effectively child sacrifice will come back to bite them, sooner than later.
This. is. heartbreaking … and infuriating. I’m so sorry for your friend. I would encourage him to watch Kyle Warner’s interview (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H7inaTiDKaU&feature=emb_imp_woyt) for tips on ways to mitigate cardiac issues.
This coverup is so disgustingly brazen, it’s akin to blaming the deaths of the Jews on showering anxiety instead of Zyklon B.