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It was an awful article. He didn't mention that the kid was born with a heart on the wrong side of the body and he was missing arteries from the heart to the lungs.

He said that there were no deaths under the age of 23, but it's because CDC WONDER hides the number of deaths on rows with less than 10 deaths for privacy reasons, so he should've disabled grouping the results by age. And he didn't include ICD codes for heart attack or heart failure but only cardiac arrest: sars2.net/statistic.html#Steve_Kirsch_Cardiac_failure_deaths_in_children_at_CDC_WONDER.

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Sep 5Edited
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Well it should come as a surprise because it's fairly typical of all these "died suddenly" cases.

A few days ago Kirsch tweeted a link to a news story and wrote "7 dead, dozens injured when Mississippi bus overturns. Could be COVID vaccine related, but hard to tell." (https://x.com/stkirsch/status/1829936506267713913)

But another article about the same story said that the bus experienced a tire failure: "Seven Mexican travelers were killed and dozens of other people injured early Saturday when a commercial passenger bus headed for Mexico experienced tire failure and rolled over off a highway east of Vicksburg, Mississippi, officials said." (https://edition.cnn.com/2024/08/31/us/mississippi-bus-crash-i-20/index.html)

Ed Dowd's book "Cause Unknown" has a couple of alternative cover images. One version features 7 athletes who are supposed to have died suddenly, but three of them died before their age group was eligible for vaccination, and one of them died by suicide: https://x.com/WaitingForPerot/status/1739655583450517957.

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