Jeff Sachs / Robt Kennedy discussion of Sach's experience on the Covid-19 commission in the below linked article (a few page downs for the mp3).
Gives an insight into the arrogant creeps who gave the world the covid debacle; ~55 mins. long; absolutely worth your time; not only informative but an entertaining insight into the level of our governmental-science "leadership".
Steve, regarding the Stanford doctor that you wrote to, please do NOT be in any way deflected or discouraged from what you are doing. His response was blind, condescending, and cowardly. You will be thoroughly vindicated. You are one of just a handful of truly crucial people in the fight to expose what these vaccines have done to people. You speak for many millions of people. Please keep going.
I am envisioning a capitulation along William Wallace's speech to the opposing army:
"Before we let you leave, your commander must cross that field, present himself before this army, put his head between his legs, and kiss his own [redacted]"
Another obit for a death 4 hours after a booster, which the guy Instagrammed. You would think there might be a story there, but they don’t have any journalists.
“Carlos Tejada, the deputy Asia editor of The New York Times, who helped shape coverage of the global Covid-19 crisis in 2021 that won a Pulitzer Prize, died on Friday at a hospital in Seoul. He was 49.
His wife, Nora Tejada, said the cause was a heart attack.”
I rarely post comments, but I want to share that I had a similar experience. I am a physician in California. I was perfectly healthy (early 40’s) with zero medical comorbidities - became ill the first week of December 2019. I was in and out of the ER and urgent care. My oxygen saturation was so low I signed out AMA against their recommendation for hospitalization (as all the could tell me was that I had a weird virus and I was concerned not having anyone check on me in the hospital - I had recently moved out of state and away from family). It took me months to recover from that acute phase, which was life changing (I suffered from new onset symptoms across multiple organs) - and it wasn’t until the 2 year mark I started to feel more normal again. Once the pandemic was announced in March 2020, I knew I had an earlier strain. I have since read about an “alpha” variant of Covid circulating in California in late 2019, which has been identified by autopsies. I’m glad I stayed home and suffered, as if I went inpatient and was ventilated I likely wouldn’t be here.
Regarding the journalists at The New York Times, this excerpt from my piece on "early spread" might provide some evidence about the calibre of said journalists ... This was published yesterday at The Daily Skeptic:
Perhaps the first early case in America (with antibody evidence that would confirm infection) is Shane of Marin County, California. Shane’s possible early case was not featured in a newspaper article, but by Shane himself in the reader comments section that followed a May 7th 2020 New York Times story (the story describes symptoms experienced by Covid patients).
Writes Shane: “I had COVID-19 last fall, far earlier than anyone else I’ve heard of. I suspect I caught it while on an overseas trip to Italy and the Middle East – I’ve taken two antibody tests in the past month, both of which confirmed I was infected.”
As Shane recounts, he was extremely sick with signature Covid symptoms.
“For me the worst symptom by far was the dry, unproductive cough. The cough was so intense, so relentless, it left me with bruised ribs and a horrible searing pain in my chest, which also felt as if someone were sitting on it. The fever at one point reach 104.9 upon which I began hallucinating – seeing my dogs talking to me and forgetting how to open a sliding glass door. Horrible chills which led to my teeth chattering so hard my jaw ached were also another noxious gift of Covid.
“What I most remember about my experience with Covid is pain, pain from coughing, pain in my body and head, pain everywhere around me, like a smothering red blanket. At times I felt I was going to die during that week and even today I must admit I am surprised I didn’t.”
Adding credibility to his claim, Shane’s post cited two labs where he claims to have received his positive antibody tests.
“The local health centre in West Marin is where I took the latest one. The other one I took directly at the manufacturer’s location – ARCpoint Labs in Richmond. That one is only 87% accurate and not FDA approved so that’s why I took the more recent one, which was done through Quest Labs I believe.”
In the comment thread, one poster suggests it’s unlikely Shane developed Covid as there had been no reported confirmed cases from that time. This poster opines that Shane was sick with some other nasty virus and later developed an asymptomatic case of Covid. However, Shane stuck to his theory and presented reasons for his opinion.
“I suppose it’s possible but I tend to think that since what I contracted had the exact same symptoms as COVID-19 – that COVID-19 is what I had. In addition, mid-February through mid-March I was in isolation, caring for my sister who died mid-March from metastatic cervical cancer. When COVID-19 made its first appearance in the U.S. in February we very quickly put in strict isolation protocols as my sister had a compromised immune system due to chemotherapy, further insulating myself from contact and infection as well.”
Shane does not report what month he thinks he had Covid – only that it was “last fall… and far earlier than anyone else I’ve heard.” He could have been sick in November or October (maybe even late September). Shane (if he really had Covid) contracted the virus from an unknown person who would have been infected earlier than him.
Shane shared his belief he might have contracted the virus in Italy or in the Middle East, which, if true, would provide more evidence of early global spread. However, it’s also possible he contracted the virus in California.
Shane’s claim was posted in the moderated New York Times’ comments section, meaning one or more Times employees were aware of Shane’s startling claim. I imagine any Covid article, including the popular reader comments, published by the New York Times was also read by at least some employees of the CDC, NIH etc.
As only paid subscribers can make comments in the New York Times comment section, the newspaper possesses Shane’s subscription information. That is, someone at the newspaper could have easily ascertained Shane’s full name and contact information, including his street and email address.
For what it’s worth, I contacted the NY Times via its news tip email address and suggested a reporter follow up on Shane’s eye-opening claim. I did not receive a reply. This leads me to believe the New York Times is not interested in pursuing evidence of early spread in America, even in the case of a person who very well could be the first known Covid case in the world.
The article says he died 8 days after suffering a stroke. Reading the eulogy, to me it is not clear how much sooner he had gotten the booster, just that the symptoms started with the booster.
Numbness in the hands is a symptom that Eric Clapton also experienced after the first shot. It is a symptom of disruption of full bloodflow to the hands which likely was also occurring in other parts of the body and reflects the effects of a known vaccine adverse event: disseminated intravascular coagulalation (DIC) as Dr. Charles Hoffe of Merritt, BC concluded after discovering that patients injected with jab often (62% of the time) had elevated d-dimer levels when measured 4-7 days after the clot jab and as could be predicted on the basis of an April 28, 2021 paper from researchers at the Salk Institute. That paper demonstrated that the spike protein was responsible for the pathogenic effects of the SARS-CoV-2 virus and as it produced inflammation of the epithelium lining the vascular system and disrupted mitochondrial signaling. This, of course, leads to inflamothrombic events ie. blood clots. Since the CoVid-19 jab causes the body's cells to produce a version of the virus's toxic spike protein that is even more toxic than the viral protein and stays in the body longer (up to 2 months). The same process of endothelial inflammation and blood clot formation is also commonly induced in vaccine recipients and which, depending of the location of the clots and the body's ability to deal with them, may induces bigger clots and leads to deleterious side effects that in the extreme cases include pulmonary hypertension, pulmonary embolisms, heart attacks, strokes, and death. But this is only one of the deleterious processes the mRNA gene therapy jabs induce.
Jeff Sachs / Robt Kennedy discussion of Sach's experience on the Covid-19 commission in the below linked article (a few page downs for the mp3).
Gives an insight into the arrogant creeps who gave the world the covid debacle; ~55 mins. long; absolutely worth your time; not only informative but an entertaining insight into the level of our governmental-science "leadership".
https://www.unz.com/announcement/prof-jeffrey-sachs-on-the-covid-origins-cover-up/
Steve, regarding the Stanford doctor that you wrote to, please do NOT be in any way deflected or discouraged from what you are doing. His response was blind, condescending, and cowardly. You will be thoroughly vindicated. You are one of just a handful of truly crucial people in the fight to expose what these vaccines have done to people. You speak for many millions of people. Please keep going.
I will stop after there is a complete capitulation. It may take awhile.
I am envisioning a capitulation along William Wallace's speech to the opposing army:
"Before we let you leave, your commander must cross that field, present himself before this army, put his head between his legs, and kiss his own [redacted]"
Bravo! A perfect answer! Thank you.
Oh hey ain’t gonna stop! This train is full speed ahead..
Another obit for a death 4 hours after a booster, which the guy Instagrammed. You would think there might be a story there, but they don’t have any journalists.
“Carlos Tejada, the deputy Asia editor of The New York Times, who helped shape coverage of the global Covid-19 crisis in 2021 that won a Pulitzer Prize, died on Friday at a hospital in Seoul. He was 49.
His wife, Nora Tejada, said the cause was a heart attack.”
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/12/22/business/media/carlos-tejada-dead.html
I rarely post comments, but I want to share that I had a similar experience. I am a physician in California. I was perfectly healthy (early 40’s) with zero medical comorbidities - became ill the first week of December 2019. I was in and out of the ER and urgent care. My oxygen saturation was so low I signed out AMA against their recommendation for hospitalization (as all the could tell me was that I had a weird virus and I was concerned not having anyone check on me in the hospital - I had recently moved out of state and away from family). It took me months to recover from that acute phase, which was life changing (I suffered from new onset symptoms across multiple organs) - and it wasn’t until the 2 year mark I started to feel more normal again. Once the pandemic was announced in March 2020, I knew I had an earlier strain. I have since read about an “alpha” variant of Covid circulating in California in late 2019, which has been identified by autopsies. I’m glad I stayed home and suffered, as if I went inpatient and was ventilated I likely wouldn’t be here.
Very interesting. Thanks for sharing. I have saved this - along with hundreds of similar anecdotes.
Regarding the journalists at The New York Times, this excerpt from my piece on "early spread" might provide some evidence about the calibre of said journalists ... This was published yesterday at The Daily Skeptic:
Perhaps the first early case in America (with antibody evidence that would confirm infection) is Shane of Marin County, California. Shane’s possible early case was not featured in a newspaper article, but by Shane himself in the reader comments section that followed a May 7th 2020 New York Times story (the story describes symptoms experienced by Covid patients).
Writes Shane: “I had COVID-19 last fall, far earlier than anyone else I’ve heard of. I suspect I caught it while on an overseas trip to Italy and the Middle East – I’ve taken two antibody tests in the past month, both of which confirmed I was infected.”
As Shane recounts, he was extremely sick with signature Covid symptoms.
“For me the worst symptom by far was the dry, unproductive cough. The cough was so intense, so relentless, it left me with bruised ribs and a horrible searing pain in my chest, which also felt as if someone were sitting on it. The fever at one point reach 104.9 upon which I began hallucinating – seeing my dogs talking to me and forgetting how to open a sliding glass door. Horrible chills which led to my teeth chattering so hard my jaw ached were also another noxious gift of Covid.
“What I most remember about my experience with Covid is pain, pain from coughing, pain in my body and head, pain everywhere around me, like a smothering red blanket. At times I felt I was going to die during that week and even today I must admit I am surprised I didn’t.”
Adding credibility to his claim, Shane’s post cited two labs where he claims to have received his positive antibody tests.
“The local health centre in West Marin is where I took the latest one. The other one I took directly at the manufacturer’s location – ARCpoint Labs in Richmond. That one is only 87% accurate and not FDA approved so that’s why I took the more recent one, which was done through Quest Labs I believe.”
In the comment thread, one poster suggests it’s unlikely Shane developed Covid as there had been no reported confirmed cases from that time. This poster opines that Shane was sick with some other nasty virus and later developed an asymptomatic case of Covid. However, Shane stuck to his theory and presented reasons for his opinion.
“I suppose it’s possible but I tend to think that since what I contracted had the exact same symptoms as COVID-19 – that COVID-19 is what I had. In addition, mid-February through mid-March I was in isolation, caring for my sister who died mid-March from metastatic cervical cancer. When COVID-19 made its first appearance in the U.S. in February we very quickly put in strict isolation protocols as my sister had a compromised immune system due to chemotherapy, further insulating myself from contact and infection as well.”
Shane does not report what month he thinks he had Covid – only that it was “last fall… and far earlier than anyone else I’ve heard.” He could have been sick in November or October (maybe even late September). Shane (if he really had Covid) contracted the virus from an unknown person who would have been infected earlier than him.
Shane shared his belief he might have contracted the virus in Italy or in the Middle East, which, if true, would provide more evidence of early global spread. However, it’s also possible he contracted the virus in California.
Shane’s claim was posted in the moderated New York Times’ comments section, meaning one or more Times employees were aware of Shane’s startling claim. I imagine any Covid article, including the popular reader comments, published by the New York Times was also read by at least some employees of the CDC, NIH etc.
As only paid subscribers can make comments in the New York Times comment section, the newspaper possesses Shane’s subscription information. That is, someone at the newspaper could have easily ascertained Shane’s full name and contact information, including his street and email address.
For what it’s worth, I contacted the NY Times via its news tip email address and suggested a reporter follow up on Shane’s eye-opening claim. I did not receive a reply. This leads me to believe the New York Times is not interested in pursuing evidence of early spread in America, even in the case of a person who very well could be the first known Covid case in the world.
that was a long time ago
True—just felt nostalgic …
Unbelievable. So sad.
The article says he died 8 days after suffering a stroke. Reading the eulogy, to me it is not clear how much sooner he had gotten the booster, just that the symptoms started with the booster.
Numbness in the hands is a symptom that Eric Clapton also experienced after the first shot. It is a symptom of disruption of full bloodflow to the hands which likely was also occurring in other parts of the body and reflects the effects of a known vaccine adverse event: disseminated intravascular coagulalation (DIC) as Dr. Charles Hoffe of Merritt, BC concluded after discovering that patients injected with jab often (62% of the time) had elevated d-dimer levels when measured 4-7 days after the clot jab and as could be predicted on the basis of an April 28, 2021 paper from researchers at the Salk Institute. That paper demonstrated that the spike protein was responsible for the pathogenic effects of the SARS-CoV-2 virus and as it produced inflammation of the epithelium lining the vascular system and disrupted mitochondrial signaling. This, of course, leads to inflamothrombic events ie. blood clots. Since the CoVid-19 jab causes the body's cells to produce a version of the virus's toxic spike protein that is even more toxic than the viral protein and stays in the body longer (up to 2 months). The same process of endothelial inflammation and blood clot formation is also commonly induced in vaccine recipients and which, depending of the location of the clots and the body's ability to deal with them, may induces bigger clots and leads to deleterious side effects that in the extreme cases include pulmonary hypertension, pulmonary embolisms, heart attacks, strokes, and death. But this is only one of the deleterious processes the mRNA gene therapy jabs induce.