Israel was ahead of the game when it came to the vaccines in terms of starting earlier and getting a large percentage of their population vaccined earlier. So, they would be in the better position to draw conclusions as far as how the vaccines went with their side efffects. I was listening to Satellelite radio about a month ago when a group of international doctors were discussing the vaccines and how it hadn't gone as planned. They said Israel was reporting a fairly alarming rate of heart inflammation from the mRNA vaccines. When I got home I Googled it and didn't find anything, weird. Everyone turned a blind eye to it. But this morning this was in the news "
Doctors looking into rare cases of myocarditis after mRNA vaccinations". As I mentioned a while ago, these people (medical authority, government, media - all obviously in cohorts) ONLY mention a side effect once the side effect has gone public. This is not good at all folks. Forcing a vaccine with claims it's 100% safe yet witholding side effects, should be downright criminal.
When they were discussing the swelling of the heart from the mRNA vaccines they specifically said that it was occuring in an "alarming rate" in Israel. When you read this article though they brush it off as "meh, it's not that many people", downplaying it. Too many to highlight but when reading the article there are so many places they try to downplay the severity of the side effect. The first major sign of downplay is in the title itself. It should read "
CDC looking into rare cases of myocarditis after mRNA vaccinations". Instead they replaced
CDC with
Doctors. CDC would cause more of an alarm, a seriousness of nature, more people would click it to read it. But saying
Doctors is very common, not alarming at all, a "nothing to see here folks" type of thing. The manipulation from the media is pure fucking evil. I detest the media
Doctors are investigating rare cases of a heart inflammation called myocarditis that have emerged after mRNA vaccination, usually after a second dose, seeking to pin down how rare it is, and what the real risk is.
www.ctvnews.ca