The mainstream media have provided varying explanations for the unexpected rise in blood clots, cardiac events and early death in the past two years: skipping breakfast, falling asleep in front of the TV, “exposure to a sudden gush of water,” napping and high noise levels.
One possibility they continue to rule out or simply ignore: COVID-19 vaccination in populations at negligible risk from SARS-CoV-2 itself.
The authors of a December analysis that found a massive rise in athletes’ cardiac-related deaths coinciding with the global vaccination campaign have issued a revised version that more carefully delineates causes and age range in response to scrutiny.
The Christmas paper cited 1,101 publicly reported incidents of cardiac-related deaths in athletes in less than two years as of Dec. 24, which they attributed to GoodSciencing, a blog run by an anonymous “small team of investigators, news editors, journalists, and truth seekers.”
That’s the same number of deaths reported from 1966-2004 in athletes under 35 (half of whom had “congenital anatomical heart disease and cardiomyopathies”) in the European Journal of Cardiovascular Prevention & Rehabilitation, the duo noted.
The revised figures: 697 professional or semi-pro athletes “still active in their sport” under age 50 who “collapsed and died due to cardiovascular complications, such as primary cardiac arrest or electromechanical dissociation from suspected venous thromboembolism or other cause.” Among those, 558 were under 35.
The mainstream media have a tendency to “endorse every kind of pandemic policy (regardless its sense), to propagandize vaccination, to minimize any possibility of adverse reactions related to the genetic vaccines, and to normalize heart attacks and sudden deaths among young and healthy people,” Polykretis wrote.
“Suddenly, it looks like everything in this world is causing heart attacks and blood clots, except one thing,” he concluded.
Obey
Article URL : https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/coronavirus/researchers-refine-estimated-covid-vax-related-deaths-young-athletes