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Conspiracies The Covid Narrative

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“At least 9 out of 10 patients that we’re seeing who are sick enough especially to be in the ICUs throughout the state, obesity plays a part in this,” said Daugherty, who is with Novant Health’s Children’s Hospital in Charlotte.


see what was i saying?

im 5' 10" 162 lbs soaking wet


cmon
 
To try and determine the role obesity plays in deaths from the disease, WFAE requested six months of data on COVID-19 deaths in Mecklenburg County.

It’s often difficult to determine an exact underlying condition since many are connected, like being a smoker and lung cancer. And the records are dependent on the notes of physicians at the hospital and could vary depending on who filled them out.

But the data shows:

  • There were 136 COVID-19 deaths among people ages 65 and younger during that time in which an underlying cause of death was listed.
  • Of those deaths, 76 had either obesity or diabetes listed as an underlying risk factor.
  • Asthma was only listed as an underlying cause in five deaths among people 65 and younger. In one of those cases, the person was also described as morbidly obese.
  • Tobacco use was listed as an underlying cause in five deaths.
  • Cancer was listed as a risk factor in six deaths.
  • Being immunocompromised was a risk factor in two deaths.
The data also shows that among younger people, obesity is more often cited as a risk factor in a COVID-19 death than among the elderly.
 
The data also shows that among younger people, obesity is more often cited as a risk factor in a COVID-19 death than among the elderly.

I notice some of the younger men that got COVID have a certain body build, like the same as a high risk for a heart attack too.

Here is a sad vaccine story. add this to your stats @Mr. Krinkle. I have an uncle that just got put back into a home/mental institution. He has demetia and has been getting violent so he needs a chemical straight jacket. He was vaccinate for COVID in April and got COVID in August. He also had fluid around his heart and lungs. In other words he was ready to go. But because he was vaccinated he lived and recovered from COVID only to live in a loony bin in a straight jacket now. Here I wish the virus took him home. But he survived.

My poor uncle a big conservative that hated Trump but would just hate democrats even more so would change the subject. So when I went to visit him he was rattled and asked me are things true just because people say they are true'? I knew he was talking about the political climate. So I said Uncle Nick, (I pointed to the sun outside the window) and said that sun comes up everyday regardless if someone jumps up and down and says it doesn't, you know in your heart it does. He had a few seconds of peace and said to me you are totally right.

Moral of the story, don't f*cking vaccinate someone who has dementia. My poor uncle was ready to go. The political climate really screwed him. I gave him an exercise everytime he felt rattled I told him to let go and leave it in God's hands. He really needs to let go. He agreed but moments later went from peaceful to not peaceful as he focused on the nonsense again. But he had a few moments of peace.
 
and it has been happening without anyone knowing for over ten years now.


🧙‍♂️
It sure has. It's also been going on for millennia in different ways though

Divide and conquer - very effective unfortunately, and so so easy for them

We fall for it every time, continuously. It's what has really stood out for me on all the covid related (and most political) threads on this forum, and everywhere else, online, irl.
 
Why do Pfizer scientists (when interviewed by undercover journalists) state that antibodies/natural immunity works better than their vaccines?

 
Covid hit and got out of control quickly. Governments were facing far greater numbers of deaths and serious illness than we have seen since the 1918 flu pandemic, and began scrambling to figure out how to fix the problem. Vaccines were developed quickly on the back of previous research and development into the original SARS vaccine. Given the timeframe, there was no time for full clinical trials. It was a choice between letting it keep spreading with, at the peak, a quarter of a million new cases and 10,000+ deaths per day (in the US alone), or push something through earlier than anyone would have liked. At the same time, information was brand new and constantly changing with further research (to the point of the first poll option, scientific consensus does change with more information, that is the point). Messaging was pushed out in a regrettably ineffective and seemingly (and sometimes actually) contradictory way, which contributed to lack of public trust. The already extremely popular and growing conspiracy sentiment about anything and everything was lit further aflame by this lack of trust and poor messaging. At this point, there is perhaps some profit motive as well, especially in the attempt to push a booster dose, after all it is big pharma. Despite this, there is a real crisis and governments needed to do something. It could have been handled better though. Meanwhile, division in the public has reached new heights, with some people shouting for the mass execution of those calling for vaccines (in this forum no less). Good luck to us digging out of this pile of shit. 100 years ago I wonder if society was anywhere remotely near this divided over the pandemic of then?
 
Grimez! Welcome back!

Looks like Australia is set to be one of the most vaccinated countries in the world.

ACT (Canberra) is now at nearly 94% of the adult population. A ridiculous number of jobs have mandated vaccination laws. In a couple of weeks the vaccinated part of the country is going to start emerging from lockdown. Those who are not vaccinated won't be able to do shit.

It's such a small part of the population that will outright refuse to the bitter end. We live in a democracy. Most people in this democracy want everyone to get vaccinated. As far as I'm concerned, the anti-vaxxers can move somewhere else if they don't like this city.

NSW cases peaked at around 1,500 per day. They sat there for a couple of weeks (maybe a month) then they dropped back down. The deaths never spiked. NSW is nearly 90% first dose now. The vaccines are working, thank God.

I suspect many countries with relatively low vaccination rates will continue to struggle with outbreaks for years. Australia is going to be okay. We made a lot of sacrifices, but it doesn't look like we're ever going to experience a lot of deaths.
 
JGrimez said:
Why do Pfizer scientists (when interviewed by undercover journalists) state that antibodies/natural immunity works better than their vaccines?

Why does it matter whether or not natural immunity works better than vaccines?

Did Pfizer scientists ever say otherwise?
 
w01fg4ng said:
Remember when you couldn't stop complaining about how mean we were to grimez when he lost the bet and the door kicked him on the way out?

That was funny

I feel the need to speak up when people are outnumbered.

I don't care what they've done.

The bet was a long time ago. It's kind of a dick move (IMO) to enforce an exile via peer pressure on a drug forum. Agree to disagree.
 
Strange. The link works for me.

He's posted a bunch of shit outside of CEPS is my point... not that it really matters either way.
 
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