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Post by shakin on Dec 20, 2021 15:22:41 GMT -5
It is a smaller dose however I've been hearing that the third has really taken a toll on some people. In the end everyone is different, some people have no reaction and some people die. I plan on stopping after the second. then you will shortly thereafter be thrown back into the category of unwashed troglodyte unvaxxed goonies like the rest of us we'll have some beers
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Post by RobR on Dec 20, 2021 15:23:11 GMT -5
It is a smaller dose however I've been hearing that the third has really taken a toll on some people. In the end everyone is different, some people have no reaction and some people die. I plan on stopping after the second. Good luck with that, after 6 months you'll be considered unvaccinated again.
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jab thread
Dec 21, 2021 13:17:17 GMT -5
via mobile
Post by adpz on Dec 21, 2021 13:17:17 GMT -5
Denmark issued a new jab practice, to aspirate the needle upon injection - which is to draw back on the needle for a few seconds to insure a blood vessel/artery hasn’t been touched (visible by the entrance of blood into the needle). Denmark found that aspiration led to a 2.4-fold reduction of (already low) adverse events.
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Post by Jetworks on Dec 21, 2021 16:21:30 GMT -5
Denmark issued a new jab practice, to aspirate the needle upon injection - which is to draw back on the needle for a few seconds to insure a blood vessel/artery hasn’t been touched (visible by the entrance of blood into the needle). Denmark found that aspiration led to a 2.4-fold reduction of (already low) adverse events. About time. I'm convinced that this is what has caused the spike in myocarditis. After I heard Kyle Warner's testimony that he "tasted saline" after the second jab, that cinched it for me. Route always matters.
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Post by 32Green on Dec 21, 2021 19:39:15 GMT -5
Denmark issued a new jab practice, to aspirate the needle upon injection - which is to draw back on the needle for a few seconds to insure a blood vessel/artery hasn’t been touched (visible by the entrance of blood into the needle). Denmark found that aspiration led to a 2.4-fold reduction of (already low) adverse events. About time. I'm convinced that this is what has caused the spike in myocarditis. After I heard Kyle Warner's testimony that he "tasted saline" after the second jab, that cinched it for me. Route always matters. Holy sh*t. Are you are saying the way the shot is administered is what actually is causing myocarditis? Is this a risk with every injection given for any reason?
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Post by Jetworks on Dec 21, 2021 20:43:03 GMT -5
About time. I'm convinced that this is what has caused the spike in myocarditis. After I heard Kyle Warner's testimony that he "tasted saline" after the second jab, that cinched it for me. Route always matters. Holy sh*t. Are you are saying the way the shot is administered is what actually is causing myocarditis? Is this a risk with every injection given for any reason? Yes. And yes. What's so frustrating for me is when I discuss this with colleagues I get puzzled looks. I mean, not only the administration route, but HOW you administer a medications matters. This is all very, very basic stuff. If I give some wacko some haldol via an intramuscular (IM) injection, it's more than likely not going to adversely affect them. But do an IV push? I could kill someone. While the chance is small in hitting a vessel when administering IM, it is a possibility. We used to be taught to always aspirate, but now it's not necessarily thought of as best practice. The saline thing is interesting. When flushing a line with saline, some patients can taste and/or smell the saline. Many cannot. So extrapolate for those who can't while also counting those having contracted myo/pericarditis. Their vaccine may have been an IV push when it accidentally went into a blood vessel and well, here we are....
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Post by 32Green on Dec 21, 2021 20:50:33 GMT -5
Holy sh*t. Are you are saying the way the shot is administered is what actually is causing myocarditis? Is this a risk with every injection given for any reason? Yes. And yes. What's so frustrating for me is when I discuss this with colleagues I get puzzled looks. I mean, not only the administration route, but HOW you administer a medications matters. This is all very, very basic stuff. If I give some wacko some haldol via an intramuscular (IM) injection, it's more than likely not going to adversely affect them. But do an IV push? I could kill someone. While the chance is small in hitting a vessel when administering IM, it is a possibility. We used to be taught to always aspirate, but now it's not necessarily thought of as best practice. The saline thing is interesting. When flushing a line with saline, some patients can taste and/or smell the saline. Many cannot. So extrapolate for those who can't while also counting those having contracted myo/pericarditis. Their vaccine may have been an IV push when it accidentally went into a blood vessel and well, here we are.... Wow. Thanks for the explanation. Dont know how getting away from aspirating was accepted as best practice.
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Post by RobR on Dec 21, 2021 21:26:14 GMT -5
Holy sh*t. Are you are saying the way the shot is administered is what actually is causing myocarditis? Is this a risk with every injection given for any reason? Yes. And yes. What's so frustrating for me is when I discuss this with colleagues I get puzzled looks. I mean, not only the administration route, but HOW you administer a medications matters. This is all very, very basic stuff. If I give some wacko some haldol via an intramuscular (IM) injection, it's more than likely not going to adversely affect them. But do an IV push? I could kill someone. While the chance is small in hitting a vessel when administering IM, it is a possibility. We used to be taught to always aspirate, but now it's not necessarily thought of as best practice. The saline thing is interesting. When flushing a line with saline, some patients can taste and/or smell the saline. Many cannot. So extrapolate for those who can't while also counting those having contracted myo/pericarditis. Their vaccine may have been an IV push when it accidentally went into a blood vessel and well, here we are.... How many vaccine injuries are you seeing? IIRC you were talking about cardiac issues about a year ago. We're not even a year in and the CDC is already recommending not getting the J+J and J+J have even admitted that their so called vax has killed 11 people, if you believe that number. I also see that VAERS has ticked about 19,000 deaths due to the vax and many interpret those numbers differently. Some say they are underreported and some debunk them entirely but one can not dispute the meteoric rise in reports albeit with a corresponding vaccination rate.
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Post by adpz on Dec 22, 2021 0:31:06 GMT -5
Denmark issued a new jab practice, to aspirate the needle upon injection - which is to draw back on the needle for a few seconds to insure a blood vessel/artery hasn’t been touched (visible by the entrance of blood into the needle). Denmark found that aspiration led to a 2.4-fold reduction of (already low) adverse events. About time. I'm convinced that this is what has caused the spike in myocarditis. After I heard Kyle Warner's testimony that he "tasted saline" after the second jab, that cinched it for me. Route always matters. Yup, that’s exactly what I’ve been reading, that ‘tasting’ the shot a few seconds after administration is a warning sign. The dopne is due for her second so I am trying to find someone to administer with aspiration. Better safe than sorry. It does seem kind of crazy that aspiration is not standard practice.
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Post by Trades on Dec 22, 2021 8:25:51 GMT -5
Yes. And yes. What's so frustrating for me is when I discuss this with colleagues I get puzzled looks. I mean, not only the administration route, but HOW you administer a medications matters. This is all very, very basic stuff. If I give some wacko some haldol via an intramuscular (IM) injection, it's more than likely not going to adversely affect them. But do an IV push? I could kill someone. While the chance is small in hitting a vessel when administering IM, it is a possibility. We used to be taught to always aspirate, but now it's not necessarily thought of as best practice. The saline thing is interesting. When flushing a line with saline, some patients can taste and/or smell the saline. Many cannot. So extrapolate for those who can't while also counting those having contracted myo/pericarditis. Their vaccine may have been an IV push when it accidentally went into a blood vessel and well, here we are.... How many vaccine injuries are you seeing? IIRC you were talking about cardiac issues about a year ago. We're not even a year in and the CDC is already recommending not getting the J+J and J+J have even admitted that their so called vax has killed 11 people, if you believe that number. I also see that VAERS has ticked about 19,000 deaths due to the vax and many interpret those numbers differently. Some say they are underreported and some debunk them entirely but one can not dispute the meteoric rise in reports albeit with a corresponding vaccination rate. They are all garbage and barely do anything if anything against the disease. There are no numbers that can be trusted for deaths because of the way they count car accident victims as Covid victims. Vaxed or unvaxed numbers aren't believable because the media is beating the Unvaxed drum hard but when you see any data everyone catching Covid for the past 6 months are heavily skewed to a high percentage of vaxed people. And don't get me started on ignoring natural immunity even though all data shows that natural immunity is a better and longer lasting protection than the vax.
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Post by Jetworks on Dec 22, 2021 21:55:07 GMT -5
Yes. And yes. What's so frustrating for me is when I discuss this with colleagues I get puzzled looks. I mean, not only the administration route, but HOW you administer a medications matters. This is all very, very basic stuff. If I give some wacko some haldol via an intramuscular (IM) injection, it's more than likely not going to adversely affect them. But do an IV push? I could kill someone. While the chance is small in hitting a vessel when administering IM, it is a possibility. We used to be taught to always aspirate, but now it's not necessarily thought of as best practice. The saline thing is interesting. When flushing a line with saline, some patients can taste and/or smell the saline. Many cannot. So extrapolate for those who can't while also counting those having contracted myo/pericarditis. Their vaccine may have been an IV push when it accidentally went into a blood vessel and well, here we are.... How many vaccine injuries are you seeing? IIRC you were talking about cardiac issues about a year ago. We're not even a year in and the CDC is already recommending not getting the J+J and J+J have even admitted that their so called vax has killed 11 people, if you believe that number. I also see that VAERS has ticked about 19,000 deaths due to the vax and many interpret those numbers differently. Some say they are underreported and some debunk them entirely but one can not dispute the meteoric rise in reports albeit with a corresponding vaccination rate. I have no idea as I've never had any clinicians tell me they've called it a vaccine injury. Even talking about the possibility during a differential diagnosis gets me dirty looks. It's a fucking cult.
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Post by RobR on Dec 22, 2021 22:35:17 GMT -5
How many vaccine injuries are you seeing? IIRC you were talking about cardiac issues about a year ago. We're not even a year in and the CDC is already recommending not getting the J+J and J+J have even admitted that their so called vax has killed 11 people, if you believe that number. I also see that VAERS has ticked about 19,000 deaths due to the vax and many interpret those numbers differently. Some say they are underreported and some debunk them entirely but one can not dispute the meteoric rise in reports albeit with a corresponding vaccination rate. I have no idea as I've never had any clinicians tell me they've called it a vaccine injury. Even talking about the possibility during a differential diagnosis gets me dirty looks. It's a fucking cult. Project veritas did an undercover segment on how hospitals don't report VAERS even though it is required by law. I've posted the video here in the past but for some odd reason I can't find it on the web right now. It also shows how a nurse that was reluctant to get the jab caved in and ended up dying, this was also iirc a federal hospital. I found it on rumble. If you haven't watched this you should. rumble.com/vmrhtl-project-veritas-whistleblower-exposes-vaccine-shove-adverse-effect-reportin.html
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Post by Trades on Dec 23, 2021 14:35:51 GMT -5
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jab thread
Dec 24, 2021 12:08:42 GMT -5
via mobile
Post by bxjetfan on Dec 24, 2021 12:08:42 GMT -5
I almost feel bad for the guy. It seems like he has autism and the lady justs keeps politely asks questions until his head is about to explode.
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jab thread
Dec 24, 2021 14:00:44 GMT -5
via mobile
Post by bxjetfan on Dec 24, 2021 14:00:44 GMT -5
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