Your account of a coworker's blood clots does not establish a cause/effect relationship with regard to transmission of spike proteins from nearby injected people. That could be the case, but at this point there is no proof (yet).
We need real studies that either prove or disprove that transmission is possible and how transmission occurs if it is possible (what mechanisms), etc. Spike proteins DO cause blood clots, so it seems suspicious at the very least.
Right now, we don't know the answers to those questions, and we all need to know.
Seems suspiciously coincidental but you are right does not prove causation. But it feels right. I will keep watching for more proof. We are older now so it could be coincidental?
Your account of a coworker's blood clots does not establish a cause/effect relationship with regard to transmission of spike proteins from nearby injected people. That could be the case, but at this point there is no proof (yet).
We need real studies that either prove or disprove that transmission is possible and how transmission occurs if it is possible (what mechanisms), etc. Spike proteins DO cause blood clots, so it seems suspicious at the very least.
Right now, we don't know the answers to those questions, and we all need to know.
Seems suspiciously coincidental but you are right does not prove causation. But it feels right. I will keep watching for more proof. We are older now so it could be coincidental?