I live on the outskirts of a town of about 2000 people. Thursday morning, I heard an ambulance coming into town toward the hospital and the sound of the air ambulance firing up. Shortly after the sirens stopped, the air ambulance started to shutdown. I got a creepy feeling because I could think of no other reason to stop the helicopter other than the patient no longer needing transport. Today we found out that it was a 49 year old woman that got her second shot two weeks ago and woke up not feeling well. Ironically, just before she called for help she took the time to answer the regional radio station's "Listener Poll of the Day". Her response to "Should children be required to be vaccinated before returning to school?" was a yes. Then she got into the ambulance for the 20 minute ride to our hospital and died of a heart attack before arriving.
Word is now getting around that there have been many similar but non-fatal reactions in the community but nobody is speaking out publicly. Instead, there is an effort to paint this as a pre-existing condition, nothing to do with the needles she had put into her. I'm hoping this woman's case is enough to shatter the cone of silence here.
Our fairly small county has recently had several mid 40s to mid 50s with heart attacks after vax. Three or more deaths. Others with very serious heart problems resulting in procedures.
Are you hearing this publicly or through the grapevine, like I am?
Well. Both. I work in a small office and the people who are having issues are local and grew up with several of my fellow office workers or are other local business people that we all know and work with. Example a local attorney that we work with all the time had a heart attack last weekend and had to have a procedure. A few days later we heard that another attorney in that office had died of a heart attack within days of the other ones heart attack. Ages 50 and 49.
But are they linking these events to the vaccine or dismissing them as coincidences?
Well. I’m not in direct contact with their family. Not sure who ‘they’ would be in this case. But that’s the first thing we talk about at the office. It’s becoming more obvious. But no. There’s no pointing it out on social media etc.