i go to a private school that overall is very conservative. My English teacher is probably conservative, but also a normie.
She is the only teacher that wears a mask now. She doesnt talk much about the vaccine, but she once expressed support when asked about it
Lately she has been down and we’ve been wondering if she's annoyed with us.
I talked with her daughter who is in my grade and she said that she just had a miscarriage. She said said she cries herself to sleep every night 😢. I didn’t mention the vax but i wondered.
I do believe the vaccine increases miscarriage rate, but the odds of a miscarriage is normally around 10-15%. Statistically, both could have a miscarriage and it wouldn't be unusual in a normal year. In any case, women need support and help understanding the miscarriage is not rare or their fault.
They’ve shown that the lipid nano carriers take the spike proteins to the ovaries more than any other location in the body. It’s by design.
so you're telling me the movie "Children of Men" was foreshadowing?
I completely forgot about that movie...such a good movie and with a sucky ending...
Never heard of it or seen it but I know Hollywood has shown us all kinds of truths beforehand.
Watch it. Also, it's predictive programming, not foreshadowing.
VIDEO: Medical Study Shows 82% Miscarriage Rate For Pregnant Women Vaxxed In First 2 Trimesters:
https://www.bitchute.com/video/cjQ2L5V8RO67/
If she injected herself with an unknown experimental substance while pregnant it is safe to go ahead and say the miscarriage can be considered her fault. If a woman injected herself with heroine while pregnant and then had a miscarriage we'd probably assume the heroin killed the baby and not excuse her behavior with the argument that "Hey, there's a 10-15% chance she'd miscarry even if she had done everything perfectly." In both examples, mom has made a high risk, poor choice and the outcome is not surprising.
Treating people with compassion and charity during a hardship does not require subjecting ourselves to insanity.
And I'm not suggesting anyone tell her it's her fault or make her feel worse about what has happened. I'm just saying I'm not buying the "well, 10-15%" story because that has nothing to do with this scenario here which was not a 10-15% situation of a group of general population happily pregnant women who are taking every precaution and then still have an unfortunate outcome.
Personal responsibility is not something everyone believes. It is actually a big point of frustration when dealing with normies. I think they feel a collective righteousness if they all do it and so push us all to do the same thing.
I didn't drink coffee when I was pregnant. It was muy dificil.
10-15% chance of a miscarriage equates to a 1-2.25% chance of two women having a miscarriage which is indeed unusual. Possible, but unusual.
Verification link: https://www.healthline.com/health/pregnancy/miscarriage-rates-by-week
At some point we will know the exact rates within pureblood / purpleblood groups.