I heard a local morning "news" station report that pregnant women are suffering problems associated with covid, and I thought "oh, finally, they are reporting on the adverse effects of the covid shots WE have known about!". But nooooo, they were saying it was a rare consequence of getting covid, and they ended the little segment by dragging out some medical doctor who said something on the order of "and of course, the way to protect against this is by getting vaccinated". What was especially infuriating was when the doctor was asked about documentation of this phenomena, she said there was no tracking of it.
As a side note, this was an Albany, NY tv station. I bought a ~$40 antenna and put it in my attic and I now get over-the-air tv stations from Albany area; the furthest broadcast antenna towers are ~60 miles away! I now get about 10 stations. I haven't had cable TV since relocating to a new house last year. (yes, feels good not to line the cable tv company's coffers any more than I have to (only reliable, barely reliable, internet) :) )
Evil as shit, they want to kill more babies in the womb. And the doctor that claimed this theory without data should be tried and executed.
Yea now it’s Covid and not the Vax. Somebody is gonna do some stats and show it’s only happening in those people that had the vax.
It almost feels like we've reverted back to the 1800's, where "medicine" peddlers are selling knowingly dangerous tonics with horrible side effects, questionable benefits, no testing or regulation... and using any lies they can to sell the product.
The FDA, CDC, Big Tech and Lame Stream Media are all part of the "medicine show" to rip off the gullible public. Back in the 1800's, it wasn't unusual for "medicines" to contain mercury, opium, cocaine, laudanum, excessive alcohol or any other known harmful substances.
These days, our "medicine" peddlers are selling a "free vaccine" full of graphene oxide.
We've had an antenna in our attic for years. Most people don't realize that normal, old-fashioned tv antennas will pick up digital signals just as easily as analog. You don't need anything special to make them work.
You can check out the signal strength for your given location, then buy a suitable antenna based on the information found here:
https://www.fcc.gov/media/engineering/dtvmaps
https://www.consumerreports.org/tv-antennas/how-to-get-better-indoor-tv-antenna-reception-a3935217766/
Cut the cable, frens. For the cost of a month or two of cable, you can pay for the antenna and installation.
I have 63 stations and a ROKU for 7 1/2 years now. Never looked back, other than to add up how much money I've saved each year.