There's my BIL with the out of nowhere low hemoglobin. My aunt knows someone who has this post booster too. She had the weird hemoglobin thing after the booster but only briefly. No lightbulb going off there whatsoever. They just keep giving my BIL blood transfusions. Prolly vaccinated blood though.
My SIL has some strange autoimmune thing now she has to wear gloves everywhere. She's so frightened she doesn't really go anywhere tho so I guess that's something. Don't know if we will see her on Christmas or not. Didn't see her yesterday this is just an extended family update of how everyone is doing.
My sister now has thyroid calcifications that they have to take out and/or biopsy.
My other BIL is going in for blood clots. We didn't even know until yesterday I think it's probably going to be an angioplasty (he was at his wife's family's we heard from another relative) His wife has "long COVID" whatever that's supposed to mean. My other BIL was in the ED for heart palpatations. He is watching his A-fib on his I Phone now so it's all good (sarc).
At some point it's like the Q drops - when does it become mathematically impossible to be anything but??? I don't think we need to say anything at this point. The wake up will be like the stages of death. Most people are still in denial. The only difference will be that anger will come after acceptance if the true reason ever becomes fully known.
Wow! That must have been frustrating to watch them not connect the dots.
Cognitive dissonance is powerful.
A person can choose to believe they did everything they were supposed to do, asked of them by society and government, and their ailments are not connected.
... or ...
They can believe that they were ignorant, shortened their lives by decades, will live out their remaining years (or months) in the poorest of health, and they did it just because they didn't want to listen to people they deem beneath themselves. And if kids are involved, they have to accept they did the same to their children.
They have tremendous incentive, psychologically, to believe the first option.
It’s fun to observe what other mistakes they will blindly follow. We can learn from their mistakes.