No. There is a very high variability within the batches of injections, to randomize the effects and make it easier for them to deny the cause. Also, many of the negative effects are designed to take years to kill people slowly.
In even simpler terms, not everyone that got an injection is going to die from that injection. Get it? We don't know what percentage of the injected are going to die. Too many variables, between different manufacturers, different batches, and different number of injections per individual.
A Nobel Prize winning doctor in France said that everyone who got the shots would be dead in about three years. There's an online video of him saying that.
No. There is a very high variability within the batches of injections, to randomize the effects and make it easier for them to deny the cause. Also, many of the negative effects are designed to take years to kill people slowly.
In even simpler terms, not everyone that got an injection is going to die from that injection. Get it? We don't know what percentage of the injected are going to die. Too many variables, between different manufacturers, different batches, and different number of injections per individual.
A Nobel Prize winning doctor in France said that everyone who got the shots would be dead in about three years. There's an online video of him saying that.