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He's seen what seems like every specialist within 500 miles over the past yearish, and it doesn't look good for him, unfortunately. From what I gather about VEXAS, his bone marrow has been corrupted (allegedly a genetic disorder, but isn't hereditary, and wasn't discovered until after covid...) and is making bad blood cells, which are triggering autoimmune episodes all over his body. High morbidity rate.

He had the first set of moderna shots, but nothing since.

They're hunting for a bone marrow donor...

Frens, he and his family could use some prayer right about now.

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Is anyone else getting that vibe?

One thing after another keeps getting exposed very publicly since Brandon became resident; the spotlight is now on illegal immigration and the hypocrisy of the left and their "sanctuary" areas. Trump could put a focus on the border directly, but MAGA and Co. had the power to deport. Without MAGA in the president's office, others are being forced to handle it however they can and transporting to sanctuary areas is the next best option to deportation.

thoughts?

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I'm genuinely curious. Not glowing, not trying to shill for anyone, I just don't get how that all fits together.

Also, is it jews by race/nationality or jews by religion that everything ever keeps getting tied to?

Please help a fren understand more. I've been around a while, I just haven't been able to reconcile this.

Thank you!

edit: For the record, "the movement" was meant to mean "bringing about the great awakening", not "Q followers". Sorry for not phrasing that well.

edit 2: Sounds like the consensus is that "people are assholes" because a bunch of non-Jews (Khazarians) took over a lot of Judaism and wear it as a mask and other people don't know how to (or don't care to) distinguish the fake ones from the real ones.

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(should this be one of them there stickies?)

I don't have much of an FB following but I wrote a post that will hopefully make people curious about what's going on with the vax, and it's obfuscated enough that it isn't setting off community guidelines or fact check flags (yet). Feel free to use this.

Here's the post:

Long post, but please read. It'll just take a couple minutes, and it's really important.

So you know how those commercials for medicine usually end in that rapidfire list of possible side effects, usually a couple dozen of them rattled off within a few seconds?

Well, a bit over a year ago, an injectable medication was given temporary emergency authorization for public distribution, and subsequently, tens of thousands of companies (and many entire regions) have started requiring that their employees (or citizens (but not non-citizens... hmm)) partake in the consumption of the injectable medication.

Post-release, the manufacturer has collected data on side effects, effectiveness of the medication, and other useful information. This information was provided to the government agency that gave them the above authorization, and the manufacturer convinced the government to keep the data away from the public until 2076 (read: 55 years from now. When I'll be in my 80s.)

The public didn't like the concealment, so they're battling with the manufacturer and the government in the courts. They're winning. Data is starting to be released.

Of note, there's a document labeled "Cumulative analysis of post-authorization adverse event reports of [product] received through 28-FEB-2021". The information is from the first four months of authorization, and it has been on the market for 12 additional months since that cutoff. With no changes to the product, and an alleged permanent authorization of a "functionally identical" formulation of the medication. Pages 30 through 38 of this document are labeled "List of adverse events of special interest". And that's not, like, 4 items listed per page. That's 9 full pages of text, single-spaced, with ~1" margin and like 13pt font. It's a lot of text. And these are, based on that title, only the ones they're interested in. Oh, and the filename contains "postmarketing experience" so that's fun.

Some quick information about that list of adverse event reports:

  • The are one thousand, two hundred and ninety-one unique items. 1,291. Quantities of each listed item are not listed, but 1,291 unique conditions reported.

  • By a quick count, there are three thousand, three hundred and forty-six words contained in those entries. 3,346.

  • According to Guinness Book, the fastest talker can speak 655 words per minute when reading Hamlet. Normally I'd deduct points for Latin medical words, but I'll skip that because ye olde English can be a pain too. If he were to read the list of notable adverse events listed above, and then sped up to double speed like they do in the commercials, it would still be over two and a half minutes. A typical TV commercial is 30 seconds to a minute. That does not include any information about what this product does, where to get it, or who it's for - just the notable reported adverse events (that they tried to conceal from the public until 2076).

  • Granted this is the case with seemingly every medication, but the thing the product is supposed to prevent is listed as a reported adverse reaction of interest.

  • A quick skim of the list shows at least 40 different autoimmune conditions (33 of which start with the word "autoimmune", and Celiac is on the list too).

I'll give you one guess who the manufacturer is and what the product is. If I tell you, I'll get zuck'd. Paragraph #2 should be more than enough information to figure it out. Product name censored above to prevent zuckification as well, but this information is easy to locate now. Use Bing or DuckDuckGo or something, Google's scrubbing the info from their everything.

If this post stays up for any length of time, I'll throw the full list in a comment thread or something. You owe it to yourself to at least read this list, but you really should dig into this more.

I couldn't get the list of stuff into the comments without making 30 comments out of it, but it's the list from pg 30-38 of https://phmpt.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/5.3.6-postmarketing-experience.pdf

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He's in his 50s. Not looking for advice on how to shame him, just trying to help him survive. I'm already planning to give him a dump of Ivermectin information.

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