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To: CatHerd; bagster; Jane Long; ransomnote

You’re engaged in circular reasoning.
“These clots are only found post-mortem”

“Hey look, I opened up the veins of people who died after the clot-shot, and I found clots.”

“They can’t have been from the clot-shots, these clots are only found post-mortem.”

Dingbat.

You’re not tall enough for the ride.

If extensive clots can kill (and they can), one has to distinguish the clots reported by these sources, unambiguously from extensive clots known to have formed before death, in those known to be free of both the COOF and to never have had significant amounts of spike protein in their system, whether from the jabs or from (say) shedding by a contact who had been jabbed.


343 posted on 09/05/2022 4:02:48 PM PDT by grey_whiskers (The opinions are solely those of the author and are subject to change without notice.)
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To: grey_whiskers
I wonder why these clot finder people think the clots are unusual, if they are as common and inconsequential and only formed after death like the VaxHerd propagandist says.

You'd think they'd be all like, yep, there's them old clots again. It never gets old.


344 posted on 09/05/2022 4:07:57 PM PDT by bagster ("Even bad men love their mamas".)
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To: grey_whiskers
Apparently, either you cannot read, refuse to read, or you are being wilfully obtuse.

Blood clots formed before death adhere to the vessel walls and have a rough surface. Here are the links *againn*:

****
“A postmortem clot (E-Fig. 1-5) can be distinguished from an antemortem thrombus by its smooth shiny surface and lack of lamination or attachment to the endothelial surface of the vessel. However, depending on the erythrocyte sedimentation rate, a postmortem clot can organize within a vessel just as within a test tube, with erythrocytes at the bottom separated by a “buffy coat” of leukocytes from the serum at the top. The resemblance of clotted serum to avian adipose tissue has garnered the name of “chicken fat clot” for this postmortem clot that is often seen in horses because of their high erythrocyte sedimentation rate. Inflammation can accelerate the sedimentation rate. Anticoagulants or hereditary coagulopathies can delay or prevent postmortem clotting of blood.”

Link: https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/nursing-and-health-professions/livor-mortis
*****

Also here:

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18243759/

Re your If extensive clots can kill (and they can), one has to distinguish the clots reported by these sources, unambiguously from extensive clots known to have formed before death, in those known to be free of both the COOF and to never have had significant amounts of spike protein in their system, whether from the jabs or from (say) shedding by a contact who had been jabbed.

This is difficult to parse. Syntax off much? I gather you again assert that that three-foot long clots can form in a living person, but offer no proof. No links, no nothing, just your word for it.

Again, the clots the embalmer removed were not stuck to the vessel walls, were easily pulled out, conformed to the shape of the blood vessel, were rubbery and/or gelatinous and had a smooth shiny surface. All the characteristics of postmortem clots, not antemortem thrombi.

354 posted on 09/05/2022 6:09:27 PM PDT by CatHerd (Whoever said "All's fair in love and war" probably never participated in either.)
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