True enough that race drivers wouldn’t have been required to get clotshot to race. But they travel, Fly, eat out, train in other facilities, and generally mix it up in other ways. I’d have to hear a flat out denial to believe the shots weren’t a factor.
Lung damage leading to pneumonia like effects is way high on the list of both C19 and shot damage. And it’s getting to be a pet peeve of mine that way too many causes of death are written off as “pneumonia.” Right up there with “colon cancer”. Lazy ass dokters take the low pressure way out.
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Ask yerself how a healthy 40-something, guy, would even get pneumonia. Riding all day in the rain then going home wet and cold? That’s how George Washington died.
And by all accounts it developed over about two weeks. That’s something besides pneumonia and coughing blood. One of my lifetime friends, who travelled a lot, went down like that about two years ago: Had trouble getting around, went in for some surgery, and died on the table.
Sad to lose Busch but it seems he and the people around him were just asleep at the switch. And we seem to be losing a lot of 40-somethings?
It’s really hard to figure with Kyle Busch. I know that as a top racer, he was driven. Perhaps driven beyond what an ordinary person would be. Whereas many people, perhaps most, would take a couple of days off, see the doc, and get healed up, he was driven to win and he was near the top of his game.
But it is suspicious. Seems like the extremeness of the illness wasn’t apparent last week when he was winning.
I think Pneumonia is a symptom of something worse, not the primary disease, in a lot of cases. But I don’t really know. More or less speculating.
So,I'm with you. I would not rule out the bio-weapons. And we know the shots are just one way they are delivered. Are they in the air, water, or food we drink along with shedding from one person to another?
I don't know but am not ruling it out.
It’s definitely not normal. The shot strikes again but I’m assuming.
-SB