Plenty of people keeled over D E A D after taking a nap, and other bad things too.
Something bad happening following something else does not necessarily mean that the event that happened earlier must be the specific cause. This is the essence of the post hoc ergo propter hoc logical fallacy.
"Many medical people have and ARE speaking out."
Which ones are stating that their own patient died from a COVID-19 vaccine? Oh, none? Really? 110 million Americans have taken a COVID-19 vaccine and ZERO doctors have come out to say "I lost a patient to a COVID-19 vaccine"? Weird...
"I have seen the personal testimonials of actual people who have said their loved ones got the vax and BLAM. These, too, are being suppressed on social media."
Did those personal testimonials include documented evidence of a CAUSAL link between the two events? Or just more "Bob had a vaccine and then later on something bad happened, so I'm going to blame the vaccine!"?
"To say there is no evidence, is ridiculous."
There is no evidence that any COVID-19 vaccine available in the United States today has caused any death of any individual in the US or the UK. Literally none. If there were any, you would present it. But you can't. Out of 110 million Americans who've had a COVID-19 vaccine, you can't find a single doctor who points to a specific patient and says that patient died because of a COVID-19 vaccine. Not one.
Provide a list of doctors with a list of patients who have died from a COVID-19 vaccine. If thousands have really died, there should be some easy examples with documented proof. So go ahead and provide that proof.
What kind of latin is there for the logical fallacy of comparing a nap to an experimental drug?
Hoc Ibdum Bolshitum?
(just had to squeeze that one in there)
*waves*