There are reports of long-term effects from getting ill with COVID-19, itself.
I do wonder about the LONG TERM effects, for some people, of being vaccinated against COVID.
My 48 yo daughter suffered from headaches and dizziness within a few days of getting J&J-jabbed.
Her doctor found she had BP of 180.
(Hypertension “runs” in my family, but was not a problem for her before.)
She was sent to ER/ED.
No blood clots. No paralysis.
Her headache subsided, but now she is on BP meds and needs to monitor her BP.
(Her BP is now erratic)
I came across a few reports of other people continuing to have erratic BP for many weeks after being vaccinated.
How many similar people are out there?
The Marketwatch article upthread might cover some of that.
There are also videos of doctors other than the earlier video on this thread, which touch on it.
The injection is known from experiments on mice, to get into all kinds of organs besides the injection site, within 24 hours.
That means lymph nodes or bloodstream.
In the bloodstream, the mRNA from the jab, will invade cells in the lining of the blood vessels, causing those cells to make and present the spike protein on their surface.
The spike protein has been shown experimentally, to induce clotting all by itself in human blood, even without the full virus; the MD on video says that the spike protein induces clotting upon contact with platelets.
And then, once the body recognizes the spike protein as an antigen, it will attack any cells presenting that protein.
Say, including cells lining the blood vessels.
I’ll bet there might be several reasonable ways that this could influence blood pressure.
There are also anecdotal reports coming out of healthy young men under 30, having heart attacks and/or swelling of the heart, after receiving the jab.
Whether bioweapon or greed, these jabs were given without the due care for safety the US citizen has routinely come to expect of drugs.
Emergency Use Authorization == smaller, shorter trials.
And IIRC, the animal trial on monkeys, had 8 monkeys in the experimental group and 8 in the control group.
That’s not good enough for meaningful statistics.