Posted on 12/26/2021 4:45:33 PM PST by SeekAndFind
Carlos Tejada was married and had two children; he spent his career at the Wall Street Journal before joining the Times in 2016.
In July, he received a Johnson & Johnson DNA/AAV Covid vaccine. He was thankful to get it, per his Instagram page.
But for the stats you have to wait 2 weeks after the injection. So he’s officially unvaccinated.
The connection between these shots and adverse reactions to the heart is well established, my friend. Your line about science assuming nothing may have had its place within the first two weeks of the vaccine roll-out but not after this much time.
“NY Times editor is dead one day after getting Moderna Booster…”
Next.
If he got Johnson & Johnson in July, that was too soon to get a booster of any kind.
He’s asymptomatic now.
“Connection”, perhaps. Causation, in particular, unimpeachable direct causation, certainly NOT definitively established.
Oh, and btw, it’s impolite and presumptuous to refer to someone as “friend” when posting a reply to a complete stranger.
Story checks out.
On 12/17 New York Times editor Carlos Tejada posted his booster injection selfie on Instagram:
https://www.instagram.com/p/CXksZUDlaOe/
On 12/18 his wife announced his death by heart attack via his Twitter account:
https://twitter.com/CRTejada/status/1472099053504966656
On 12/22 New York Times published an article regarding his death:
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/12/22/business/media/carlos-tejada-dead.html
I told the head nurse where I got the booster to aspirate it. He understood perfectly and passed that to the nurse giving me the shot. She and I had an interesting discussion about aspiration, why it fell out of favor, and the necessity with the mRNA products to keep them out of the bloodstream.
She learned the technique 20 or 25 years ago in nursing school. She was good at it…just a very slight backward withdrawal of the plunger with her fingernail, then complete the injection. That helped allay my fears.
He got what he wanted. May he rest in peace.
Pray they gave you the saline, not the poison.
Is the news on page 1 of the NY Times or buried in the paper or not reported at all in the paper?
At least he will allowed to be buried.
Fireman15, you are correct about proust’s humor; tone of voice is non-existent in print...
Can’t prove nuffin’.
That is what they are counting on.
Excellent, then you should feel 100 times better!
Hopefully 100 times less likely to drop dead of cardiac arrest.
What does that do ?
The vaccine is supposed to be injected into the deltoid muscle tissue and stay at that location. The deltoid muscle has few capillaries in it, so the chances of injecting the vaccine into the bloodstream are small. The theory is that injecting the vaccine, even a small amount, into the bloodstream delivers the vaccine to organs where it doesn’t belong and can cause all sorts of organ and health damage. Japanese data was released about six months showing the vaccine concentrating in certain organs which was unexpected. There is suspicion that the cardiac problems might be caused by intravenous injection of the vaccine.
“Aspiration” simply means that you push the needle in and pull the plunger back a tiny bit. If the needle hit a blood vessel, you will see red in the syringe and know that you don’t want to inject there. You pull the needle out and try a different location. If no red in the syringe, you are in muscle tissue, so go ahead and inject.
That’s my layman’s understanding (which the nurse confirmed).
I learned about this potential problem in one of the many articles on FR.
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