Ping
In her honor, free jabs for anyone who signs up with a grief counselor.
Beautiful young girl. How needlessly tragic. What does Dr. Fauci have to say about this? Or Bill Gates? Or Albert Bourla?
Normies are starting to notice...
“The news of the young player’s sudden death comes after another young footballer died after a sudden collapse during a game in Spain’s Malaga last month.”
It’s not new. Soccer has had sudden deaths for ages.
This article is from 2018.
https://www.c-r-y.org.uk/sudden-cardiac-death-in-elite-footballers-higher-than-anticipated/
So easy to blame 'the vac'.
How long did people smoke cigarettes before the danger was known?
Unbelievable... At this age, kill the parents for pushing it.
I wonder when all these deaths filter down into the consciousness of the vaccine believers. When will they finally stop believing?
I believe that the next time they try to push jabs on us, they’re going to be openly mocked by many.
There should be a thread somewhere were out there where these are posted as they occur. For reference purposes. I am surprised that someone somewhere has not done that.
I have no doubt the jab is killing people, but it seems odd to me that there are so many articles about people who’ve “died suddenly.” Are there that many journalists realizing the jab kills? Very suspicious to me. Maybe it’s a setup somehow?
Futballers (soccer) was the 1st group of athletes to exhibit a spike in sudden deaths...said spike remains at a high level.
I believe that before people engage in any strenuous exercise they need to have a medical check which includes an ECG.
Over the past 30 years, colleges and universities have increasingly screened athletes for health conditions that may pose undue risk to sports participation. Sudden cardiac death is the leading cause of death among college athletes, so a primary function of these screenings is to reveal unknown heart conditions.
Research indicates that screenings that incorporate an ECG are more effective at detecting cardiac conditions that put athletes at risk, and more efficient in terms of cost-per-diagnosis of at-risk players, than screenings involving only a physical exam and patient history.