Posted on 10/03/2021 3:05:40 PM PDT by Fitzy_888
Video at link.
Thanks for sharing that.
I doubt it can be good to inject an antigen directly into a vein. It probably drives the immune system crazy.
A good way to deflect from a bad message is to shoot the messenger.
They want people to continue taking them. They don’t want them to figure out that the problem is what they are injecting into people.
What a load of horseshit. The deltoid muscle doesn’t have any large veins or arteries. That’s why it’s considered the best place to inject into muscle tissue.
Now the butt does have some larger vessels so it’s good common practice with aspirate before injecting.
This explanation holds water like a laundry basket.
The death clot shot doesn’t stay in the muscle. It goes all over the body and organs including the heart.
Sadly there will be some who believe this nonsense.
Vaxx mandate - bump for later....
Allow me to elaborate. I don't think aspirating the needle would help all that much in every instance, since even hitting a capillary in the deltoid muscle would probably be sufficient to allow the mRNA to migrate throughout the body. But neither do I take at face value the "planned genocide" angle, either.
Here's the thing: the pharma companies were instructed to produce a "vaccine" at "warp speed." Producing a vaccine that induces an antibody response isn't, from what I understand, all that difficult to do. Producing a vaccine that induces an antibody response and that does it safely is another thing altogether. But the marching orders here were, "do it, and do it quickly."
Did any of the pharma company guys know that the mRNA-generated spike proteins would circulate throughout the body? Oh, I'm sure they at least suspected. But they also knew not to go looking for something they didn't want to find, consistent with "warp speed." The pharma companies -- and the FDA, the CDC, and Fauci at NIAID -- didn't care, one way or the other, whether the vaccines were safe or not. They still don't. Why should they? They're not accountable in any way.
Why any sentient person would believe these "vaccines" to be safe baffles me. Just "faith," I guess. But just who and what are they having faith in?
It’s actually old science that was dumbed down so any idiot can perform a deltoid injection.
—
Unless the idiot manages to hit a vein and the person gets an IV instead of an IM injection; then all the mRNA takes an express ride thru the patient’s circulatory system winding up who knows where; heart, lungs, bone marrow.
“Naturally. They need some way to downplay the cardiopulmonary effects of this evil serum.”
= = = = =
Bingeaux!
I agree this happening, but if it was just this why are the effects mainly in young men.
It’s not the vaccine, it’s the way it’s administered that’s the problem.
Yea, right.
Grade “A” BS?????
Pure wild speculation, but the spike protiens may be taken up rapidly in the ovaries and uterine wall of young(er) women.
Wonder if it is material if you aspirate the needle if the injection is saline solution?
Riiiiiiiigghht.
It might be.
Aren’t most, if not all of these shots, intermuscular?
What if someone administers a vax subcutaneously instead? Or uses needles that are too shirt on an obese patient? Or uses needles that are too short to cut costs?
It might not all be the vaxxes.
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The outer deltoid muscle has extremely few veins in it near the surface making it a good vaccine injection site. That said it is posssible to hit one if too deep with a needle, etc. See this UK Dr. (Campbell) video on the topic from a week ago: https://youtu.be/nBaIRm4610o
From the comment section of that video:
“Jerome Morrow -
I’m a cancer and reconstructive surgeon. The nature of my subspecialty means that I have a better working knowledge of muscle anatomy than just about any other physician or surgeon outside my subspecialty. In the deltoid, the large veins are only found on the deep aspect of the muscle where the blood supply enters the muscle (ie: the neurovascular hilum). The large vessels arborise very quickly into much, much smaller and finer branches such that nearer the muscle surface (the area where most IM injection needles would get to), there are few if any veins of sufficient size that cannulation could occur leading to an inadvertant intravenous injection. This risk is reduced further if the site is pinched during needle entry (collapses the blood vessels).
That said, I have never understood why present day training seems to advise against aspiration prior to intramuscular injection in both medical and nursing courses. Perhaps I am a bit of a dinosaur (graduated medical school in 1995), so I still do it the traditional way. I know full well that the likelihood of inadvertant IV injection with the short, fine needles (as used with Covid-19 and flu vaccination) is practically zero. However, it does no harm to aspirate, seems entirely logical and sensible; and is hardly a huge extra task in the process. I have seen enough freak events happen over my many years of work that I rather not take any chances. I also do not understand the seeming active resistance that some medical and nursing practitioners have when asked by patients to aspirate prior to IM injection. There’s no need to be difficult for something so simple and if it affords the patient a measure of reassurance, surely we should just do so rather than be a**hats about it.
Sorry for my rather long post.”
Saw a video early this year of some Australian government official “getting the vax”, setting an example for the subjects.
The person “administering the vax” slid the syringe up under the vaccinees blouse sleeve, went through the motions of administering the injection, and, when they pulled the syringe out from under the sleeve, the needle STILL HAD THE PROTECTIVE COVER ON IT.
Whata ya expect for part time and $15 an hour?
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