GB pushed the vax

by Diedsuddenly 41 Replies latest watchtower scandals

  • enoughisenough
    enoughisenough

    disillusionedJW...it has been several months ago when I watched videos that were well resourced at the time. I cannot at this point in time point to a specific one from where the information I post came from...

  • Disillusioned JW
    Disillusioned JW

    OK, but do you have a post from several months ago in which you mentioned the resources?

  • peacefulpete
    peacefulpete

    Disi...My 2 cents. Apply the same critical thinking you apply to creationism and you will likely have a similarly sober minded respect for the value of medical science. Reasonable caution is always appropriate but imputing murderous motives to the world's health organizations is something quite different. Myself I defer to trained professionals when it comes to my health.

  • LV101
    LV101

    Not saying Jewish community behind any depopulating but clearly making serious billions along with others who've investments in these cos. Not anti-semitic even have jewish ancestors -- admire them but not happy about these inoculations. I don't know who is behind depopulation if that's the MO -- I prefer it just be monetary goals.

    I'm not thrilled with any of this right now.

  • LV101
    LV101

    enoughisenough -- you've done your homework and I've read bits/pieces of same info you've referenced. There were many graphs flying around re/death rates of red states vs. blue states. I haven't had the time past several mos to stay up with much news, unfortunately. Appreciate your posts!

  • Disillusioned JW
    Disillusioned JW

    peacefulpete, I notice you said "Disi...My 2 cents. ... Reasonable caution is always appropriate but imputing murderous motives to the world's health organizations is something quite different." Did you think I was imputing murderous motives to the world's health organizations? I was not doing that at all. I disagree with those who impute such motives, but I was also asking for clarification from some of those who impute such motives. At the same time though, I think the Covid-19 vaccines might not be as safe as the medical community (the world's health organizations) claims they are. I do believe that the bast majority of those in the medical community who claim the vaccines are safe truly believe they are safe.

    But early televised news reports of major complications (clots and heart problems) make me wonder. Furthermore, the anecdotal evidence I have seen in my own legs. and which I have been told about by my close friends and family about a now dead elderly friend of mine (who got a stroke and died about a week after getting the first dose of the vaccine) and about my mother's severe brain condition make me wonder if the mRNA Covid-19 vaccines have a major problem. Furthermore, the very nature of how the mRNA Covid-19 vaccines function has concerned me since I learned of how they work. Some of my co-workers have received the Covid-19 illness after they got vaccinated (even with the same brand of the vaccine I received). One of the co-workers got Covid-19 twice while she was fully vaccinated against Covid-19. She ended up missing months of work. When she returned to the workplace her health condition looked awful - looking like she had a stroke and became physically handicapped as result. She told us she came to say goodbye to us, because her health condition now prevents her from resuming her job in our workplace again.

    I do have a respect for medical science, but I also exercise independent thinking and critical thinking in my personal medical matters. When I meet my doctor and my nurse, I ask them questions if they tell me something which seems incorrect (or possibly incorrect) or possibly unsafe to me. I sometimes bring up medical information I have read in online from trusted health information sources and I ask them about that in regards to what they told me. When I was in the hospital recently due to massive blood loss from internal bleeding, I questioned the conclusion of a doctor who said I was well enough to leave the hospital and return to work. I told a doctor why I didn't think I was well enough. It was good that I did such because the next day (or two days later) in the hospital I started bleeding again and my health condition became much worse. The condition became so bad I ended up accepting a transfusion of two units of packed red blood cells in order to save my life and my health. [Those transfusions were the first times (and thus far the only times) I accepted a blood transfusion.] I felt immediately better within an hour after getting each transfusion. My health condition greatly improved and then I left the hospital. If I hadn't questioned the earlier conclusion of one of the doctors (who said it was safe for me to go home), I would likely be dead by now, or I would have had to return immediately back the hospital, likely by ambulance.

    A few years ago my doctor at the time prescribed Naproxen to me to reduce inflammation cause by an injury. I told him I prefer to not take man-made drugs if possible, preferring herbal medicine instead. He assured me the medication was safe and better treatment. I thus accepted it and began taking it. But, the medication ended up causing extreme pain in my digestive tract and as a result I reduced my dosage (from the prescribed amount) and I reduced the frequency of the dosage. About two years later I decided to take some of the pills, thinking that by reducing inflammation in general it would be good for my health and longevity prospects, but my new nurse and doctor at the time insistently demanded that I stop taking it. I then researched the medication online and discovered that new medical data says the medication [and other nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAID)] can cause bleeding and severe damage (even without symptoms) and even death. [Seehttps://medlineplus.gov/druginfo/meds/a681029.html .] After learning that I haven't taken it again. I learned I was right to be initially suspicious of the safety of that medication.

    The medical community used to recommend that most people age 60 or over to take aspirin daily to reduce their risk of getting a hear attack, but new medical data now says the danger of the aspirin causing bleeding is greater than formerly thought. As a result the medical community no longer recommends that most people age 60 and older to take it. https://connect.uclahealth.org/2022/04/26/daily-aspirin-no-longer-recommended-to-prevent-heart-disease/ says the following.

    "A panel of disease-prevention experts says older adults who don’t have heart disease should not take daily low-dose aspirin to prevent a first heart attack or stroke, a shift from earlier guidance.

    The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, a panel of physicians who review scientific research to develop guidelines to improve Americans’ health, published new recommendations on April 26 advising against daily aspirin use for the prevention of cardiovascular disease in people age 60 and older.

    Taking baby aspirin daily has been routine for millions of Americans looking to prevent a heart attack or stroke. Aspirin has blood-thinning properties that can reduce the likelihood of blood clots forming in the arteries. But these same properties can also cause ulcers and bleeding in the digestive tract.

    The task force says in its new recommendations that low-dose daily aspirin to prevent cardiovascular disease (CVD) has a modest benefit for people ages 40 to 59 who aren’t at increased risk for bleeding.

    It concludes that there is “no net benefit” of taking aspirin for primary prevention of heart disease in those 60 and older."

    Aspirin has been a problem for me, staring with the earliest time I took it. Whenever I take more than one whole pill in a two-day period I have extreme pain (excruciating pain) in my digestive tract. As a result, I no longer take it. Tylenol (Acetaminophen) also is a problem, but I can tolerate more of it before experiencing digestive tract pain.

  • Disillusioned JW
    Disillusioned JW

    LV101 and enoughisenough, see https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/covid-death-rates-higher-republicans-democrats-why-rcna50883 (the article is called "Covid death rates are higher among Republicans than Democrats, mounting evidence shows: Lower vaccination rates among Republicans could explain the partisan gap, but some researchers say mask use and social distancing were bigger factors"). It says the following.

    "Average excess death rates in Florida and Ohio were 76% higher among Republicans than Democrats from March 2020 to December 2021, according to a working paper released last month by the National Bureau of Economic Research. Excess deaths refers to deaths above what would be anticipated based on historical trends.

    A study in June published in Health Affairs similarly found that counties with a Republican majority had a greater share of Covid deaths through October 2021, relative to majority-Democratic counties.

    ... The Yale researchers behind the new working paper say vaccine hesitancy among Republicans may be the biggest culprit.

    "In counties where a large share of the population is getting vaccinated, we see a much smaller gap between Republicans and Democrats," said Jacob Wallace, an author of that study and an assistant professor of health policy at the Yale School of Public Health.

    Indeed, his paper found that the partisan gap in the deaths widened from April to December 2021, after all adults became eligible for Covid vaccines. Excess death rates in Florida and Ohio were 153% higher among Republicans than Democrats during that time, the paper showed.

    "We really don’t see a big divide until after vaccines became widely available in our two states," Wallace said.

    But the June study suggested that Covid vaccine uptake explained just 10% of the partisan gap in the deaths. Those researchers suggested that compliance with other public health measures such as mask use and social distancing was a significant factor."

    See also https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/people-in-republican-counties-have-higher-death-rates-than-those-in-democratic-counties/ (the article is called "People in Republican Counties Have Higher Death Rates Than Those in Democratic Counties: A growing mortality gap between Republican and Democratic areas may largely stem from policy choices"). it says the following.

    'During the COVID-19 pandemic, the link between politics and health became glaringly obvious. Democrat-leaning “blue” states were more likely to enact mask requirements and vaccine and social distancing mandates. Republican-leaning “red” states were much more resistant to health measures. The consequences of those differences emerged by the end of 2020, when rates of hospitalization and death from COVID rose in conservative counties and dropped in liberal ones. That divergence continued through 2021, when vaccines became widely available. And although the highly transmissible Omicron variant narrowed the gap in infection rates, hospitalization and death rates, which are dramatically reduced by vaccines, remain higher in Republican-leaning parts of the country.

    ... In a study published in June in The BMJ, Warraich and his colleagues showed that over the two decades prior to the pandemic, there was a growing gap in mortality rates for residents of Republican and Democratic counties across the U.S. In 2001, the study’s starting point, the risk of death among red and blue counties (as defined by the results of presidential elections) was similar. Overall, the U.S. mortality rate has decreased in the nearly two decades since then (albeit not as much as in most other high-income countries). But the improvement for those living in Republican counties by 2019 was half that of those in Democratic counties—11 percent lower versus 22 percent lower.

    .. The new study, conducted by researchers in Texas, Missouri, Massachusetts and Pakistan, covers the years 2001 through 2019 and examines age-adjusted mortality rates—the number of deaths per 100,000 people each year—from the top 10 leading causes of death, as recorded in 2019. These include heart disease, cancer, lung disease, unintentional injuries and suicide. The researchers then analyzed county-level results in each of the five presidential elections that took place during their study period, identifying counties as Republican or Democratic for the subsequent four years. They found the gap in mortality rates between Republican and Democratic counties increased for nine out of 10 causes of death. (The gap for cerebrovascular disease, which includes stroke and aneurysms, remained but narrowed.) Political environment, the authors suggest in the paper, is a “core determinant of health.”

    ... And an analysis of the new study’s data by subgroups supports the idea that individual choices play a role. Hispanic Americans everywhere saw significant improvements in their risk of death. Black Americans still have the highest mortality rates of any racial group, but they saw relatively similar improvement. “It didn’t really matter where they lived,” Warraich says. For white Americans, however, the difference was profound—a fourfold increase in the mortality gap between those living in Republican and Democratic areas.

    ... In the intervening decades liberal states enacted more policies to address health concerns while conservative states went in the opposite direction, with inflection points in the early 1980s 1994 and 2010. Montez notes that those dates line up with Ronald Reagan’s election as U.S. president, Newt Gingrich’s control of Congress and the rise of Tea Party politics. Political affiliation drives social policies and spending, says Lois Lee, a pediatric emergency physician at Boston Children’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School. Conservatives tend to see health as a matter of individual responsibility and to prefer less government intervention. Liberals often promote the role of government to implement regulations to protect health. The Democratic approach has included expanding Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act. Access to health care and having health insurance are important for well-being, Warraich says. Democrats also spend more on what are known as the social determinants of health. “We know things like your housing situation, your socioeconomic status, your access to healthy foods and healthy lifestyles, as well as exposure to toxic stress—all these things affect your overall physical as well as emotional and mental health,” Lee says.

    Several kinds of policies—around tobacco, labor laws, the environment and guns—repeatedly emerge as significant. “Each party has bundled multiple policies together,” Montez says. In Mississippi, for example, there are no statewide clean indoor air policies restricting smoking in bars, restaurants or workplaces, Montez says. In California, on the other hand, smoking is restricted in all three environments. Cigarette taxes also differ dramatically. “The places where you can’t smoke indoors are also the places where cigarettes cost a lot,” Montez says.

    ... Cultural differences between red and blue counties also likely contributed to COVID deaths. “You’re affected by your neighbors,” says Neil Sehgal, a public health professor at the University of Maryland and co-author of a recent study of the association between COVID mortality and county-level voting. Sehgal and his colleagues found that through October 2021, majority-Republican counties experienced 72.9 additional deaths per 100,000 people relative to majority-Democratic counties. To the researchers’ surprise, however, vaccine uptake explained only 10 percent of the difference. The finding suggests that differences in COVID outcomes are driven by a combination of factors, including the likelihood of, say, engaging in unmasked social events or in-person dining, Sehgal says. By February 2022 the COVID death rate in all counties Donald Trump won in the 2020 presidential election was substantially higher than in counties that Joe Biden won—326 deaths per 100,000 people versus 258. “COVID was probably the most dramatic example I’ve seen in my career of the influence of policy choices on health outcomes,” Woolf says.'

  • Disillusioned JW
    Disillusioned JW

    Correction: in my latest post to peacefulpete where I said "At the same time though, I think the Covid-19 vaccines might not be as safe as the medical community (the world's health organizations) claims they are" I meant to say the following. "At the same time though, I think the Covid-19 vaccines might not be as safe as the medical community (and the world's health organizations) claims they are."

  • peacefulpete
    peacefulpete

    Disi...I wasn't suggesting YOU held those extremely disturbing views. Sorry I was not clear. As far as being your own advocate in medical decisions, absolutely agree. Your doctor is a human and probably overbooked. My oncologist last month called to tell me my cancer had spread to my lungs. My heart sank. Seconds later when describing the mass on my lung, I stopped him and reminded him I had a massive pulmonary embolism that killed the bottom third of my lung. He paused and said, "Oh that's probably it then."

    I was relieved but still displeased he hadn't consulted my file before calling with such bad news. Doctors and nurses are people. I don't think anyone (not you) should equate that with a worldwide conspiracy to reduce population, as is being spread by many. Researchers around the world whose job is to keep us safe, knew what the various vaccinations were, it wasn't a mystery to them. Even the cutting edge mrna approach has been studied for years with the purpose of quickly responding to a situation like what arose. Any injection has a small risk, and any medication has a risk of reaction.

    I hear your preference for "natural" medicine. Medical research is always looking at naturally occurring compounds and how they interreact with disease. Nature has had many millions of years to experiment.

    Many chemotherapy drugs were derived from "natural compounds". They are poison but their preference for cancer cells makes them useful. Again sorry for not being clear. I respect you, I just disagree that the evidence suggests the vaccines we have are less safe than being reported by medical authorities.

  • Disillusioned JW
    Disillusioned JW

    Thanks peacefulpete. Regarding my coworker who "got Covid-19 twice while she was fully vaccinated against Covid-19" I should note that she has been experiencing multiple health problems since even before Covid-19 came into existence. She is also a cigarette smoker.

Share this

Google+
Pinterest
Reddit