January 13, 2023

Less than a day after NFL player's heart stopped on live national TV, Dem-run paper had the Narrative

If you were a government spook looking for the most efficient way to push government propaganda on Americans, would you bribe the editor of 500 county newspapers with a combined circulation of maybe 150,000, or would you enlist the help of three or four big-city papers, with a combined circulation of millions?

The answer should be obvious.  Fewer people on the payroll and lots more people reading what you want them to read.  (And equally important, NOT seeing things you don't want 'em to see.)

Example: On the televised Monday night NFL game, a pro football player suffered a hard but not out of the ordinary hit, and then some variation of heart attack on the field.  He was quickly attended to by team medics with CPR and then de-fib.

By 7:37 pm the next day--with not a shred of actual information about the player's medical history or current diagnosis, the L.A. Times published a story titled

      "COVID-19 vaccines almost certainly didn’t cause Damar Hamlin’s cardiac arrest. Here’s what may have."

The mental sweep of this is breathtaking:  By 7:37 pm the day after Hamlin collapsed, the Times writer didn't know anything about the Hamlin's actual condition, but still had the experts' quotes in hand to support a fast debunking of the notion that the jab could *possibly* have had anything to do with the player's heart "incident."

Oh, you don't like the phrase "fast debunking"?  Consider that this piece of propaganda was rushed into print so fast that no one caught an off-by-a-factor-of-ten claim that "heart disease kills 70,000 Americans each year."  The actual figure is 700,000, which the Times corrected at 10:03 am the next day.  The error isn't critical; the point is that the Times rushed this piece into print--because one of the most important concepts of propaganda is "Get your version out there first," since first impressions persist.

Of course you don't believe this article could *possibly* be an orchestrated propaganda effort.  You've been conditioned to think "propaganda" is something done by the Soviets (Russians) or North Korea.  (You might also have momentarily thought "...and China," but then you recalled that biden/harris have assured you that the Chinese are NOT your enemy.  Not at all, in fact quite the reverse: They're your friends!

How...interesting.

So back to the collapsed player.  Here's the Times:

It’s vanishingly rare for an athlete who plays at the top of a sport that requires strength, superb conditioning and a high tolerance for physical punishment to be among them.  That's led cardiologists and football fans alike to ask: Why did Hamlin’s heart stop?

They pondered the velocity and impact point of the hit. They contemplated his recent illnesses...

Really?  "Contemplated his recent illnesses" without knowing squat about his actual medical history?  Does anyone believe that?  Oh wait...of course: all Times readers believed it, cuz...LAT tells duh troof.

...his medications and his COVID-19 vaccinations.

None of which were known to the experts or the Times writer.

A few acknowledged the grim possibility that his heart had been a ticking time bomb since birth.

Ah yes, the "ticking time bomb since birth" theory.  Or he could have been abducted by aliens.  Or it could be Global Warming.  Stray voltage.  Clearly they're throwing everything against the wall hoping something will stick.  Anything but the covid "vaccine."  Cuz we absolutely can't have that!

Those lines of speculation suggest very different explanations for the highly improbable scenario that played out Monday night.

Sudden cardiac arrest can be the result of trauma, a side effect of medication or a repercussion of heart muscle damage incurred by a viral infection. It can be the predictable outcome of a chronic disease or the first indication of a disease written into a patient’s genes at conception.

Yeh, dat it: "Chronic disease...or disease written into a patient's genes at conception."  Seems ta me every NFL player has a physical every season to detect signs of "chronic disease."  But maybe duh team docs could be a li'l sloppy, eh?

Sometimes more than one of these contributors is present, muddying the picture.

Ah, the "muddy picture" theory--like Hunter's laptop?   Let's mix several possible contributors all acting at once, eh?  So, see, if you don't have enough evidence to pin it on just one of the many options the Times just laid out, you can blame a little on each one, right?  (I'm favoring Global Warming.)

For doctors trying to keep Hamlin alive, diagnostic tests that...scan his DNA for telltale mutations may provide clues to what happened.

But medical professionals will not be able to diagnose exactly what happened to his heart at the precise instant he slammed into Bengals wide receiver Tee Higgins.>>

Didja get that?  "No matter what, no one will ever be able to know, right?"  So if anyone says "duh jab" Times readers can say with absolute certainty, "The Times said even medical professionals can't possibly know what caused it!"  So there!

In the absence of definitive findings from Hamlin’s cardiac workup, doctors will have to consider a diagnosis that explains roughly 10 to 20 deaths a year in the United States, mostly among young male athletes: commotio cordis.

“Commotio cordis occurs in people with normal hearts,” said cardiologist Dr. Mark S. Link, who has written about sudden cardiac arrest.

See?  "Occurs in people with *normal hearts.*  So that would seem to rule out a vax connection, eh?

Studies in animals suggest that if hit in exactly the right place (where the right ventricle receives blood from the right atrium) and at exactly the right instant (a 20-millisecond span when the walls of the heart are gearing up for their next pump), the stricken ventricles will begin to beat fast and erratically.

If the heart’s disorganized rhythm persists for long enough, the organ will lose its ability to pump blood or sustain normal operations.

It takes “the perfect storm” of circumstances to result in the death of a seemingly healthy young person, Link said.

The fact that it doesn’t happen more often suggests to Link that some young men — the victims are almost exclusively boys and young men — may have underlying conditions that predispose them to such devastating injury.>>

So after admitting this was "extremely rare," notice how deftly the writer slipped in the idea that it's actually caused by "underlying conditions"--but apparently the vax is NOT one.  Again...NOT the vax.  Got it.

One of those "underlying conditions" could be myocarditis, an inflammation of the heart most recently linked to mRNA vaccines for Covid.  About 95% of all players in the National Football League were vaccinated against duh virus by the end of last season, so odds are high that Hamlin was one of them.

In September, the CDC told vaccine experts that among more than 123 million people who received COVID-19 shots, it had detected 131 cases of myocarditis.

Not "131 *thousand,* but literally just over 100 cases.  And did you notice the weasely phrase "it had detected"?  Clearly that's not equivalent to "There were..."  Just "We detected."  The CDC added that *none of them died.*

That's very reassuring, eh?  But before we check this off, there's a study from the British Medical Journal of total cases of myocarditis during the period from vax rollout to March of 2022, covering the U.S., U.K and EU. That study found 18,204 cases.

Well y'see (you uneducated deplorable science-denier!) that study found way more cases cuz it covered  the UK and EU as well as the U.S..  So LOTS more vaxxed people, see?  So it makes sense that they'd find more cases, right?

Gosh, that sounds SO logical.  Plausible.  But let's look just a tad closer, eh?  (Something they know you wouldn't ever do.)  The CDC claims 71% of Americans have taken at least one dose of the "vax."  There are supposedly 335 million people in the U.S., so that would mean about 238 million had taken the jab.   The EU reports 342 million had taken the jab, while  the U.K. reports 52 million.

So the total jabbed population of UK and EU is about 394 million people, and adding the U.S. gives 632 million.  So adjusting the 131 cases the CDC claims to have deteccted in the U.S. for the greater number of  "vaccinees" in all three areas in the BMJ study would lead us to expect a combined total of 348 cases of myocarditis in the U.S., UK and EU.

Instead the BMJ study found 18,204 cases-- 52 times higher than the case rate reported by the CDC for just the U.S.  Wow.

Democrat/innumerate American: "Dis not true!  Dis fake newz!  Duh CDC beez tellin duh truth, cuz...reasons!  Duh BMJ pipo beez lyin!  Cuz Fauci an' our totally honest preznit nevah lie to us!"

Here's the Times again:

Myocarditis often scars the heart and leaves it weakened years after a case of the flu, herpes simplex or even a common cold.

So myocarditis can result from duh virus, or from the flu or herpes, "or even a common cold"!  So the Times writer has now planted the idea--even without explicitly stating it--that if a young person has myocarditis it was more likely caused by something *other than* duh vax.   

So even if myocarditis were found to have contributed to Hamlin’s injury, it would more likely stem from “plain old viral myocarditis” than from a vaccine reaction, Link said, especially since the vast majority of cases related to COVID-19 shots occur within a week of vaccination.

So there ya go, citizen.  Leftist/Dem LA Times assures you that while we can never know what caused Hamlin's heart to stop on the field, they can ASSURE you that it was NOT the jab.  Oh, and since he survived (due to closed-chest heart massage within two minutes, then electrical de-fib to get it started again), he's perfectly fine, so CALM DOWN, rubes!

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