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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Winfastorlose who wrote (1328090)11/7/2021 4:52:07 PM
From: isopatch1 Recommendation

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Winfastorlose

  Respond to of 1580267
 
Can confirm that.



To: Winfastorlose who wrote (1328090)11/7/2021 5:32:05 PM
From: sylvester801 Recommendation

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rdkflorida2

  Respond to of 1580267
 
BREAKING: Deputy recovering from COVID changes mind about vaccine: ‘This virus will kill you’
yahoo.com
Will Langhorne
Sat, November 6, 2021, 7:07 PM·4 min read



In this photo provided by Christina Fisher, Lincoln County Sheriff's Deputy Ben Fisher and his wife, Christine Fisher, are pictured in mid-Oct. 2021, at the Boise VA Medical Center where he was being treated for COVID-19, in Boise, Idaho. Fisher, who was unvaccinated and lax about wearing a mask outside of work, has changed his mind about the COVID-19 vaccine. He was diagnosed with COVID-19 in late September, spent 40 days bedridden, 17 days intubated and lost 80 pounds. He was transferred to another hospital for rehabilitation on Oct. 22, but not before receiving his first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine. (Christina Fisher via AP)More
LIBBY, Mont. — After nearly losing his life to COVID-19, Ben Fisher has changed his mind about getting vaccinated against the virus.

“The only protection we have is the vaccine,” Fisher said from St. Luke’s Boise Medical Center in Idaho on Oct. 27. “This virus will kill you, especially if you catch the wrong variant of it.”

Fisher, a 47-year-old deputy with the Lincoln County Sheriff’s Office, caught the delta variant of the coronavirus in late September. Days after going to a Libby emergency room with low oxygen levels, he was fighting to stay alive on a ventilator at the Boise Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Idaho. The battle left him intubated for 17 days, bed-ridden for 40 days and stripped 80 pounds off his stout 6-foot-4 frame, The Western News reported.

Complicating his coronavirus infection, Fisher suffered from suspected bacterial pneumonia and asbestosis, according to his wife Christina Fisher. During the darkest days of Ben Fisher’s hospitalization, nurses had trouble proning him, or turning him on his stomach to help distribute oxygen throughout his lungs.

Community support galvanized around the Fishers with neighbors offering donations, food and firewood. Dozens turned out for a prayer vigil for the afflicted deputy at Troy Christian Fellowship on Sept. 25.

Born and raised in Troy, Ben Fisher said he had joined his neighbors in rallying around local families in need many times before.

“When you live in a small community like Troy and Libby, that is what you have to do,” he said. “You never think about it being you.”

While Ben Fisher was struggling in the intensive care unit, hospital managers allowed Christina Fisher to sit with him and give him massages. A nurse herself, Christina Fisher was surprised to have this level of access. While medical staff assured her they were allowing her to be with her husband because they thought her presence might improve his condition, Christina Fisher later learned they were being lenient because they believed Ben Fisher was on death’s doorstep.

Unvaccinated cases surge: Montana reports 8 additional COVID-19 deaths

Against incredible odds, Ben Fisher’s condition was improving by mid-October and managers at the Boise Veterans Affairs Medical Center moved him out of the hospital’s intensive care unit. As Ben Fisher worked to regain his basic motor skills, hospital staff made fewer exceptions to their restrictions on visitation, leaving him to spend long hours alone in the center’s step down unit.

“To not be able to have someone come in is tough, especially when you’re hours away from home,” he said.

Eventually, Christina Fisher finagled her way into the unit and managers later relaxed the hospital’s policies. As Ben Fisher’s strength returned, staff transferred him to Saint Luke’s on Oct. 22.

While in rehab, Ben Fisher learned just how close he had come to death. Doctors who took care of him in the early days of his infection told during visitations that they hadn’t expected him to make it.

Christina Fisher said physicians with the Veterans Affairs Medical Center told her that patients like her husband, who were intubated at the hospital and infected by the delta variant of the virus, had only a 5% chance of survival.

Talking with doctors during rehabilitation also changed Ben Fisher’s stance on vaccines. Initially, he opposed the shots because he worried pharmaceutical producers had rushed the process. Physicians, however, told him that researchers had worked on similar vaccines for years.

While Ben Fisher emphasized that getting vaccinated should be a personal choice, he recognized shots as safe and effective. Before transferring to Saint Luke’s, Ben Fisher received his first vaccine dose and noticed no side effects.

Reflecting on how he reacted to the virus before his hospitalization, Ben Fisher said he might have done things differently if he had known the outcome.

“I wasn’t doing my part. I wasn’t wearing a mask. I wasn’t concerned about it,” he said. “It’s definitely changed my mind now that I’m living with the result.”

Christina Fisher said that her husband wore a mask at work, but they were lax in wearing masks to the grocery store, church or their children's activities.

Before he returns home, Ben Fisher will likely spend between one and three weeks regaining his strength. As of Oct. 27, he was focusing on standing for longer periods and walking. Due to the way COVID-19 affected his nervous system, Ben Fisher said the left side of his body was taking longer to heal.

While he was excited to return to his patrol vehicle after completing his recovery, Ben Fisher said the thought of coming home to his family was what kept him going.

“I am super excited to get back and see my kids,” he said. “That’s what’s making me get up and fight and take that extra step.”



To: Winfastorlose who wrote (1328090)11/7/2021 7:35:49 PM
From: FJB2 Recommendations

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kapex
Winfastorlose

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1580267
 
The Spike Protein By Itself Is A Pathogen

fulcrum7.com

Pierson: Let us bring in Dr. Bridle. He's an associate professor of viral immunology at the University of Guelph. Doctor, you've been very open-minded on this whole issue, and you're not an anti-vaxxer by any stretch but what do you think about this inflammation in the heart and is it an actual threat?

Dr. Bridle: So this is what it is: The sars-coronovirus-2 has a spike protein on its surface. That spike protein is what allows it to infect our bodies. That is why we've been using the spike protein in our vaccines. The vaccines get our cells in our body to manufacture that protein. If we can mount an immune response against that protein, in theory we can prevent this virus from infecting the body. That's the theory behind the vaccine.

However, when studying [severe cases of Covid-19] everything that you've just described—heart problems, lots of problems with the cardiovascular system, bleeding and clotting—is all associated with severe Covid-19. Doing that research, what has been discovered by the scientific community is that the spike protein on its own is almost entirely responsible for the damage to the cardiovascular system. If it gets into circulation. Indeed, if you inject the purified spike protein into the blood of research animals, they get all kinds of damage to the cardiovascular system. It can cross the blood-brain barrier and cause damage to the brain.

Now, at first glance, that doesn't seem too concerning, because we're injecting these vaccines into the shoulder muscle. The assumption, all up until now, has been that these vaccines behave like all of our traditional vaccines, that they don't go anywhere other than the injection site. So they stay in our shoulder, and some of the protein will go to the local draining lymph node in order to activate the immune system.

However, . . . and this is where it gets scary, through a request for information from the Japanese regulatory agency, myself and several international collaborators have been able to get access to what's called a bio-distribution study. It's the first time ever that scientists have been privy to seeing where these messenger RNA vaccines go after vaccination. In other words, is it a safe assumption that it stays in the shoulder muscle?

The short answer is: absolutely not! It is very disconcerting that the spike protein gets into the blood and circulates through the blood in individuals. Over several days, post vaccination, it accumulates, once it gets the blood, it accumulates in a number of tissues, such as the spleen, the bone marrow, the liver, the adrenal glands. One that’s of particular concern for me is that it accumulates at quite high concentrations in the ovaries.

[ A paper just accepted for publication] that backs this up, looked at 13 young health care workers that had received the Moderna vaccine, which is the other messenger RNA-based vaccine we have in Canada, and they confirm this. They found the spike protein in circulation—so in the blood—of 11 of those 13 health care workers that had received the vaccine.

What this means—so we’ve known for a long time: that the spike protein is a pathogenic protein. It is a toxin. It can cause damage in our body if it gets into circulation. Now we have clear-cut evidence that the vaccines that make . . . the cells in our deltoid muscles manufacture this protein—the vaccine itself plus the protein gets into blood circulation. When in circulation the spike protein can bind to the receptors that are on our platelets and the cells that line our blood vessels. When that happens it can do one of two things it can either cause platelets to clump, and that can lead to clotting. That's exactly why we've been seeing clotting disorders associated with these vaccines.

It can also lead to bleeding. And, of course, the heart's involved; it's a key part of the cardiovascular system, [and] that's why we're seeing heart problems the protein it can also cross the blood-brain barrier and cause neurological damage that's why also in the fatal cases of blood clots many times it's seen in the brain.

And also of concern is, there's also evidence of a study--this has not yet been accepted for publication yet, this one--they were trying to show that the antibodies from the vaccine get transferred through breast milk, and the idea was this may be a good thing because it confers some passive protection to babies. However, what they found inadvertently was that the vaccines, these messenger vaccines, actually get transferred through the breast milk, delivering the vaccine vector itself into infants that are breastfeeding. Also . . . we know [that if] the spike protein gets into circulation, any proteins in the blood will get concentrated in breast milk. Looking into the adverse event database in the United States we have found evidence of suckling infants experiencing bleeding disorders in the gastrointestinal tract so . . .

Pierson: Okay, let me pause you there because I've only got about 45 seconds left. I mean the bottom line is, this is scary. This will freak a lot of people out, this message.

Dr. Bridle: Yes, so this has implications for blood donation right now cleaning blood. Canadian blood services is saying people that who have been vaccinated can donate; We don't want transfer of these pathogenic spike proteins to fragile patients who are being transfused with that blood. This has implications for infants that are suckling, and this this has serious implications for people for whom Sars Coronavirus-2 is not a high-risk pathogen, and that includes all of our children.

In short, the conclusion is we made a big mistake. We didn't realize it until now. We thought the spike protein was a great target antigen; we never knew the spike protein itself was a toxin and was a pathogenic protein. So by vaccinating people we are inadvertently inoculating them with a toxin. And in some people [the spike protein] gets into circulation and when that happens in some people it can cause damage especially to the cardiovascular system.

And I don't have time [to discuss them now] but I have many other legitimate questions about the long-term safety of this vaccine. For example, with it accumulating in the ovaries, one of my questions, is will we be rendering young people infertile?