Dr. Drew about COVID vaccines causing heart disease

2 months ago
44

The problem on what you're pointing at though, is how do we, when you're giving messenger RNA and you're instructing cells and you're taking over the cell's machinery to produce a protein, how do you get it to stop? And then we now have good evidence that the people that get into problems with the vaccine, it's turned on and it doesn't seem to stop or at least the immune response to it doesn't stop and the antigen load seems to stay up.
So it is seem to be the case that some people, particularly after the first booster, can get into real trouble and that should alarm us. Plus, we now know that there's no doubt about the myocarditis in males, in young males, it occurs. There was some data out of France just a couple days ago, it was published in JAMA, it looked pretty good that the kids that got the myocarditis didn't seem to have long-term consequences.
Though I will tell you they are getting atrial arrhythmias and eating ablations, which are invasive cardiac procedures. The age of 25, can you imagine that you want to go play football? It's like they are having to go. What I'm seeing is we used to see a football player who's 23 or whatever, die every five years, somebody that heart attack and die. Maybe every decade, every week, some 25, 30 year old football player is dropping dead and we see myocarditis and all this exploding.
It seems like, well, not our card is for sure. And not our current is was a, is a dreaded complication of viruses. Now the France study does suggest that the long-term consequence of myocarditis from COVID virus is worse than from COVID vaccine. But that's in elderly patients because young patients don't seem to get the myocarditis from the virus itself.
So my question again, why aren't we using whole viral options? If the spike protein is the issue and if you're so hell bent on mandating or requiring vaccines, why aren't you considering other than two brands? Number one. And I understand you believe those to be very effective brands, but there are other effective brands out there. Not under. That's my point."

Loading comments...