The Russian Roulette Shot
November 3, 2021
UNSURPRISINGLY, evidence has emerged that casualties from the Covid injections overwhelmingly came from a small percentage of batches of the injections. This would explain, if true, why some people have gotten ill or died and others seem fine for now.
The Exposé reports that all of the deaths reported came from just five percent of the batches:
An investigation of data found in the USA’s Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS) has revealed that extremely high numbers of adverse reactions and deaths have been reported against specific lot numbers of the Covid-19 vaccines several times, meaning deadly batches of the experimental injections have now been identified.
But what’s perhaps more concerning is that the “deadly” lots were distributed widely across the United States whilst other “benign” lots were sent to just a few locations.
The benign lots appear to have been diluted or may have even been saline solutions. That’s true if this investigation is correct. Caution with this news is advised and with ALL Covid information, as this is a giant psychological operation and there is much planted disinformation.
Speculation as to why this anomaly might be so focuses on a number of possibilities:
— Solutions were diluted to prevent the full effect of the inoculations from becoming too obvious
— Solutions were diluted purely for profit
— Solutions were diluted from carelessness in manufacturing
In any event, getting a Covid injection appears to be a game of Russian Roulette and some recipients, such as the son of this Texas father below who testified in Washington, D.C. yesterday, lost:
In related news, women in countries with heavy inoculation show declines in fertility — except in Israel. And every day, more and more people are eligible for boosters.
The game of roulette is coming to young children. The New York Times reports:
In Houston, Texas Children’s Hospital on Wednesday morning tackled the first of some 35,000 pediatric Covid-19 vaccine appointments, a rush that officials said had been booked in just five days. Nationally, Walgreens and CVS pharmacies opened appointment lines for millions of miniature doses. And amid a deluge of demand from parents desperate to get their children at least partially inoculated by Thanksgiving, Dr. Eric Ball realized he would have to skip some of his friend’s daughter’s bat mitzvah.
“Yeah,” the Orange County, Calif., pediatrician said, laughing. “Looks like I’ll be vaccinating kids in my suit this Saturday.”
With the blessing of federal authorities — and just in time for yet another stressful holiday season — health care providers mobilized nationally this week for a fresh wave of inoculations, this time featuring smaller shots in smaller arms.