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monga

VIP Member
Same here. My mum has had many, ongoing problems after her one and only including suddenly being anaemic but also my dad who sailed through his 5 or 6 I've lost count is also now anaemic for the first time in his life and they both need b12 injections as do many of their friends.
These things that we are seeing in our loved ones and acquaintances plus thyroid, recurring and sudden advanced cancers, strokes and heart problems, neurological problems and even eye issues are too widespread to be a coincidence imo.
I see the actor Sam Neil has blood cancer, probably coincidence 🤷🏼‍♀️
 
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monga

VIP Member
And still they rolled it out ,remember March 2021 was when VITT was first discovered… What happens to those on means tested benefits if they get a payout? Will they lose out on certain benefits? Essentially cancelling the payout 🙄
 
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monga

VIP Member
It's a commentary website - that's what tattle is! Reading back, they weren't telling anyone what to do, just sharing their personal and professional concern for children whose parents choose not to vaccinatie them against those brutal childhood diseases. It's their opinion, to which they're entitled, in the same way you're absolutely entitled to yours.
In a very judgemental way 🫤
 
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monga

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This is for you @monga and everyone else who is ridiculed or talked about elsewhere , by the ct labeling/tiktok obsessed ,for daring to question. .


"The world needs more conspiracy theorists/critical and free thinkers, people who will listen and read what is being offered to them and who’ll do research before forming an opinion. Modern-day life is confusing, and questioning aspects of it should not make someone feel like a rebel.
My basic human instincts frequently cause me to question things.
I will continue to navigate life with an open mind, considering all possibilities, and if people want to call me a conspiracy theorist along the way, so be it. I will smile and thank them for the compliment."
Maybe it’s to do with the fact we as a people are very suspicious of government ,we’ve grown up with first hand experience of what they’re truly capable of, it’s very clear they knew AZ was causing problems yet chose to ignore and roll on regardless , so why would it matter when wealth will always go before health in their logbook, failing to question them is exactly what they want people to do it gives credence to any rule or policy they choose to push on people.
 
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Oohthedrama

Iconic Member
Moderator
Icing on the cake
Not a euphemism for talc on you fanny right 😂
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Hard read; we were mugs


As early as November 2020, the potential impact of the Covid pandemic on cancer treatment was already beginning to cause grave alarm. More than 300,000 planned screenings, it was then reported, had not taken place because testing services had either been reduced or suspended altogether in the months since the crisis had struck in March of that year.
The National Screening Service, testing for breast, bowel and cervical cancers, had planned to screen more than 433,000 people in 2020. Instead, the pandemic lockdowns had left them up to 70% behind their targets. Consultant oncologists were so concerned about the screening backlog that they launched the Care Can’t Wait campaign in late 2020.
A reduction in services due to the pandemic meant that, even when patients turned up with worrying symptoms, it simply wasn’t possible to provide all the tests they needed as quickly as they needed them.
‘The last thing patients need to hear is that we’d like you to get this scan,’ Dr John Crown said at the time, ‘but we can’t do it for a month.’
A combination of missed or delayed screenings, along with a significant decline in the number of people presenting with cancer worries for fear of going anywhere near a hospital during the worst of the pandemic, the consultants warned, was likely to cause serious problems in cancer care in the years ahead.
It now looks very much as if those fears have come to pass.
In the first year of the pandemic alone, around 2,600 cancers went undetected, either because people didn’t attend screenings or didn’t go to their doctors to have worrying symptoms checked out. As a result, the Oireachtas Health Committee heard this week, patients are turning up in hospitals with far more advanced cancers than would otherwise be expected – because they simply didn’t get seen in time.
This figure, remember, relates to just the first year of the pandemic – a period of nine months – since the effects of the lockdown would not have been felt until late March of 2020.
We won’t know until later this year, it seems, just how the figures shaped up for 2021 and 2022, but if the missed diagnosis rate remained at around one in ten, the 2020 figure provided to the committee, the numbers are likely to be far worse.
To add to the misery, said Irish Cancer Society chief executive Averil Power, those now presenting with advanced symptoms arrive into the hospital system at the worst possible time. Emergency departments have reported record numbers on trolleys since the beginning of the year and, said Ms Power, ‘it’s terrifying to think you have to go through an overcrowded ED to get access to care’.
It’s pretty terrifying, anyway, to think that people whose cancers should have been picked up for life-saving early treatment over the past three years have been walking around unaware that they were in mortal danger.
Was it really wise, in hindsight, to sacrifice the care and screening of one potentially fatal disease in our panicked haste to contain another? It was not, after all, as if the threat of the other Big C somehow receded during Covid. Should more effort have been made to maintain cancer services as a priority, back when we were being warned that reduced services were simply a warehousing of misery to come?
Early diagnosis of many common cancers, after all, is the best way to save lives – and, in the process, health service resources. If colorectal cancer is caught in time, for example, there’s a 95% chance that the patient will survive for at least five years. But if the same disease is diagnosed later, that five-year survival rate falls to just one in ten.
The upshot of the pandemic’s impact, Oireachtas members were told, is that instead of being picked up in routine screening or identified by an alert GP, some 14% of cancers are now being diagnosed in emergency departments. Imagine the awful anxiety, the hours of waiting, the vanishing hope that the bleeding or the lump or the sudden pain is something trivial… The tragic reality behind that statistic doesn’t need spelling out.
Once your cancer is bad enough that you need emergency treatment, it’s bad. Imagine getting that most dreaded news after a night on a chair in a chaotic ED.
‘A delayed cancer diagnosis is not a statistic,’ as Averil Power told politicians this week. ‘It is a whole world collapsing.’
 
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Poddular

VIP Member
Sickening.
And why we must never forget how some people behaved and how some people were treated.
 
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xyzcba

VIP Member
Just catching up on this thread. I was just reading about that psychologist who died from the covid vaccine and saw that he died while his wife was on maternity leave and she was left to use food banks etc 😭 it was already tragic enough but that just makes it so much harder to read I can’t imagine how she coped through all that. That poor lady should have been enjoying the happiest times of her life and instead she’s mourning for her husband while trying to be a mum and struggling to feed her family all while fighting for justice💔
And while being mocked and called a loon for dare speaking their truth 💔

Blood is not categorised this way nor is it screened for the covid vaccine. Both vaccinated and unvaccinated could receive your blood.
That's great. But in my heart of hearts I would truly only want blood from someone who hasn't had the CV jab. I know it doesn't work like that and it isn't possible, but I can't help how I feel.
 
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xyzcba

VIP Member
Whatever names they call us, there is one term they can never use: guinea pig.

These are people who injected themselves, and their children, repeatedly with a new substance.

A rushed-out substance that the long-term effects could not possibly have been known, unless you want to argue that Pfizer has a time machine.

And why did they do this? To protect themselves from an illness which had a 99.8% recovery rate. By the time the vaccine was being foisted on us, it was evident to everyone with eyes and ears that covid wasn't killing a damn healthy person.
I know someone who had her 3 kids jabbed because they had an upcoming holiday to India already booked & paid for... 🥺😞
 
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EnjoyingTheShow

Chatty Member
Old Ester being the perfect example. I’ve already said how those ( unvaxxed ) people in her situation would’ve felt watching her vitriol while battling a life threatening illness and unsure how a new unproven vaccine would’ve impacted them.
Agree 100% Monga. I think we’re going to find justice will be served in these cases 😉
Heartbreaking for all those who faced serious illness when these jibs were pushed. I often think too about poor individuals suffering from HIV, what have you, who had to be extra precautious about what they put in their body. Some of them had to disclose their status to employers when trying to get a medical exemption, Just can’t imagine.
 
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monga

VIP Member
It's like a collective projection. I think it causes doubts in some jabbed people and they just don't want to think about that possibility.
I must be the exception lol, I definitely want to know if it’s a contributing factor ,not that it can be undone just so current and future generations are aware .
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Surely we’re still gathering information on vaccine side effects, it amazes me how some people think it’s all cut and dried and there’s “nothing else to see here “ 🙄
 
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philopastry75

Well-known member
Hi everyone! I’ve applied for vaccine damage payment as I’ve had 3 doses of Pfizer and since I’ve had my covid vaccines I’ve had muscle spasms in both my top arms and my legs go to sleep frequently, and I had none of this before the covid vaccine. I didn’t want the covid vaccine in the first place but my dad told me to get me as otherwise we wouldn’t have been able to go on holiday as dad was worried they might not have let me go on the plane if I didn’t have it as we were going to Greece in 2022. I regret having it but had it to keep my family happy. My children will not be having it. I have had vaccines when I was a baby and high school and never had any problems like this.
Same here, muscle twitches especially at night and when trying to sleep. Seeing a doctor next week and I’m going to ask if my issues could be related to Pfizer.
Do you need any doctors notes to apply for the vaccine damage payment?
 
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monga

VIP Member
I thought they could never produce a successful coronavirus vaccine before, what changed!
 
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monga

VIP Member
They did which has saved many lives. 👍🏻


IMG_3837.jpeg
 
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