While we were told the Covid-19 “vaccines” were “safe and effective,” authorities long ago confessed that the drugs’ effectiveness was greatly overblown. But now a new Rasmussen poll finds that almost half of American adults aren’t so sure about the safe part, either — and more than a quarter believe they know someone whose death may be linked to the shots.
As Rasmussen Reports informs, its latest
national telephone and online survey finds that (49%) of American Adults believe it is likely that side effects of COVID-19 vaccines have caused a significant number of unexplained deaths, including 28% who think it’s Very Likely. Thirty-seven percent (37%) don’t say a significant number of deaths have been caused by vaccine side effects, including 17% who believe it’s Not At All Likely. Another 14% are not sure.
…Twenty-eight percent (28%) of adults say they personally know someone whose death they think may have been caused by side effects of COVID-19 vaccines, while 61% don’t and another 10% are not sure.
…Forty-eight percent (48%) of Americans believe there are legitimate reasons to be concerned about the safety of COVID-19 vaccines, while 37% think people who worry about vaccine safety are spreading conspiracy theories. Another 15% are not sure.
The survey of 1,000 American Adults was conducted on December 28-30, 2022 by Rasmussen Reports.
I wasn’t surveyed, but I’m more or less among the 28 percent. In fact, I wrote in 2021 about unprecedented experiences I had: Within a short space of time, I encountered three different men at the same recreational facility who all volunteered to me that they’d had heart attacks.
All three had taken the gene-modification agents (GMAs, aka “vaccines”) prior to their coronaries.
I haven’t seen any of them since.
In addition, a friend of mine accepted a GMA and suffered heart inflammation, a common side-effect, soon afterwards; and a female neighbor experienced a different side-effect post-shot.
They may have plenty of company, too. As Daily Caller writes, providing more Rasmussen data:
A solid majority of the population is vaccinated against COVID-19. According to the poll, 71% said they have received the vaccine, while 26% said they have not. The majority of unvaccinated Americans, 77%, expressed concerns about vaccine safety, while 38% of those who received the shot said unexplained vaccine deaths were somewhat likely.
Among adults under 40 years old, 35% believe they know someone who may have died from vaccine side effects. Individuals making less than $30,000 a year are more concerned about vaccine safety, while those making more than $200,000 per year are more likely to believe that concerns about vaccine safety are rooted in conspiracy theories.
“Interestingly, 33 percent of Democrats suspect someone they know might have died from the shot,” The Iowa Standard added, “whereas just 26 percent of Republicans and 26 percent of unaffiliated voters say the same.”
This may seem counterintuitive, as conservatives are more skeptical of the GMAs and should be more likely to attribute anomalous deaths to them. But it makes sense: Since far more Democrats than Republicans have taken the shots, and since people are more likely to associate with co-ideologists than those politically alien, it follows that Democrats would know more people who’ve suffered GMA side effects.
As for my unusual experiences, I wrote about another one last November. I met a man in a supermarket checkout aisle who was about to attend two funerals, he informed me. One was for his brother, who died of a heart attack — at age 24. The other was for a friend’s son who’d mysteriously passed away in his sleep.
The boy was in first grade.
Since the man was glassy-eyed and obviously grieving, I believed it inappropriate to inquire about the departed’s GMA status and thus don’t know if they’d taken the shots. But my encountering so many people who related odd health-oriented events is unprecedented and all too coincidental. Of course, my experiences are anecdotal, but they also align with something that isn’t.
Scott Davison, CEO of insurance company OneAmerica, reported on December 30, 2021 of a spike in mortality his industry was seeing — 40 percent above normal — that was worse than that associated with a one-in-200-year catastrophe. Not only were these mostly non-Covid deaths, but this spike mainly involved people 18 to 64 years old and began in 2021’s third quarter.
Note: That was precisely when the GMAs began being pushed on people under 65.
Then, there was this report just yesterday about how Germany’s AfD Party analyzed its nation’s mortality data and “found a massive increase in sudden and unexpected deaths” for 2022’s first quarter, as the RAIR Foundation puts it.
Also yesterday, Fox News commentator Tucker Carlson related an analysis of heart-attack data for athletes in European sports leagues. It found that prior to the GMAs’ introduction, “there were roughly 29 cardiac arrests in the European sports leagues per year,” Carlson stated. Since the GMA campaign began, however, “there have been more than 1,500 cardiac arrests in those leagues — and two-thirds of them were fatal.”
All coincidence?
Actually, it’s something else according to the World Health Organization. “Anti-vaccine activism” is in reality “anti-science aggression,” the WHO related via a statement it endorsed (video below), and is a greater threat than “gun violence, global terrorism, [or] nuclear proliferation.”
This “aggression” requires “political solutions,” too, the video presentation concludes. So perhaps people complaining about the GMAs need to be arrested — that is, if cardiac arrest doesn’t get them first.