The Case of the Mysterious Mystery
What does the media talk about, when they refuse to talk about it?
I got a little behind the other day. It’s because I got sidetracked. I wanted to start a post by introducing the topic of “medical emergency” by highlighting the media’s style of coverage of possible vaccine injury. I came across an article from a few months back that struck me as typical. It describes a case of heart arrhythmia in a young woman. The article mentions the rarity of the condition several times, but never in the context of perhaps finding out why such a rare thing has happened. The question is never asked of whether or not there has been a rise in such a rare condition. They don’t mention covid in the article — unthinkable in a health-related article any time before the Ukraine switcheroo. But of course they don’t mention the shots, either. That is not surprising.
It’s important that these dots are connected and the vaccines start to take the blame for the carnage they are causing. The institutional world is changing from it.
We saw in the last “medical emergency” stack, Pt. 15, that a recent court case was decided by the revelation that the driver’s medical episode — fainting dead away behind the wheel — was a symptom of covid. 3 - 10% of covid cases, it was alleged by a doctor in court, according to the article, result in people suddenly passing out. And that’s all it took. Case closed. Imagine if they’d blamed the vaccine. I wonder how that case would’ve turned out. I also wonder what research the good doctor was referring to.
And while we’re imagining things, imagine the stadium-wave-like convulsions the world would have gone through if 3 - 10% of covid cases resulted in fainting.
Of course, from Tiffany Dover, in December, 2020:
1) WATCH: Nurse (Tiffany Dover) passes out on live TV after taking COVID-19 vaccine
Source: youtube.com
to the guy that passed out behind the wheel of his truck on his way home from the shot and almost killed those two guys, from June of 2021 — remember that? —
2) Video Shows Pickup Crash Into Boat; Passed-Out Driver Said He'd Gotten COVID Shot
Source: nbcboston.com

— we DO know the shots drop people like stones. And from the moment the shots rolled out, I think we’ve all seen the effects since then, whether we recognized it or not. We’ve seen road signs smashed. Single-car crashes. Maybe a set of tire marks that went off the highway and on up the embankment and just, went…
It’s farcical to blame all this on covid. On the court case in question, the man didn’t even know he had covid. Why do the shots make people pass out? I don’t know. But the virus that hasn’t even caused a man a sniffle — how does that make someone pass out? Covid only begins to approach the harm of the shots when the covid case is severe. At least, that’s what I’m picking up.
Or maybe not. We know covid’s tricky and strange in a lot of ways. I personally know an unvaccinated individual that experienced the strange twitching we’ve all seen in the vaccine-injured. And it certainly was after a prolonged illness. Is it shedding? Is it spike? If we can ignore cases like Tiffany Dover, and the plethora of videos we’ve seen of people flopping over inside of vaccine centers and so on, then I fear that as time goes on, and with shot rates as high as they were worldwide, and with so many of the shotted also having had covid, it will become more difficult to sort the signal from the noise. If we can ignore all we’ve ignored so far, then it makes one wonder if there’s anything we don’t have the capacity to ignore.
And one thing that helps people ignore something is to devote a magazine article to the purpose. Call me a cynical conspiracy theorist. A recent article in Today described the case of a young woman who suddenly fell ill, and was diagnosed with heart arryhthmia.
Many athletes and others have retired or dialed back their schedules or just died from heart arrhythmia since the shot program started, so it’s difficult for me to ignore the shot’s potential role when I hear about another case of arrhythmia.
Heart arrhythmia is what Sergio Aguero, FC Barcelona, retired from, and also what caused Caroline Graham Hansen, FC Barcelona, to step away from the sport long enough to have heart surgery for it — the same heart surgery our “new Mom” had: ablation. See, I know all about heart surgery now, too. Since the shots rolled out. A mere ablation later and Caroline Graham Hansen’s back on the field.
But not everybody feels that way. No indeed. Sometimes they blame… anything but the vaccine. From today.com:
3) New mom, 32, shares the ‘static feeling’ that led to cardiac arrest
Source: today.com
A week after giving birth, the new Mom:
‘Antiganee Cain-Francis, 32, and her husband were adjusting well to their new life.
Cain-Francis was recovering from her C-section and working on breastfeeding. "Everything was great that week — as great as it could be with a newborn […]”’
Then while watching TV:
‘[…] she noticed a "static feeling" and wasn't able to see or hear.’
She doesn’t remember what happened after that. She had an “episode.” Then she “stabilized.”
‘But the next day, at around 2:30 a.m., she had another episode and went into cardiac arrest.’
So I guess it was: episode, episode, cardiac arrest.
‘The event set off about three weeks of hospital stays and medical detective work to find — and finally treat — the exceedingly rare cause of [her] life-threatening symptoms.’
So we find out pretty early in the article that this ailment is “exceedingly” rare.
After 3 days of treatment:
‘"She seemed to be doing well," Mitra [her heart specialist] says, "but within about 24 hours, she started to have a few of these extra beats." During an EKG procedure to try to map out the abnormal beats, [she] "again went into rapid, sustained arrhythmia," he says. She went into cardiac arrest again and was resuscitated for the second time.’
Again the author emphasizes the mystery, yet somehow avoids making the mystery a focal point of investigation:
‘Cain-Francis had no warning signs before her first episode, no family history of heart disease or sudden death and no genetic markers to point doctors in a particular direction.’
They finally figured out it was:
‘a type of arrhythmia called triggered ventricular fibrillation. In people with this condition, "there's one particular site in the heart muscle," he explains, "and when it fires, it basically puts the heart into a tailspin."'
Perfect. Problem solved.
‘In [her] case, the condition is idiopathic, meaning doctors don't know why it developed.’
Oh.
‘That's especially rare in patients as young as Cain-Francis, [the heart specialist] says.
While experts don't know exactly what causes triggered ventricular fibrillation happens [sic], the condition is thought to originate in the heart's Purkinje fibers, which are responsible for sending specialized electrical signals that control the heart's pumping muscles.’ [emphasis added]
‘[The heart specialist] says Cain-Francis is the youngest of just four or five patients with this issue that he's seen in his 30-year career.’
Again, the rarity of this condition ought to pull a little more weight in the article. I understand they perhaps want to focus on the people side of things down at Today. But, not even a mention of the rarity of the condition in either the title of the piece or the subheader? They do bring it up in the article several times, but it’s not made the focal point like I would expect it to be. The whole thing screams “Mystery!” while the writer tells us the problem is solved. It’s almost like they don’t want to know what’s on the other side of that mystery.
The author didn’t draw the connection to other incidences of this “exceedingly rare” condition that have been in the news. It’s rather engaging, to me, the fact that Sergio Aguero also retired from this exceedingly rare condition. Even if there’s no connection, it’s still engaging. Don’t writers generally want to engage? FC Barcelona donated time on their training grounds to shot programs. They were exceedingly shot-supportive. They bragged early on that their entire organization — caterers and everyone — was vaccinated at a near-100% rate. It would only be exceedingly easy to draw the connection, and then at least ask the question.
That’s the tide. That’s the natural flow of news-telling. And there’s clearly something holding back that tide.
Imagine trying to hold back the tide.
Cheers
lolz, no one can accuse you of being blind in any way.
good on you 🤗