9 Comments

BTW... Great title of article. Very well done! Sad but true. Thank You

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Great information you have researched! Thank You!

Mos Def sharing!!! 💥♥️💥

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Thanks for reporting.

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Great idea to sort folks by category. The age along w/the cause is the most important in my opine. Growing up most people didn't die before the age of 65, if they did it was a car accident or some other freak of nature type incident. Cancer and CAD was in the realm for all ages, but not like since Covid.

The younger people, under 50 dying at home surrounded by family is something to observe, that wasn't a thing of the past, it was reserved mostly for the elderly 70 and above. People were expected to retire at 65 to live out their golden years which could be up to the average of 20+ more years.

I recently learned of something now being called Compassionate Care, it is for people that don't qualify for Hospice Care or fit in the category of being put in a health rehab type place. Essentially it is for people that have a complicated health life and no where to go to get care so you stay home til something clear cut happens. I wonder if all these younger people dying at home surrounded by family are Compassionate Care people?

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On your list: Ronnie Hillman, dead at 31.

Pretty familiar with Ronnie as we attended the same high school, and I followed his career closely.

Ronnie was out of the league by 2017—well before the C@vid “pandemic” and years before the shots were mandated.

Can you provide more detail on this particular case? Why is Hillman listed in an article ostensibly on C@vid shot-implicated deaths?

Thanks.

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Yes. I have to update the whole section of former players with references. The whole section was an afterthought.

The whole article needs to be re-done. It's thin and scrappy right now. It needs to be big and boisterous. The 10 -- now 11 -- current players was the main focus. 11 out of less than 1,700 total players, again, is more than one-half of one percent of the league.

Now, the former players really is another story. Young former NFL players seem at first glance to be at extraordinary risk for early death -- only a little of which could be blamed on the violence of the game. So, yeah -- that whole section needs to be redone.

Regarding the shots per se -- I don't spend a lot of time chasing down whether or not someone's shotted. It's usually a good assumption that they are. And former NFL players seem to me a group that would be heavily leaned on to get shotted, as part of the propaganda drive if nothing else.

So, long and short -- he's on the list because he died.

And, thanks for the input, because it reminds me the article needs a lot of work.

Cheers

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My guess is even a couple more Damar Hamlin events this season won’t wake up the sheeple. The “experts” always find some hidden “underlying condition” like they did with LeBron’s son.

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Mike Fanning was 69 but no explanation was given for his passing. He was retired and seemed to enjoy fishing and ranching. Played on the 74 national championship team for ND and in the NFL. https://www.legacy.com/us/obituaries/tulsaworld/name/michael-fanning-obituary?id=37010675

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Here is an interesting one, Louis Nix III, ND alum and NFL player found dead with car in pond outside his apartment on 2/27/2021. Had been shot in the chest in the recent past, may have been given “preference” for early access to the jabs.

https://www.jacksonville.com/story/news/local/2021/03/05/louis-nix-funeral-service-planned-jacksonville-notre-dame-football/6918637002/

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