Source: i24 News article
There's always so much to say I decided to write a Substack on it. And we want to hit the ground running, so I present to you the story of Matan Bello, a 35 year-old from Israel, a contestant in one of those "Ninja" shows -- made the finals two seasons running -- who had a heart attack a few days ago while on vacation here in the United States.
Certainly, if you've been paying attention, then you'll know there are far more compelling stories about vaccine injury I could have chosen from, if I wanted to write about vaccine injury. But this one struck me and I wasn't sure why. I thought about it and figured it out and then wrote this article.
So, the first story's about Matan. There's a news anchor today -- yet another one -- laying another 20-something year old colleague to rest; another unidentified youth soccer player in Italy bit the dust; another Belgian cyclist's out with heart palpitations, and a young French soccer player near Nice, France, pronounced "Neese," died, and the single article I could find about it -- in French -- doesn't mention her age, but it does show a beautiful young woman leaping in the air for joy surrounded by teammates who can't wait to hug her. It could be an old photo, but it isn't. You know that it isn't, too, without having to see it. Because you know the youngsters are dying all across the planet right now, aren't they?
Well, they'll cook up a “syndrome” to explain it off soon enough. The high school football player I mentioned -- oh, sorry, I didn't mention him yet -- Greyson Lyons, who looks like an absolute chad in his memorial photos, RIP, who never got up after making a tackle in a high school football game, he was diagnosed post-mortem with "Long QT Syndrome."
So, this last bit really brings me around to the topic at hand, because, as I've said, I'm not here today to tell you about Matthew Rodrigopulle, Tim Wellens, the 14 year-old Italian soccer player, or about Laura Domecq, or about Greyson Lyons, but about a perhaps slightly less emotionally-impactful story, and one equally, of course --
OF COURSE
-- distanced from the vaccine by both the corrupt medical establishment and the corrupt media, that of Matan Bello, a 35 year old who starred on a show called "Ninja Israel" as a contestant. I don't know what they do on that show but it probably isn't very easy, he's made the finals twice, so I'd say he's a fitness buff. A fit 35 year old shouldn't be having a heart attack. I don't think it's controversial to say that. People might be inclined to start talking about heart attacks at around 45 -- but not 35. So it's a suspicious heart attack. Statistically, it's suspicious. And overtly, Israel is still in the vaccine trials, right? Those trials take a few years to complete, don’t they?
"Trial." Except it's not a trial, because trials are monitored.
An increase in heart attacks is one of the first things that happened in Israel a year and a half ago, after the shots rolled out. During Senator Ron Johnson's Nov. 2, 2021 covid summit Dr. Retsef Levi, an Israeli scholar at MIT, presented his group's findings of a 25% increase in ambulance calls for cardiac arrest in Israel that closely matched the vaccine rollout. He also described the difficulties he and his colleagues faced in publishing their work.
Does that type of study seem so controversial? Isn’t it easy to compare ambulance records before and after vaccination? That is straightforward work. Very straightforward.
So now we return to the topic of our discussion -- the unfortunate vacation of Matan Bello. It is always unfortunate, when bad things happen to a person, right? It is — unless perhaps those bad things lead to better things. So, as things stand, Matan's vacation is very unfortunate indeed. He had a heart attack. That's all we know.
And if it was caused by the vaccine and we have done nothing in the midst of the vaccination campaigns to bring them to a halt, then it is very unfortunate indeed.
And if we call for alarm when there is no cause, then we will see that a few percent of people decide against participating in the medical experiment they would otherwise have accepted. Not such a terrible outcome.
But if we don't know either way, then the proper response to Matan's suspicious heart attack is to blame the vaccine first, and then prove conclusively it's not involved.
That's the proper response.
You know it is.
And when you instead conform with the media's presentation, and insist on proof of the vaccine's involvement first, then that is very unfortunate. That falls in the "unfortunate" category. Because that is turning away from the truth. And you know it. You're left knowing what you are and haggling over the price if you do that. We must face the truth -- we have no choice but to face the truth -- we never do.
Matan Bello's heart attack was caused by the vaccine. Prove me wrong and then I'll shut up about it.
THE END