I'm seeming some weird Covid19 vaccines reaction videos in my feed. I dk how real they are yet, but they all seem to have the same reaction of involuntarily muscle convulsions... if any one sees an explanation from a trusted Dr. Whistleblower lmk.
4wks more serious adverse event reports - including 2.5x deaths - have been filed for the #Covid vaccines than all other vaccines combined since last June. Not flu vaccines. ALL ~100 other vaccines.
(Left, Covid. Right, all others)
The #CDC had more accurate and up-to-date data that it could have used to calculate the rate of severe allergic reactions to #Moderna’s #COVID #vaccine — why didn’t it? #TheDefender
https://t.co/CmdGzyTuZC
https://t.co/f9GstalG6G
https://t.co/tEeSVZZGYJ
https://t.co/5K9DbrAJBT
Please view the video on our website - then share widely. Everyone needs the truth in order to make informed decisions.
Video link:
https://t.co/aMef0eZTrI
https://t.co/HJXrvTCKry
1 Feb, 2021 19:09
https://t.co/bvWPUyRVhu
https://t.co/OXJOvIDV3u
North Carolina \u2022 Kristi Simmonds, a registered nurse is suffering from a neurological & overall physical reaction to the poisonous Moderna Covid19 experimental mRNA injection that she received January 19, 2021. In this video she posted yesterday January 30, 2021, pic.twitter.com/UY0yeCFPDJ
— Sin\xe9ad Linda Murphy \U0001f1ee\U0001f1ea (@sineadirish_) February 1, 2021
https://t.co/VtSxzUFFKp
https://t.co/gWIB4uW2Kj
https://t.co/xhk7MTpYI5
Tuesday, January 19, 2021 8:08
https://t.co/hSlLn2IULD
Miami obstetrician Gregory Michael, 58, died after a catastrophic reaction to the #Pfizer Covid-19 va((ine
https://t.co/sOn2jJYSfH
More from TXgrlWatching💻⚔🛡
Reminder America has been in State of Emergency since 1933...
Senate Report Written in 1973, says “Since March 9, 1933, the United States has been in a state of declared national emergency…Under the powers delegated by these statutes, the president may: seize property;…
seize commodities; assign military forces abroad; institute martial law; seize and control all transportation and communication;…restrict travel; and, in a plethora of particular ways, control the lives of all American citizens.”
The president can act through Executive Order, Presidential Proclamation, or through his many agencies, which include most of the alphabet agencies.
Senate Report🔻
https://t.co/1WaeF2Rxf6
In the introduction to Senate Report 93-549:
"A majority of the people of the united States have lived all their lives under emergency rule.-(Exhibit 2)
Remember, this report was produced in 1973. The introduction goes on to say:
"For 40 years, freedoms and governmental procedures guaranteed by the Constitution have, in varying degrees, been abridged by laws brought into force by states of national emergency."
Senate Report Written in 1973, says “Since March 9, 1933, the United States has been in a state of declared national emergency…Under the powers delegated by these statutes, the president may: seize property;…
— Bad Legal Takes (@BadLegalTakes) June 24, 2021
seize commodities; assign military forces abroad; institute martial law; seize and control all transportation and communication;…restrict travel; and, in a plethora of particular ways, control the lives of all American citizens.”
The president can act through Executive Order, Presidential Proclamation, or through his many agencies, which include most of the alphabet agencies.
Senate Report🔻
https://t.co/1WaeF2Rxf6
In the introduction to Senate Report 93-549:
"A majority of the people of the united States have lived all their lives under emergency rule.-(Exhibit 2)
Remember, this report was produced in 1973. The introduction goes on to say:
"For 40 years, freedoms and governmental procedures guaranteed by the Constitution have, in varying degrees, been abridged by laws brought into force by states of national emergency."
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1/Politics thread time.
To me, the most important aspect of the 2018 midterms wasn't even about partisan control, but about democracy and voting rights. That's the real battle.
2/The good news: It's now an issue that everyone's talking about, and that everyone cares about.
3/More good news: Florida's proposition to give felons voting rights won. But it didn't just win - it won with substantial support from Republican voters.
That suggests there is still SOME grassroots support for democracy that transcends
4/Yet more good news: Michigan made it easier to vote. Again, by plebiscite, showing broad support for voting rights as an
5/OK, now the bad news.
We seem to have accepted electoral dysfunction in Florida as a permanent thing. The 2000 election has never really
To me, the most important aspect of the 2018 midterms wasn't even about partisan control, but about democracy and voting rights. That's the real battle.
2/The good news: It's now an issue that everyone's talking about, and that everyone cares about.
3/More good news: Florida's proposition to give felons voting rights won. But it didn't just win - it won with substantial support from Republican voters.
That suggests there is still SOME grassroots support for democracy that transcends
4/Yet more good news: Michigan made it easier to vote. Again, by plebiscite, showing broad support for voting rights as an
5/OK, now the bad news.
We seem to have accepted electoral dysfunction in Florida as a permanent thing. The 2000 election has never really
Bad ballot design led to a lot of undervotes for Bill Nelson in Broward Co., possibly even enough to cost him his Senate seat. They do appear to be real undervotes, though, instead of tabulation errors. He doesn't really seem to have a path to victory. https://t.co/utUhY2KTaR
— Nate Silver (@NateSilver538) November 16, 2018