Anonymous ID: e1390d March 12, 2021, 5:44 p.m. No.13194714   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4731 >>4733

>>13194694

Bow Tie No More

 

Who is Tucker Carlson?

 

Tucker Carlson grew up in La Jolla, California, with his father and younger brother, where he attended boarding and prep schools. Despite being incredibly intelligent, he never really excelled academically because he preferred to debate rather than study. The man really does enjoy debating people.

 

After college graduation, Carlson unsuccessfully applied to the CIA. When that didn’t work out, he set his sights on becoming a journalist. That may seem like a rather large leap, from aspiring to the CIA to writing, but his father was also a journalist, as well as a media executive. It was a family business of sorts.

 

Carlson was actually a highly-regarded journalist for many years, writing articles and penning essays for a wide range of publications. He wrote for Esquire, The New York Times Magazine, Policy Review, the Weekly Standard, and the Arkansas Democrat Gazette, to name just a few.

 

As many political writers do, Carlson often appeared on television shows and news segments to discuss (or more likely, defend) his latest work. With time, Carlson’s occasional appearances became more and more frequent. Perhaps the trademark Tucker Carlson bow tie caught people’s eyes, or maybe it was his unrelenting “interview” style, coupled with his slight-but-distinctly-unidentifiable accent.

 

https://askandyaboutclothes.com/tucker-carlson-bow-tie/

Anonymous ID: e1390d March 12, 2021, 5:59 p.m. No.13194814   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4832 >>4834 >>4915 >>5222 >>5297 >>5304

>>13194778

Did you see this article?

 

Texas woman leaked spinal fluid after COVID-19 nasal swab test

 

SAN ANTONIO, Texas, March 9, 2021 (LifeSiteNews) — A woman in Texas leaked spinal fluid after a COVID-19 nasal swab test punctured her brain tissue three weeks ago.

 

Chari Timm went to a San Antonio hospital due to chest pain and was recommended for a heart diagnostic exam late last month, KFOX14 reported. She was told she needed a COVID-19 test before receiving any further testing related to her actual source of pain, however.

 

When a nurse administered the nasal swab test, Timm said that she felt intense pain almost immediately. “It hurt, it was an immediate instant migraine,” she said. “I’ve never had a migraine ever in my life.”

 

“It started from the back of my head and just extend it to the front of my head and my entire brain was an extreme pain,” Timm continued. “Instantly fluid just was leaking out of my nose.”

 

The fluid turned out to be spinal liquid, which leaked out due to a tear in her dura mater, a membrane that protects the central nervous system. A neurologist later diagnosed Timm with pneumocephalus, a rare cranial condition involving air inside the cranial cavity that is typically associated with skull damage.

 

Timm will need surgery to repair the rupture, she said. “I have to remain at a 30-45 degree angle at all times,” she said. “I have to be careful with the air I breathe as bacteria may get in through the injury/[t]ear and [can] cause meningitis.”

 

Timm’s isn’t the first case of brain leak following a COVID-19 test. Last fall, the journal JAMA Otolaryngology — Head and Neck Surgery revealed that an unnamed woman suffered similar cerebrospinal liquid loss after a testing swab punctured a part of her brain that contained the fluid.

 

A new study published in the journal warns that people with a history of significant sinus problems likely should avoid nasal swab tests altogether. Health care professionals conducting the tests should ask whether patients have had sinus or skull surgery, the report cautions.

 

“Sinus and skull-base surgery frequently removes bony partitions between the nasal cavity and skull base, resulting in the exposure of critical neurovascular structures. After surgery, patients are theoretically at higher risk of cerebrospinal fluid leak and neurovascular damage during [nasopharyngeal swab] insertion,” the study reads.

 

“If so, other modes of testing such as at the back of the throat should be performed,” said Dr. Phillip Chen, one of the study’s authors and a professor of otolaryngology (head and neck surgery) at the University of Texas at San Antonio.

 

https://www.lifesitenews.com/news/texas-woman-leaked-spinal-fluid-after-covid-19-nasal-swab-test