Anonymous ID: 0057a9 June 4, 2021, 1:50 p.m. No.13830275   🗄️.is 🔗kun

first donuts, then pot, now it's free baseball tickets if you will only accept the death jab

 

Major League Baseball offers free tickets for COVID-19 vaccinations in 'MLB Vaccinate at the Plate' initiative

 

All 30 teams will give fans incentive to get the COVID-19 vaccine by offering free game tickets

 

"Each of the 30 MLB Clubs will host at least one event in June where unvaccinated fans will be able to receive a free ticket to a game if they get a COVID-19 vaccination shot at the event. MLB Clubs will have the flexibility to construct the giveaway to their own specifications including where the event is hosted, when in June it takes place, and if the tickets are good for that day's game or a game later in the 2021 season."

 

sauce: https://www.cbssports.com/mlb/news/major-league-baseball-offers-free-tickets-for-covid-19-vaccinations-in-mlb-vaccinate-at-the-plate-initiative/

 

How appropriate that after chemically castrating their players and quite possibly giving them Lou Gehrig's disease, now they are extending the same generous offer to their fans

 

Could Covid-19 Vaccinations Be Playing a Role in MLB's Current Wave of Injuries?

 

MLB player injuries are up 33% compared with the last full season of play (2019).

 

"Is it possible that Covid vaccine side effects will continue to affect players' performance as the season wears on? This was, after all, the first time in MLB history that the league high-pressured players into taking an experimental medication unapproved by the FDA.

 

A major question for MLB players at this stage is whether the tissue-damaging spike proteins will eventually be eliminated from the body, or whether they will continue to accumulate and cause greater damage as time goes on. As the shots are experimental, it's impossible to know the answer to that question at present. Many doctors think the worst of the injections' side effects will manifest six months to two years after getting jabbed. Conceivably, booster shots (if they are ever recommended to players) could play a role in how long spike proteins remain in the body.

 

Hypothetically speaking, how would long-term, widespread player injuries due largely to the injections affect MLB going forward? It could be that minor leaguers who refused vaccination will see their stock rise in value, as they will have avoided the ill effects of artificial spike proteins in their bodies. Should many of today's established, vaccinated players find their careers cut short by spike protein damage, younger players could find unexpected opportunities for career advancement.

 

Will there be legal and financial fallout from this spring's vaccination campaign? While the vaccine manufacturers themselves are shielded from liability over side effects in most cases, MLB and/or individual MLB clubs might be held responsible for failing to meet informed consent requirements. MLB.com writer Brian McTaggart reported on May 10 that Dr. Seema Shah of Houston Methodist played a major role in 'educating' the Astros players "on the pros and cons of the vaccine" and helped to "dispel some of the misinformation that might be out there." If it should turn out, however, that the team or its medical staff withheld essential information from players about potential Covid vaccine risks, players or their survivors could have grounds for legal action."

 

sauce: https://www.crawfishboxes.com/2021/5/29/22459946/could-covid-19-vaccinations-be-playing-a-role-in-mlbs-current-wave-of

Anonymous ID: 0057a9 June 4, 2021, 2 p.m. No.13830357   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13830304

anons who haven't yet downloaded the second batch (i.e. ICAN batch) of Fauci's FOIA'd emails, you can get them here:

 

https://download1498.mediafire.com/bbxp1uelh4eg/e7wi0lqjd1d5lcx/ICAN+Fauci+Emails_2021_06_03.pdf

Anonymous ID: 0057a9 June 4, 2021, 2:28 p.m. No.13830530   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0756

>>13830506

 

About what size were they? Around ten years ago I saw a 'hovering cube' much like you are describing. It was silent, black, and quite small - probably double the size of a Rubik's cube if you know what I mean. It was pretty close to the window of my highrise apartment, which is the only reason I could see it. It was small enough that you wouldn't see it from a distance except maybe as a dot.

 

At the time I figured it was probably a science project by some graduate students at the local university. Now, I'm not so sure.