Anonymous ID: 186f70 Feb. 27, 2023, 3:02 p.m. No.18421121   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1241 >>1308 >>1324 >>1358 >>1389 >>1420 >>1423

Cardiac Testing at Washington State Event Found 53% Myocarditis Rate

Feb 26, 2023

 

Myocarditis detected in 50% of individuals tested at an event in WA State.

 

Advanced Multifunction Cardiogram Test administered at a public event uncovered alarming rate of heart damage lurking beneath the surface.

It’s clear that most community leaders are reluctant to engage in conversation of how the failed pandemic response left so many harmed in its wake.”

— Bill Sullivan

 

WENATCHEE, WA, USA, February 26, 2023 /EINPresswire.com/ – Nearly 500 people from Washington, Oregon and Idaho gathered at the Wenatchee Convention Center in Washington State on Saturday, January 28 to hear and share stories of how the unprecedented response to the COVID-19 pandemic impacted their lives. Stories included injuries and deaths from COVID shots and hospital protocols; careers upended and families torn apart by mandates; and numerous harms from closures of schools, businesses and churches.

 

In addition to giving people a forum to express their loss, the event pointed people toward helpful medical, spiritual, and legal resources.

 

Heart screening was available and conducted using multifunction cardiogram technology, or MCG, provided by HeartCARE Corp of Chattanooga, Tennessee. Approved by the US Food and Drug Administration and in use since 1995, the MCG represents the most advanced non-invasive cardiac diagnostic method available. Eule Glenn, CEO and co-founder of HeartCARE Corp. explained, "we had the opportunity to perform Multifunction Cardiogram™ screens on a variety of participants and patients. I was surprised to find thatover half of those tested (16 of 30 people) had positive markers for myocarditis. Two of these were active duty US Military pilots."

 

The MCG screening results observed in Wenatchee are consistent with national trends that show rates of myocarditis and death by heart attack have recently skyrocketed compared to pre-pandemic years.

 

NBA legend John Stockton, co-host of Voices for Medical Freedom podcast, headlined the event and was joined by about two dozen speakers, including other national figures in the medical freedom movement and local citizens who signed up to speak. Included were physicians, nurses, a pharmacist, an attorney, faith leaders, parents, spouses, and grandchildren. Each addressed the event to share their stories and perspectives.

 

Dr. Richard Amerling, Chief Academic Officer of The Wellness Company, a newly formed private healthcare provider, and Past-President of the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons, spoke remotely of the failures of the centralized corporate health system model he witnessed during the pandemic years.

 

Todd Callender, Attorney at Law, of Disabled Rights Advocates (https://dradvocates.com) also speaking remotely, summarized his work helping defeat the military COVID vaccine mandates and a program he developed to help private individuals redress their pandemic response harms.

 

"People came to this event looking for answers, to build community, and to be given a voice because those in government and corporate medicine have refused to listen," said Bill Sullivan, an appointed member of the Chelan-Douglas Board of Health and co-organizer of the Pandemic Response Harms Event, acting in a private capacity. "The honest medical professionals are being silenced by their licensing boards, by media, by the public health apparatus, and by their corporate bosses. If they dare explore any connection between all these strange ailments and the experimental COVID shots, they risk losing their license and their job for purveying what state bureaucrats determine is ‘misinformation’.”

 

Sullivan’s concern was echoed by several speakers. Repeating a sentiment heard throughout the day, Brian McInnes, a local physician and endurance athlete who was diagnosed with a heart conduction abnormality following COVID vaccination told the crowd, “There are many people like me, as you are hearing, that have experienced adverse health effects after COVID vaccination. And like me, most all of them have had any association of their health problem with the vaccine dismissed.”

 

McInnes went on to say, “My first vaccine dose came from Pfizer Lot Number EK-9231. This lot is ranked number one for all Pfizer batches for adverse reactions, given right here in Wenatchee.” Dr. McInnes continued, “My second vaccine dose came from Pfizer Lot EN-5318. This lot is ranked number four of all lots for adverse reactions. These two vaccine batches alone are associated with a reported 252 deaths and many other illnesses and disabilities. And that’s just the VAERS data which is . . . quite underreported”.

 

Dr. Amerling spoke at length about how the centralization of modern medicine has interfered with doctors’ ability to act independently in the best interest of their patients. “The hospital protocols were killing patients and are killing patients,” he said of the ubiquitous use of the experimental drug Remdesivir to treat hospitalized COVID patients, “but doctors in these [hospital] systems are forced to give it."

 

John Stockton, in providing the Keynote presentation, summarized the feelings of many of the people in attendance who have lost confidence in once-trusted institutions.

 

“When people are wrong all the time, you learn not to listen to them anymore. They say the shots are vaccines; they are not. They say they are safe and effective; they are not. They said Ivermectin and Hydroxychloroquine were dangerous and ineffective. Also wrong. If your source is wrong all the time – like the CDC, the FDA, the WHO,” Stockton said, “you can’t trust anything they say. . . sometimes technical fouls in a game are so egregious that they need to be thrown out of the game.”

 

Sullivan hopes this event will inspire similar community-level medical freedom movements organized by regular citizens. “It’s clear that most community leaders are reluctant to engage in conversation of how the failed pandemic response left so many harmed in its wake. Well, if they won’t talk about it, then we will step up and lead the discussion. We’re done with being the silent majority. It’s time to boldly stand up for the truth so that we can finally break the spell of fear and madness gripping our communities for the past three years.”

 

The Wenatchee COVID-19 Pandemic-Response Harms Conference was organized by the grassroots Truth and Accountability Project Washington and sponsored by InformedChoiceWA.org (ICWA).

 

Video of the event is available at https://rumble.com/v297djc-pandemic-harms-listening-session-wenatchee-wa-28jan23.html

https://rumble.com/embed/v26lg6q/?pub=4

TAPWA Conference Organizer

Truth and Accountability Project Washington (TAPWA)

Anonymous ID: 186f70 Feb. 27, 2023, 4:02 p.m. No.18421324   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1340 >>1351 >>1355 >>1358 >>1389 >>1420 >>1423

>>18421121

>Wenatchee conference on jab damage

meanwhile, in the state capitol:

 

HB 1333 creates a Domestic Violent Extremism Commission to develop ways to combat ‘disinformation and misinformation’

TJ Martinell

The Center Square Washington

 

As the Washington State Attorney General’s Office continues work on a database for police use of force incidents, a House bill would set up a 13-member commission within that same office to develop a data collection process on incidents of “domestic violent extremism,” or DVE.

 

Although the term DVE is not defined in the bill, under State Attorney General Bob Ferguson’s description it would include noncriminal activities or speech.

 

HB 1333 sponsored by Rep. Bill Ramos, D-Issaquah, creates a Domestic Violent Extremism Commission to develop ways to combat “disinformation and misinformation,” though the two words are not defined in the bill. Also not defined is the term DVE.

 

The legislation is derived from a recommendation by theAttorney General’s Office own 2022 “Domestic Terrorism” study, which cautioned that “effective State intervention to address these threats has the potential to implicate speech or association that may be protected by the First Amendment, or the individual right to bear arms protected by the Second Amendment.”

 

Among the report’s recommendations was the creation of a commission to explore not just data collection, but potentially adding a definition of DVE to state statute. State law already addresses hate crimes, and the FBI defines “domestic terrorism” within the context of actual crimes or intent to commit a crime.

 

However, the attorney general’s 2022 report argues that “rather than exclusively address ‘domestic terrorism’ per se, these recommendations seek to best support Washington State to respond to this panoply of challenges, which together combine to create the threat of — and indeed, are often precursors to — acts of domestic terrorism.”

 

The commission would also examine ways to treat DVE as a public health issue, though the state Department of Health is not included on the commission or mentioned in the bill. The commission would only have a member with “an expertise in public health” and would be appointed by the attorney general.

 

The bill is intended to take preemptive measures to stop actual domestic terrorist acts through community intervention. Testifying in support of HB 1333 at its Jan. 24 public hearing in the House State Government & Tribal Relations Committee, Snohomish County Councilmember Megan Dunn told legislators that “as local electeds, we have limited options in reporting, tracking, or collecting data, and we often have limited resources or solutions for combating serious misinformation related to domestic violence extremism. We know incidents are not reported or under reported, and that data is the first step to determining the scope of the issue before we move forward with solutions.”

 

However, critics argue that it could easily lead to situations like that in 2021, the National School Boards Association, or NSBA, sent a memo to the Biden Administration asking that it treat parent protesting during public comment at local school board meetings as “a form of domestic terrorism” under the PATRIOT Act.

 

Several state attorneys general filed lawsuits against both NSBA and the Biden Administration over the incident in an effort to obtain public documents on that memo.   

 

In a letter from Attorney General Bob Ferguson included in the 2022 Domestic Terrorism study, he described DVE as follows:

 

“Various forms of extremist and political violence like threats, coercion, and intimidation, online disinformation, extremist recruitment and government infiltration efforts, and the general spread of extreme white supremacism and anti-government ideologies.”

 

In an analysis of the bill, Washington Policy Center Director Liv Finne wrote that the legislation “would criminalize certain forms of expression based on what members of a state commission consider to be their definition of ‘domestic extremism.’ Creating a state level ‘Ministry of Truth’ would not only undermine democratic norms, it would have a chilling effect on public debate, freedom of speech and civic participation in Washington state.”

 

In the original bill, the American Civil Liberties Union, or ACLU, would have been guaranteed a spot on the commission, but was removed via a committee amendment. In a brief statement, the ACLU declined to comment on the bill or its removal from the commission.

 

Part of the commission’s work would be developing ways to track data incidents of DVE, “including how data is collected, what triggers data collection, and how to ensure data is not disproportionately used against black, indigenous, and people of color communities or other communities.”

 

The commission would have to submit a report of its recommendations to the Attorney General’s Office by 2025, though the office would write its own final review “guided by the recommendations in the Attorney General’s 2022 domestic terrorism study.”

 

Testifying at HB 1333’s Feb. 20 public hearing in the House Appropriations Committee, Sue Coffman with informed Choice Washington warned that it’s “bad publicity to spend $500,000 on an unlawful effort,” adding that they should “focus on actual criminal activity and intent to commit a crime, and not upon the people who exercise their right to freedom of expression.”

 

Also opposed was ballot initiative sponsor Tim Eyman, who told the committee that the bill could result in people being investigated over their “views, their associations, and their friends,” with “no judicial oversight, no public viewing, no TVW.”

 

HB 1333 was voted out of the Appropriations Committee on Feb. 23.