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Dain's avatar

Healthy man dies “from Covid” shortly after being jabbed and put on a ventilator for weeks. I’ve heard this story before.

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Karen Bracken's avatar

I will NEVER regret my decisions to refuse the COVID bio weapon.

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Deb Nance's avatar

I think 1% is 1% too high. Zero would be embarrassing right? Logically why would anyone regret when they could just go get vaccinated? 🤔

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Diana's avatar

In the words of Edith Piaf: (famous French cabaret singer) "Moi je ne regret rien!"

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annademo's avatar

Words to live by....

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Diana's avatar

I'm always 2nd guessing myself. I regret not selling my stock, Equity Funding. They went bankrupt after losing a trial for corruption. My stock lost all its value and I lost all my money. I regret not staying in touch with my sociology professor, Emanuel Schegloff, who left Columbia University before I finished my doctorate. I wanted to complete my dissertation under his guidance, but couldn't do so. Nevertheless, I could have followed his specialty. Now I'm having a great time studying Conversational Analysis. Too bad I didn't realize that I could have still kept up. 20/20 hindsight is wonderful! MY MAJOR REGRET: That science was censored so we all didn't realize how harmless Covid infection was and how unsafe mRNA vaccines really were. I also regret that the U.S. started so many wars!!

There's a video that really exemplifies this message.

https://www.youtube.com/shorts/z24TqORnY4I

Near the end of this short video a small overweight grey and white cat with extremely short legs decides to jump up on top of a sink. He manages to get at least 3 inches off the ground before he falls back. At this point, he walks away. No further attempts for him! "If at first you don't succeed--then you must give up," seems to be his motto.

I understand, Mr. Cat. But before you give up the mysteries and pleasures of the sink, I think you should try losing weight and exercising.. Also you might try a running start to your jump. Although it seems you don't have much room.

If you feel pressured to have no regrets, then you might feel pressured to think it was a good decision you made to get vaccinated. Nope! Some decisions you really should regret! Nobody is omniscient.

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annademo's avatar

What's the point of regrets? Second guessing yourself seems a waste of effort. You can't go back and change what did, can you? All you can do is go forward and accept/live with the consequences of your choices. Personally, I took the one-and-done J&J jab during late alpha/early delta, because I was nearly 70 and prone to upper respiratory infections, but I chose to avoid any boosters. I don't regret either decision. I was later infected with omicron and treated very early with meds that were cheap and on the market for many years. As for your "regret" at the end, that is understandable but it was clear to anyone with any basic science understanding that COVID was just a bad flu/cold. That evidence was in the news in Feb/Mar 2020 (the cruise ships; lots of old people, lots of COVID, very few deaths). As for the jab, I remember reading about a study from Japan where they were doing animal testing with some mRNA product and nearly all the animals died. I wish I had saved that paper. It was in mid- to late-2020 and it made me very skeptical of the mRNA jab (the J&J was not mRNA).

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Diana's avatar

Actually if we are experiencing PTSD, we CAN go back in time. When I hear therapists say, "You are not to blame," it doesn't seem to connect to me. But when I review what happened with the support of someone else--it seems I get a totally different viewpoint. And that new viewpoint leaves me feeling much better. It's as if I can go back and change/reexperience what happened. The psychiatrist, Milton Erickson, reviewed such a case in his book, "The February Man." If I remember correctly, he was treating a young woman who never had a loving father and was scared to date or experience romantic attachments. Erickson, who was a skilled hypnotherapist, age regressed this patient. He played the role of a caring male paternal figure who visited her every February (her birthday) to see how she was doing and how she was growing up. This regular experience of paternal care from her psychiatrist modified her feelings of neglect and abuse. She was able to heal from these threatening feelings.

So, yes, with the correct treatment--you CAN go back emotionally. Of course, you won't get your money back or all your health back, or your stock back. But with faith in ourselves and others, almost any loss becomes bearable. (I think)

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Diana's avatar

Ah the point of regrets is to make sure you don't keep making the same foolish or poor decisions. When an airplane crashes, the FAA steps in, examines all the evidence, recommends changes to prevent similar accidents in the future. 1)If I feel like getting rid of an investment, I shall seek financial advice rather than feeling I must not question any investments my parents give me. 2)If someone is unable to commit to me in a major way, maybe we/I can still enjoy some benefits of a friendship or student. (This is very hard for me. Out of sight/out of mind was my motto. Now I can tolerate more anguish for the rewards of human relationships. I admire your persistence in honoring your judgments. The ones I regret were more "act in haste, repent at leisure." SO! What went wrong? How can I do better. I used to work as a computer programmer. My obsession with analyzing my errors made me a more and more reliable developer.

I speak in favor of second guessing. As they told us in wood working class: measure once, check twice.

It depends on the meaning of regret. If you or I take NO RESPONSIBILITY for our decisions we learn nothing. We feel extreme sorrow, regret, grief, "WHY ME?!!" That isn't my main experience. Mine is more like anxiety (what if this happens again), more anxiety (what can I do to learn from this and avoid it in the future), regret AND "I am going to do everything possible to make sure I don't make the same mistake in the future! And help my loved ones also to avoid such mistakes.!" (Ha Ha the Vaccinated loved ones don't want to listen because they don't want to feel any regret on top of their adverse reactions. "Who knew? We didn't know!! There is nothing we could have done! What's the point of recriminations and regrets?"

The point of recriminations is so we don't join WEF or believe in Disease X and fearfully sign up for more vaccines! We should have learned our lessons. Also I'm going to need many hours of reviewing and reliving this past because I have to convince myself that history proves avoiding vaccines is the better decision. Otherwise I hate disobeying my doctor, the medical/industrial complex, my friends and relatives. I hate disobeying or not trusting the authorities!. You have more faith in yourself. How did you gain that faith? 30,000 decisions and all good? At this point, I THINK I can trust my food preferences. That's about it.

Hmm rereading this makes me reevaluate myself. IT seems I'm remarkably stubborn and persistent--even while 2nd guessing all of my decisions. Especially those which cause conflict.

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annademo's avatar

By the way, you should never have to obey or disobey your doctor. You and your doctor should be partners in managing your health. If your doctor won't listen (really listen) to your thoughts and concerns, then it's time to get a better doctor.

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annademo's avatar

LOL, "act in haste, repent at leisure." I've had my share. But I repent, not regret. And no, my 30,000 (likely way more) decisions were not all good. But I trust my intellect and my experience (7 decades of it) and my gut and if I choose poorly, c'est la vie and carry on. "Woulda, coulda, shoulda" has no place in my life. As for you, stubborness is good, as long as you can pivot when the data dictate you should pivot. Persistence is good, too. Giving up too quickly is rarely the right choice (although it may be). For the record, not all vaccines are bad. I'd rather get the tetanus shot than get tetanus. But if I had any daughters (grand-daughters), I would recommend against Gardasil. And I will never take an mRNA jab for any disease - ever. I'm concerned that the technology is so easy that all vaccines will soon go that way and then, my support for (those) vaccines will fade away. Have a pleasant weekend. Nice chatting with you.

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Diana's avatar

Or die by if you persuade yourself you have no regrets or 2nd thoughts about getting vaccinated and boosted.

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Sirka Sie's avatar

My dumb-ass brother asked me the same thing after i lamented to him the loss of my job, income and friends....because those are SOOO VALUABLE dontcha know??? Of course the fact that i haven't been sick a day since the onslaught of the Psy-op has eluded him...dumb-ass, or did i already mention that?

Not jabbing is the smartest thing i have EVER done, i have NEVER for a moment regretted it!!!!

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Barry O'Kenyan's avatar

Sirka,

I thought you were happily working in a restuarant?

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Sirka Sie's avatar

Loool, state of mind Barry, state of mind🥰

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Barry O'Kenyan's avatar

Ahh.Yes. Like if you believe you have convid, you have convid.

If you believe you are lucky., you are lucky.

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Sirka Sie's avatar

❤️❤️❤️🤗

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Diana's avatar

They don't give up--do they? Died from Covid because he didn't have enough antibodies? My opinion is died from vaccine injury--probably heart issue. More likely to live if you DON'T get jabbed.

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baker charlie's avatar

I regret a lot of stuff in life:

Getting into a car my drunk boyfriend would later crash at 60 MPH into a building

Getting into a car my boyfriend's ex girlfriend would, within the hour, essentially steal and crash into the bar we were drinking in at considerable speed.

Getting my first tattoo of strip flowers that was botched by an apprentice and turned into a potato in the coming years.

There's probably more...

But nah, ain't never going to regret not getting vaxxed. Not ever.

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patrick.net/memes's avatar

I don't believe that even 1% of the unvaxxed regret not taking it. I think the true number is literally zero.

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Jjule's avatar

Why would anyone regret NOT getting vaxed?

Rite Aid is will and waiting for stooges

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HiggsBosonSlut's avatar

Phrased another way, 93% of respondents are negative about the poke (as they were either not vaxxed or wish they hadn't been). This is an overwhelming amount.

The "regrets" are now lining up for potentially a shorter life. I know an insider at Roche. One of their next big things is medicine for fast acting cancers. Which is totally coincidental, of course.

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Jinc's avatar

Ummmmm, nobody should "regret not taking the vax." (Read that carefully.)

After all, you are alive and well enough to answer a twitter survey. As are the other categories, yeah.

Or is that not proof enough for this most bizarre 1% of respondents.

Perhaps they need to find their common sense again.

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Diana's avatar

Question is WHY do you regret? I regret because my husband divorced me, I lost my medical license and all my friends and relatives. And now I'm locked up and starving. Also I need a heart transplant--and no hospital will accept me without proof of vaccination. None of this is true for me. But it COULD be true. Coercion is a bitch!

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Jinc's avatar

Most valid.

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Diana's avatar

If you got jabbed--that is NOT why you are alive. Fallacy: Post Hoc Ergo Propter Hoc.

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Jinc's avatar

Agreed, of course. (But are you gonna call it a fallacy that I know I am alive because I didn't get vaxxed?)

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Diana's avatar

Of course not! I'm totally biased for the good guys!

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Guy Duperreault's avatar

wow! great share. ty.

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GAU8A's avatar

I have a lot of regrets. Not about not getting shot with a bioweapon. I regret that people would not listen to someone who has seen what they are doing to animals in the labs. I regret that there were so many epidemiologists, and that they were all so skilled at following along with false narratives. I just regret the entire thing.

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Kathleen Janoski's avatar

The VA had safety signals triggered 6 months after the shot roll out.

Myocarditis was reported after the 1st Pfizer shot. VA doctor notified the CDC. Both remained silent.

VA still forced their employees to get the covid shot because of federal worker mandate.

VA never warned veterans that the shots could harm them.

Democide? Or genocide?

https://www.theepochtimes.com/health/exclusive-veterans-affairs-found-safety-signal-for-pfizer-covid-vaccine-never-disclosed-it-5561709?welcomeuser=1

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JamesDuff's avatar

No one dies from Covid lol 😂 like in the Clue Game

Done in the hospital ventilator room, by the jab

From nurse ratchet

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Evil Harry's avatar

Poor bastard.

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Edwin's avatar

Absolutely do not regret not getting the jab. Or testing for Covid. Something wasn't't right about that either, and I'm not talking about the incredible amplification, which would have tested my Jeep positive.

I. as a retired community pharmacist, maintain at least 10-15 years for a regular vaccine, especially if the dang disease is less than 1% death rate.

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Barry O'Kenyan's avatar

That 1% is noise.

I am sure you have noticed that with any opinion poll, there was always an outlier.

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annademo's avatar

I'm sorry for the gymnast and his family but did anybody offer him early treatment when he started showing symptoms? Like early Ivermectin? Or (as was my case, for any of you IVM doubters), early dexamethasone, albuterol inhaler and prophy antibiotic? If he got sick enough to need a vent, I truly doubt he got any early treatment at all (go home and come back when your lips are blue). Such early treatment could have saved his life, in my opinion....

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Evil Harry's avatar

Treatment for symptoms of vaccine induced death?

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annademo's avatar

No, he died from COVID, according to the piece.

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Andreas Oehler's avatar

Not quite: he died from his poor decision to acquiesce to the Covid jab, because of which his immunity dropped and he'd got bad Covid on a short order and then was finished off with their "treatment" protocols by people in white coats. A perfect storm!

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FLR's avatar

That's correct. You should have put this in the article. Already in Feb 2021 there was a study of old people and their caretakers showing that the incidence of corona doubled for the latter in the 2 weeks after injection. But why a 50 year ex-gymnast would go so far as to being hospitalized, which was a death sentence in of itself, is a mystery.

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Andreas Oehler's avatar

I wrote about this so many times back in 2021 already that I got tired and thought it's common knowledge.

E.g.: https://live2fightanotherday.substack.com/p/hiding-in-plain-sight or

https://live2fightanotherday.substack.com/p/beware-of-greeks-bearing-gifts

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Evil Harry's avatar

Even gun shots and stabbings were marked as covid, so I have little faith in their honesty to report the truth.

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