A movie called Died Suddenly premiered Monday on Twitter and, spoiler alert, was not a romantic comedy. the fact about the largest ongoing mass genocide in human history. “He also claimed that “the global elite has extended its intentions to depopulate the world. “A pair of low-waisted jeans? No, vaccines against Covid-19.
Yes, welcome to another conspiracy theory about covid-19 vaccines. In fact, this conspiracy theory is absolutely new and has been going on for about two years, like chewing gum in an Ugg boot. It is a component of an anti-vaxxer salad bar. Claims that have emerged since late 2020, ranging from COVID-19 vaccines that turn other people into giant magnets where keys can stick to their foreheads to COVID-19 vaccines that cause the death of other perfectly healthy people. The name of this movie is a bit like the names of the movie Snakes on a Plane and Sausage Party in the sense that it captures the story the movie seeks to tell. Suddenly, the deceased spends much of his one-hour and eight-minute runtime suggesting that many other people died suddenly after receiving Covid-19. 19 vaccines.
Note the word “suggest” instead of “show” or “try”. While the film shows headlines and stories of other people who have died suddenly, it never provides much concrete clinical evidence linking covid-19 vaccines to all those sudden deaths. You’re basically saying, oh, look at all those sudden deaths in recent years and, oh, other people, in general, have won the Covid-19 vaccines. Don’t worry about the fact that other people have been dying suddenly since, oh, the beginning of human existence. Don’t worry about the fact that more than a million people in the United States and more than 6. 6 million worldwide have died from, you know, Covid-19, since the beginning of 2020. Don’t worry about the fact that those deaths due to the covid-19 pandemic have led to excess mortality. Don’t worry about the fact that other people are suddenly dying since Rep. Marjorie Taylor-Greene (R-Georgia) was elected to Congress when the movie doesn’t try to link those two sets of events. in the same way is lin k vaccines have excess mortality.
In fact, the film shows photographs of other people falling and not dying, as Angela Rasmussen, PhD, a virologist at the Vaccine and Infectious Disease Organization at the University of Saskatchewan in Canada, put it in the following tweet:
Hmmm, other people showing up who seem to be collapsing when they aren’t is a big hint on your part, isn’t it?
The film also features a lot of innuendo. It shows photographs of what look like blood clots, but never confirms their true origin. Recommending that they were caused by Covid-19 vaccines as the film did would be a bit like showing mule photographs and then claiming that vaccines caused such hairstyles. In the film, a coded user said in a distorted voice what sounded like “like a Canadian embalmer, I found that everyone I embalmed for over a year had fibrous mass clots. “However, you can’t tell who this user is, because saying “Canadian embalmer” is rarely the same as saying something like “billionaire who bought Twitter. “It does not specify who the user is. In fact, he can’t tell the identity of most of the other people featured in film because subtitles are used relatively little.
Overall, the film is a hodgepodge of clips, audio bytes, interviews, and other things taken absolutely out of context and cooked in combination like a gigantic conspiracy theory frittata. For example, at the beginning of the film, actor Tom Hanks can be seen on the Today Show talking about the Malthusian theory, which is the confidence that the world’s population is developing at a rate that far exceeds the expansion of the food supply. It wouldn’t be good news for anyone who has to eat and supposedly explains why the ‘elite’ possibly need to depopulate the world, although the film doesn’t show Hanks saying something like ‘and that, kids, is why the world needs to be depopulated. Hell with those days with video editing software and a bunch of movie clips that you can also combine, you can also have anyone say something like Bella Hadid or Jason Momoa telling you how much you’re sexy.
Many anonymous Twitter accounts pushed this film, just as the anti-vaccine films Vaxxed and Plandemic were spread on social media in the past, as noted by Dr. Alastair McAlpine, a pediatric infectious disease physician:
From Twitter
Maybe that’s why the words “Sudden Death” were posted on Twitter on Monday:
From Twitter
A Twitter account @DiedSuddenly_ actually promoted this film aggressively and decisively. @DiedSuddenly_ didn’t exactly tweet things like “look my cat loses his back on my keyboard” or “look at those delicious macaroni and cheese with breadcrumbs on the most sensible #lifeiswonderful. “”And as of 6 p. m. ET on Nov. 21, @DiedSuddenly_ tweeted the movie. The account also pushed the words “Sudden Death” on social media, even posting on Twitter: “You guys made it!#DiedSuddenly, the world’s No. 1 entertainment trend. Pure blood rises, we will replace the world!Share the video with as many friends and family as possible. It’s [sic] time to kill the [vaccine emoji] once and for all.
Who exactly manages this account? Well, the account comes with a blue check mark, which will have to mean that Twitter has verified it as a valid account, right?Well, that or the account owner only had $8 to spare to pay Twitter.
The film and its promotional decoration imply that Stew Peters is the film. Is Peters an expert in medicine or some kind of scientist?No, he was a bounty hunter before he became a radio announcer. It was also he who said that Anthony Fauci, MD, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), “should be hanging somewhere at the end of a noose,” at America’s first political action convention of 2022, which is rarely exactly a smart thing to say about anyone. :
From Twitter
Peters has a history of making unsubstantiated claims about Covid-19 policies and interventions. For example, Spotify removed Peters’ screen from its platform after making WTH statements about Covid-19 vaccines, such as calling them a “military biological weapon” containing steel parasites. , as described by Zachary Petrizzo in a Daily Beast article titled “Spotify, far-right podcaster Stew Peters about COVID lies.
Although covid-19 vaccines are not the best and the medical network and science journalists reported rare side effects when they appeared, there is no real evidence that covid-19 vaccines are being used as a “military biological weapon” to depopulate the Earth or dedicate “the largest ongoing mass genocide in human history. “In other words, don’t expect to see a lot of science in the movie “Sudden Death. “
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