Talk about some literally fragile statements. Social media accounts, anonymous, have posted videos of other people shaking other parts of their bodies and suggesting they were spasms induced by the Covid-19 vaccine. For example, a Twitter account called @AngeliaDesselle featured a video of two possibly human legs shaking quite a bit. vigorously, accompanied by the words “Thank you, Pfizer. ” Presumably, the tweet referred to the Pfizer-BioNTech Covid-19 mRNA vaccine and not some other Pfizer product like Viagra. So, did such a statement have any foundation, figuratively?Could this show anyone actually suffering a side effect from the vaccine?Or was it just someone who intentionally shook their legs because that’s what many humans with legs are capable of?
Well, the bio of this Twitter account does not come with any transparent self-identification information. Therefore, it is complicated to say if this “Angelia Desselle” is a genuine “Angelia” compared to an Angelo compared to a bot compared to some other type of façade or if it is its legs. And even if it was his legs, the tweet literally provided no evidence that Covid-19 vaccines were to blame for the tremors. But who wants genuine evidence in those days, right?The tweet was re-tweeted more than 5400 times, quoted more than 35,9000 times and liked more than 33,5000 times. The words “Thank you, Pfizer” also circulated on Twitter, but perhaps not in the way the user managing the account @AngeliaDesselle appreciated.
This tweet and video made many other people shake their heads on Twitter. For example, they used the “Community Notes” feature on Twitter to note that “spasms have not been proven to be a proven side effect of covid19 vaccines”:
In addition, this note from the network highlighted a misleading fact about the video of @AngeliaDesselle: “The tremors are very strong, uncontrollable, but the camera remains motionless and level . . . “. What special effects, Batman, the video of @AngeliaDesselle can Have they simply been staged?Was the goal of the video to recommend that someone was suffering from spasms after the Covid-19 vaccine when it didn’t happen?
Regardless, others on Twitter have tried to get rid of that imaginable intent in some other way. They shared more videos of other random people shaking in other tactics with the words “Thank you Pfizer” just to show how simple it is to do. .
For example, Randi Mayem Singer, screenwriter of his paintings in the movie Mrs. Doubtfire, defamed with this tweet:
Yes, it’s Jennifer Gray as Frances “Baby” Houseman in the 1987 film Dirty Dancing, more than 30 years before covid-19 vaccines hit the market.
Another tweet danced around this topic with one more video:
And here’s a reaction to the “Thank you Pfizer” trend:
Meanwhile, Duolingo, in order not to be with Dua Lipa, tweeted: “I can’t. . . stop. . . of making twerk”, in this two-part thread:
There are few things worse than uncontrollable twerking, with the imaginable exception of uncontrollable dabbing, which is illegal in Saudi Arabia. Twerking, by the way, is not listed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) as a common side effect. Of Covid-19. No vaccines, common side effects come with pain, swelling and redness around the injection site, fatigue, headache, muscle or joint pain, chills, and swollen lymph nodes. On another website, the CDC lists more serious adverse events that can occur, though very rarely, such as anaphylaxis, myocarditis, and pericarditis.
Now, you may have heard of other types of side effects reported to the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS), a formula co-sponsored by the CDC and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Please note, however, that just because something has been reported to VAERS does not mean it is a valid side effect. Not everything that was reported to VAERS was verified as if it had happened. Vaccination, adding up deaths, does not necessarily mean that a vaccine has caused a health problem. “
So, don’t assume that something necessarily happens just because you see “Thank you, Pfizer” attached to a video like this:
Yes, just because something happens after something doesn’t mean they’re necessarily similar to each other. For example, let’s say you used Tinder one day and, a few days later, fell headlong into an omelet. This doesn’t necessarily mean that Tinder is to blame for the twist of destiny or that you’ve made the omelet.
If spasms were indeed an unusual-looking effect of covid-19 vaccines, with more than 12. 7 billion doses administered in 184 countries as of October 2022, don’t you think you would have noticed a lot of tremors by now?Something like this, perhaps:
Surely a medical researcher would have detected such a condition, conducted a study, and published in a peer-reviewed clinical journal right now, right?
Moreover, what is the supposed mechanism of such spasms?It’s not like simply spilling a vaccine or anything that causes uncontrollable shaking:
Again, it’s very simple to film yourself shaking a part of your body, post the video, and claim it’s the vaccine that caused it. It doesn’t require a lot of high-tech camera or CGI work. For example, some of the “tremor” videos of recent times have shown hands holding drinks and shaking, accompanied by claims that the tremors were due to Covid-19 vaccines. Therefore, @redheadgemini94_3 shown on TikTok how simple it is to level such a screen without a big Hollywood budget. :
Unsurprisingly, after “Thank you Pfizer” started trending on Twitter, an anonymous Twitter account posted the following: “The #ThanksPfizer trend right now is despicable. Mocking, mocking, and discrediting the injured CovVax actually highlights who you are as a human. Yes, that tweet distracts from the real challenge highlighted through the “Thank you, Pfizer” trend. A doctor, document your challenge and then report it to public fitness authorities?There are transparent mechanisms to show that you have a challenge with a vaccine, if indeed it is. These mechanisms explain how thrombosis with thrombocytopenia syndrome (TTS) has been shown as a rare side effect imaginable after J vaccination.
Doctors, public fitness experts, and other true scientists around the world have kept an eye on covid-19 vaccines since they’ve become available. they are done. So it wouldn’t be so simple for the government to simply say, “Shake it,” temporarily any valid report of vaccine-looking effects imaginable.