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My wife, who is from the Kenyan coast, was forcibly vaccinated against “tetanus” when she was probably 15-16. The shot, whatever it was, doesn’t appear on her shot record. Since that day, she has never had a normal period, and, since we have been married has suffered 6 miscarriages or death in utero. We have one live baby girl, who is a medical miracle (many complications during pregnancy, abnormal everything, yet somehow came out fine via emergency C-section), and my wife is pregnant again, and already has many complications. We will find out tomorrow what her prognosis is but it will take a miracle for this to turn out well. All her schoolmates who were vaccinated, with whom she is still in touch, have had similar problems with their reproductive system. The girls who were too poor to afford school fees (and with whom she is still in contact, just a few of them) and thus were spared the forced vaccinations (they are generally given in schools) have had normal pregnancies.

Her sister was just recently coerced into receiving a “COVID vaccine”. If she didn’t acquiesce, she would not have been allowed to sit the national exams to get into college. That shot, whatever it contained, does not appear on her “health” records either, despite Kenya now supposedly having moved to a fully electronic online registry. So far, her sister is fine.

I must push back a little on your cricket criticism, however. My wife ate many a cricket growing up, and still has fond memories of her diet. They were poor, unimaginably poor by American standards, and crickets and wild fruit and corn meal and some bush meat was pretty much all they could get, and sometimes they didn’t even have that. Sometimes, there was no food.having said that, even-on a highly restricted, repetitive diet, her health was phenomenal and, apart from “side effects” of the “vaccine” she received, she never had a single health issue. I don’t know what is going on with the mass productions of crickets, but the wild crickets they caught and ate were, apparently, both tasty and nutritious.

Thanks for the great work you are doing!

Greetings from Detroit!

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