Happy New Year!

Here is hoping 2023 will be the year the darkness parts and the formerly free men and women of the west wake up from their slumber.

Today is also the anniversary of Amazing Grace being written-

https://thefederalist.com/2022/12/30/the-most-famous-new-years-day-hymn-amazing-grace-celebrates-250-years-of-new-mercies/

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16 Responses to Happy New Year!

  1. Pascal says:

    Opinion mawm? And happy new year.

    • mawm says:

      She’s right about everything. The statin market is huge and lucrative and most people on them do not get any benefit from taking them.

      Big pharma are old masters at setting up trials to get a predetermined result, using relative risk instead of absolute risk, hiding adverse effects, etc. I think that the mRNA vaccines have woken a lot of people up to their skullduggery.

      The Cochrane Collaboration is a wonderful idea – independent researchers analysing the literature and identifying the evidence on which to base medical treatment, but they are not without bias (which is getting worse, woke and political) and can no longer just be accepted as correct in their recommendations.

      • mawm says:

        BTW -Happy new year.

        I must declare a conflict of interest to the above video – my wife is an ardent supporter of “Low Carb Down Under”.

  2. Michael in Nelson says:

    Best wishes to all the denizens here and don’t forget, no one said your resolutions have to be good.

    • mawm says:

      Happy new year Michael.

      I had a reply to your post on IgG4 and cancer. I have a new computer and CR kept on telling me I had a Captcha failure but it took a little while for me to realise that I had not logged in to CR. So I lost the post.

      Anyway here is a link to some interesting info on IgG4 from Jessica Rose (she’s an interesting lady). There are 3 posts on IgG4 and cancer, fibrosis and in pregnancy.
      https://jessicar.substack.com/

      • Michael in Nelson says:

        Thanks mawm, the persistent presence of the spike protein through continued production or multiple injections was always going to produce anomalous antibody reactions and BigPharma must have known that.

      • Michael in Nelson says:

        Looks like my reply has vanished. I said that the repeated stimulation of antigens caused by continued production of the spike protein or repeated mRNA injections would invariably lead to disruption of antibody ratios which BigPharma must have known.

  3. Pascal says:

    JP Sears rounds up the 2022 news not covered by corp feed2ya.

  4. Michael in Nelson says:

    Darin, I’ve replied to one of mawm’s posts twice but it keep’s vanishing. https://falfn.com/CrusaderRabbit/wp-content/plugins/wp-monalisa/icons/wpml_unsure.gif

    • Darin says:

      Looks like somebody fixed it, wasn’t me though, I’ve been sleeping, late night last couple nights https://falfn.com/CrusaderRabbit/wp-content/plugins/wp-monalisa/icons/wpml_cool.gifhttps://falfn.com/CrusaderRabbit/wp-content/plugins/wp-monalisa/icons/wpml_whistle3.gif

  5. mawm says:

    “Commotio Cordis” is the new catchphrase being bantered around to explain a certain cardiac arrest on the sports field. What causes it? Usually a sharp discrete impact to the chest wall overlying the heart. One probably has to have some underlying arrhythmogenic cardiac condition for this to happen. In over 50 years I know of one possibility – which in itself is an interesting story.

    During my final medical undergraduate year a young student at the high school I had attended died after being struck on the chest by a cricket ball. My youngest brother was a student at that school at the time which had made me aware of this. Roll on a few months and during my final examinations I was asked by a cardiologist what I would have done if I had been the teacher supervising and this had happened. I gave him the answer which elicited the response from him that I had been the only student being examined who’d given the correct answer. A funny thing then happened….. he looked down at his list of candidates and I watched as it dawned on him that my surname and that boy’s were the same …and that it was my brother who was friendly with his son, also a student there. His conclusion was wrong but he couldn’t get me out of the examination room quickly enough.

    • Darin says:

      If this is right, CPR was being administered for 9 minutes on the field.
      https://stevekirsch.substack.com/p/the-most-likely-scenario-is-that.

      I’m not sure Commotio Cordis would explain it. In a contact sport like Football. A player may make contact and get hit a hundred times a game. That times the number of players on the field any given week. It seems like it would be either much more common, or if it is dependent on a condition he had as a rarity, it should have happened sooner in his career.

      • mawm says:

        They go into ventricular fibrillation (a cardiac arrest in that there is no blood flowing) – as do these asymptomatic vaccine-induced myocarditis cases, and need to be defibrillated ASAP which is not always successful initially and my require dozens of attempts. He had a subsequent cardiac arrest in the ER. This does not bode well for him.

        The tell will be if he gets an autopsy if/when he dies.