Not surprising, but you didn't read the question.Animal wrote: ↑Thu Mar 31, 2022 1:46 pmProving that the arrhythmia came from that shot should be pretty easy for you if it did the damage to your heart within hours. I guess you will just have to also prove why it didn't do the same thing to the other 5 billion people that got it. But it sounds like a slam dunk case to me.Cassandros wrote: ↑Wed Mar 30, 2022 2:39 am Here, I will even help; consider this basic, simple scenario:
I have high blood pressure or take any number of medications that affect my blood pressure. After I got my second shot (hours, not days) I noticed my heart would sometimes beat fast and then 'miss a beat', over and over, for a few minutes at a time; but thankfully it was really rare, like once ever couple weeks. And otherwise I felt completely normal with no apparent issues. Eventually I bring it up to my Dr and he discovers I have arrhythmia.
How do I prove that arrhythmia came from the shot, and not from the pre-existing condition, or what ever medication I was taking?
The hypothetical person noticed it hours later, but the diagnosis was actually weeks later.
So, again, in this scenario how does one prove the injury came from the shot and not the myriad of other potential culprits.
What test exists that proves mRNA 'vaccine' damage?