Wednesday, March 17, 2021

Greg Hunt's Sudden Illness

I wouldn't have been aware of this if it hadn't been for a random comment made in ZeroHedge the other day. It's evidently of no big concern to anybody, but Australia's Minister for Health and Age Care, Greg Hunt, got a serious leg infection only days after taking the experimental vaccine currently pushed by journalists and politicians alike.

The leg infection has nothing to do with the vaccine, we're told. However, I find it nevertheless interesting, because the legs were also where late Dr. Necklemann was affected shortly after taking the vaccine, as was my mother the other day, as well as countless others. There's definitely a pattern to this.

The irony in this is that Greg Hunt has been very vocal in his support of the vaccine. No amount of evidence has been able to persuade him against an aggressive rollout plan, with all sorts of jabs, including the now infamous AstraZeneca shot. Greg Hunt has not shown any concern about the horizon problem that all these experimental drugs pose.

No-one knows the long term effects of these drugs. Even the short term effects are relatively unknown. Now that Greg Hunt has taken the shot himself, only to fall ill shortly after, he may privately have some second thoughts. He will of course stick to the official story, that his illness had nothing to do with the vaccine, but deep down, I'm sure he's wondering what exactly he let into his body, and what it may be up to in the future.

Hopefully for him, and all the people who trusted him, the adverse effects are transient and not coming back. However, no-one knows. There has been no long term testing. There might be something unpleasant lurking over the horizon, but only time will tell us if it's there, and what its form may be.

Smallpox vaccine.jpg
Smallpox vaccine

By Photo Credit: James Gathany Content Providers(s): CDC - This media comes from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Public Health Image Library (PHIL), with identification number #2674. Note: Not all PHIL images are public domain; be sure to check copyright status and credit authors and content providers. Deutsch | English | македонски | slovenščina | +/−, Public Domain, Link

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