The mainstream media, to distract from the link between COVID vaccines and heart attacks, has published a series of absurd explanations for the demise of young people. Since 2021, the media has blamed the rise in heart attacks on:
- Hot sauce
- Exposure to sudden gushes of water (i.e., showers)
- Car headlights
- Climate change
- Video games
The media carries Big Pharma’s water because the drug industry’s direct-to-consumer advertising accounts for about 10% of total TV and newspaper revenue, second only to the entertainment industry. Some specific news programs receive 50% or more of their funding from drug ads.
What’s notable is that Big Pharma doesn’t actually care about influencing the buying decisions of consumers watching the news. Rather, the industry seeks to influence the news itself. The media’s power comes in equal parts from 1) distorting the truth in the stories it does cover, and 2) ignoring the news that reflects poorly on its benefactors.
The New York Times recently did its part to defend vaccines. It published a tongue-in-cheek article about the “Gen Z stare,” describing how Generation Z — born between 1997 and 2012 — has difficulty communicating. The article discounts what is obvious brain damage as “the blank stare that members of younger generations give in situations where a verbal response would be more common.”
These young adults don’t deserve our ridicule; they deserve our compassion.
Between the passage of the National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act of 1986 that eliminated liability for vaccine injury, and 2012, the number of shots on the childhood vaccine schedule went parabolic. Needle sticks increased by 24, with total doses up by as much as 38 over the previous generation. New vaccines added to the childhood immunization schedule for Gen Z included Hepatitis B, Varicella, Hepatitis A, Rotavirus, Pneumococcal Conjugate, Tdap, Meningococcal Conjugate, HPV, and Influenza.
One shot alone is enough to trigger disastrous consequences in infants and children. Just look at how the rate of SIDS dropped precipitously for the first time ever during COVID when parents stopped bringing their children to pediatric “well visits.”
However, vaccine damage can also be cumulative. One doctor explained that vaccines, especially those containing aluminum, cause increasing harm over time. The aluminum adjuvant:
- reduces the body’s zeta potential (fluid circulation) causing blood sludging and microstrokes
- triggers a strong immune response that cause large white blood cells to clog tiny blood vessels, which can block oxygen and hurt nearby tissues
These effects build up, with some people developing symptoms along the autism spectrum — including difficulty communicating.
The other factor impacting Gen Z’s brain is artificial blue light from electronic devices. Gen Z is the first cohort in history to grow up bathed in narrow-band blue light: the iPhone was introduced in 2005; the first iPad in 2012. Neurosurgeon Dr. Jack Kruse says that artificial blue light disrupts myelination in the brain — the formation of protective sheaths around nerve fibers. The myelination process is critical for brain function and is not complete until people reach their mid-20s. Impaired myelin development, especially in kids under six, makes them more vulnerable to long-term neurological issues.
If you think too many vaccines and too much blue light has caused all kinds of problems for Gen Z, just wait. The consequences for the group that comes next will be overwhelming.
