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“Just stop giving them the vaccine. People are dying,” Yeadon said in the Delingpod podcast with James Delingpole. He cited the recent cases of blood clots in the brain associated with the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine in Germany where the victims were mostly women under the age of 60. “Those are women who would not have died of the virus. They’re being killed by the vaccine,” said Yeadon, who has an extensive experience as allergy and respiratory researcher. Yeadon slams AstraZeneca’s COVID vaccine trial in children Yeadon also questioned the clinical trials of COVID-19 vaccines in children, noting that there had been zero deaths among previously healthy children who acquired the disease. He specifically slammed the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine trial in 300 children. ....
A health worker (L) inoculates a senior citizen with a Covid-19 coronavirus vaccine at a government hospital in Faridabad GURUGRAM: In letters addressed to the local administration and the chief minister’s office earlier this month, about 50-60 residents in the southern Haryana district of Palwal said they did not wish to take the Covid vaccine. The serum, they feared, contains cow blood, meat or fat. In Nuh, where inoculation drives have met with resistance in the past too, the health department has been informed of concerns that the vaccine “contains pig parts” and could cause infertility. The Phase 3 turnout in the two predominantly rural districts has been dismal so far. While Nuh’s turnout is the second lowest in the state, with just 470 people vaccinated, Palwal is at 17th spot among 22 districts, with 1,252 inoculations. According to the 2011 Census, Nuh’s population is 12 lakh while that of Palwal is 10.5 lakh. Either district has a target of over ....
Video video. shoshanna roberts is her name. she claims that the makers failed to get her signed permission before making the video to sell advertising. she says she was only paid $200 for it. well a california couple is heading to court in what could become a landmark legal case. the issue here is whether one party in a bitter divorce can keep the couple s frozen embryos. abc s kayna whitworth with the details. reporter: each fantastic in their own right, both harvard educated. mimi lee, a juilliard-trained pianist and doctor specializing in neuroscience married steven finley a financial analyst. just before they tied the knot, mimi was diagnosed with cancer. in a race against time, they decided to freeze embryos, knowing her treatment would render her infertile, signing a consent form that they would be destroyed if they divorced. now five years later and divorced, they re on opposing sides of a historic case as they fight over the fate of their ....
That she kind of connects herself to. go ahead, ann. that s right. i almost wish you hadn t reminded everyone of that tape because i want to swipe the slate during the campaign. i think it s absolutely devastating, and to her, yeah, you can represent the client without laughing about a pedophile raping this 12-year-old girl and leaving her infertile, and i don t think she was that magnificent on foreign policy wrush i think it was revealed paired to obama? well, i think it was revealed on your show well, she isn t president. she s secretary much state. that she went up to the father of the navy seal that was killed at our embassy at the funeral at his son s funeral and said don t worry, we re going get the guy who made that tape. as secretary of state she spent $70,000 running ads in pakistan apologizing for the tape. as america we are so far even though we were exercise it can we tell pakistanis about the first amendment? ....
unimaginable cruelty i ve heard. it struck a chord as a father and a journalist and struck a chord with millions around the world. masked men came to his home, covered him with kerosene, and set this little boy on fire. it s hard to imagine that anyone could do that to a child. you know, youssif s story isn t so much about cruelty. it s about strength, it s about healing and courage. here s our story. reporter: now 9, it s hard to believe that this is the same youssif we met in baghdad four years ago. there s no trace of the sullen, with drawn, and angry boy he was once. no trace of the boy who could only speak a few words of english. i m still making it! i m doing like soccer games and practice. i never used to do that in my country. reporter: why didn t you do it in your country? because it was kind of dangerous. reporter: do you remember that day the guys attacked you? no. reporter: he used to, this was youssif, 5 years old at the time. he was attacked ....