Sunday, February 22, 2026

The Covid Vaccine is Still Killing Americans

from Google AI:
Fibrinogen (Factor I) is a vital liver-produced plasma protein (normal range–) that plays a key role in blood clotting (hemostasis) and wound healing. It is converted by thrombin into insoluble fibrin, creating a mesh network to stabilize platelet plugs and stop bleeding. Low levels (hypofibrinogenemia) can cause excessive bleeding, while high levels are linked to inflammation and thrombosis.

Key Fibrinogen Functions and Role 
  • Blood Clotting: Acts as the primary structural component of blood clots, providing strength to the initial platelet plug.   
  • Wound Healing: Mediates cell spreading and facilitates tissue repair.   
  • Inflammation Marker: Levels often rise in response to infection, inflammation, or tissue trauma   
  • Antithrombin Activity: Helps regulate clotting by binding to and limiting thrombin activity.
Normal Range and Clinical Significance
Normal Levels: 200 to 400 mg/dL (adults). 
Critical Low Levels: <100 mg/dl 
High Levels (>400 mg/dl): Generally indicate inflammation, infection, pregnancy, or increased risk of cardiovascular disease/stroke.

 Causes of Low Fibrinogen (Hypofibrinogenemia)

  • Inherited/Congenital: Rare genetic disorders (afibrinogenemia).  

  • Acquired: Severe liver disease, malnutrition, DIC (disseminated intravascular coagulation), or severe bleeding/trauma (consumption of clotting factors).

Symptoms of Low Fibrinogen
  • Prolonged or abnormal bleeding, particularly after trauma or surgery.
  • Easy bruising.
  • Mucous membrane bleeding (e.g., nosebleeds, gum bleeding).
  • In severe, cases, risk of intracerebral hemorrhage.
Diagnostic Tests
Fibrinogen Activity Test (Clauss Method): Measures how well fibrinogen functions in creating a clot. 
Antigen Test: Measures the total amount of fibrinogen present.


from Google AI:
Thrombosis is the dangerous formation of a blood clot (thrombus) inside a vein or artery, obstructing blood flow. It often causes pain, swelling, and warmth (usually in the leg) or serious conditions like stroke, heart attack, and pulmonary embolism. Treatment involves blood thinners (anticoagulants), clot-busters, or surgery. Key risk factors include immobility, surgery, cancer, and smoking.

Types of Thrombosis 
Symptoms of Thrombosis - Symptoms vary by location, but generally include:
  • Leg/Arm (DVT): Swelling, pain (often cramping), tenderness, and warm skin.
  • Lung (PE): Sudden shortness of breath, chest pain, rapid heart rate, and coughing up blood.
  • Brain (Stroke): Sudden weakness, numbness, confusion, and difficulty speaking.

Causes and Risk Factors 
Thrombosis often occurs due to injury, illness, or genetic factors that make blood more prone to clotting (thrombophilia). Key factors include:
  • Immobility: Long periods of sitting, hospital stays, or bed rest.
  • Medical Conditions: Cancer, pregnancy, and inflammatory diseases.
  • Procedures: Major or orthopedic surgery.
  • Lifestyle & Age: Smoking, obesity, and advanced age.
  • Medications: Oral contraceptives or hormone replacement therapy.
Treatment and Prevention 
  • Medication: Anticoagulants (blood thinners) are the primary treatment to prevent further growth and reduce risk of embolisms.
  • Procedures: Clot-busting drugs (thrombolytics) or mechanical removal (catheter-directed thrombolysis).
  • Prevention: Staying active, wearing compression stockings, and managing weight.

9 comments:

The Prophet Dervish Z Sanders said...

Why is rfkjr helping cover this up?

Joe Conservative said...

Good question. My wife is currently having severe vascular problems in her lower legs that doctors are unwilling to explain, with some even discouraging her from looking into them. i think we need to find a new doctor.

Joe Conservative said...

I suspect that the mRNA vaccine has introduced a protein folding problem (chirality) leading to the structural problems we're seeing in the clots... like in the Thalilomide babies in the 50s/60s.

Joe Conservative said...

...only this time it's migrated into the blood circulatory and immune system.

Joe Conservative said...

We need Alphafold working on it... which is why this is the only AI that is currently proven actually useful.

Joe Conservative said...

Fibrinogen issues resulting in molecules depleted in sulfur and enriched in phosphorous...

Anonymous said...

Those Pathetic Democrats Constantly have with a SCOWL on their Face , and a pile of lies ready to insult our President. They can't possibly ever be Happy with the fabulous way President Trump has accomplished all those marvelous things that has made our country great again
because their side didn’t do it.

Anonymous said...

DAVE DUBYA why don’t you Get The Hell Out Of Here, And Go Back to that SHIT-HOUSE That You Came From, or Go to that Progressive Blog Where Creeps Like You Belong!

The Prophet Dervish Z Sanders said...

Minus: I suspect that the mRNA vaccine has introduced a protein folding problem (chirality) leading to the structural problems we're seeing in the clots... like in the Thalilomide babies in the 50s/60s.

Copilot says you suspect incorrectly.

🤖Is his specific theory plausible?

He’s proposing:

mRNA vaccine → protein folding / chirality problem → structural clot issues.

Like thalidomide → vascular damage in his wife’s legs.

Problems with that:

mRNA vaccines don’t behave like thalidomide

Chirality in that sense applies to small molecules, not big vaccine‑encoded proteins in this way.

Known vaccine‑related clotting mechanisms don’t match his description.

Vascular problems in the legs have many more common causes (age, genetics, smoking, diabetes, immobility, prior COVID infection, other meds, etc.).

Could his wife’s issues be serious and real? Absolutely. Does his explanation match current evidence? No.🛑

FYI, rfkjr isn't covering this up because the excess death data IS still being published.

Your post originally read, "...and this is why the CDC in America and NHS in UK have Stopped Publishing Excess Death Data".

You removed this because you realized this claim is false (which it is)?

🤖Copilot: The CDC has not stopped publishing excess‑death data. Some dashboards were retired or moved, but the underlying mortality data and excess‑death estimates are still available. The UK still publishes mortality and excess‑death data through the Office for National Statistics (ONS). The NHS isn’t the primary publisher of that data; ONS is.🛑