-A high school student collapsed and died suddenly during a game in Arizona
-A 24 y/o soccer player collapsed and died on field
-An 18 y/o died playing football in Wisconsin
-Another student died suddenly after collapsing on field in Florida
What do they all have in common? 🧵
All were young. And ALL of these incidents happened BEFORE 2020. Long before any covid vaccine, long before covid itself.
Buffalo Bills player Damar Hamlin collapsed suddenly on field. Anti-vaxxers and opportunists are rushing to push their agenda before any facts are known, and ignoring the facts that we do know: young, healthy people died suddenly for inexplicable reasons long before covid.
Rather than waiting for facts to come out, people are pushing half-baked, idiotic theories and pushing bullshit documentaries. Want to follow the money? Don't forget to include the conspiracy theorists who are profiting off it by building their brand and selling you products.
Use Occam's razor. If your theory requires a large number of assumptions (that a global cabal of pharma companies are pushing drugs just to make a profit, to help stop the spread of a virus that was made by Dr Fauci, for profit or something), then your theory is probably wrong.
People died suddenly before covid and will die suddenly after it. Ironically, covid itself leads to significant long-haul effects like blood clots, myocarditis, cardiac arrest and even erectile dysfunction. Covid kills people. It's rare, but it's happening.
For further reading, here are the sources I cited in the first tweet:
This time for real though, unlike in
May of 2019
February of 2019
January, 2019
October, 2018
July, 2018
March, 2018
March, 2017
February, 2017
September, 2016
YouTube will likely never be over. Thread: 1/8
Every few months when YouTube changes their terms of service or their algorithm adjusts, everyone wrings their hands and gets their panties in a bunch about how the website is over and "this time for real!" But it never is. Here's why: 2/8
Hosting video costs money. Every competitor that comes along tries to promise the same service as YouTube, but they can't deliver. Over 300 hours of video are uploaded to YouTube every minute. That's 5 billion videos watched per day. BILLION. 3/8