JUST IN: Jonathan Lewis, a teenage boy who was beaten up by 15 students at a high school in Las Vegas, Nevada had died.
November 13, 2023
I haven’t seen any news outlet cover this tragedy. So, here is all I know about it.
November 13, 2023
I haven’t seen any news outlet cover this tragedy. So, here is all I know about it.
Read more at https://theblacksphere.net/2023/01/nfl-player-dead-from-covid-vaccine/

Leftists love their euphemisms, and SADS works out perfectly when you don’t want to admit that people died from a big Covid lie. In this case, the lie of the vaccines. With everything we now know about vaccine deaths and vaccine injuries, no one should be surprised that Moderna, Pfizer, and their financial enablers wanted the data about deaths and injuries hidden for 75 years.
The recent heart attack suffered by Damar Hamblin illuminated the need for investigation in this mess. While Leftists scumbags promoted these death pokes as “safe and effective”, others sounded the alarm bell.
Green Bay Quarterback Aaron Rogers spoke out against vaccinations. In light of what happened to Hamblin, you can bet that he feels vindicated. However, there are many examples of great athletes who suffered mightily after getting the jab.
Little coverage was given to 38-year-old pro-vax ex-Baltimore Raven Uche Nwaneri. The former offensive lineman collapsed in the bedroom of his wife’s home in West Lafayette, and he never recovered. The cause of his collapse was an “enlarged heart with acute heart failure.” Sound familiar? For those who wonder if his death was Covid-vaccine-related, check out this tweet from Nwaneri:

I wonder if his family realizes who the “stupid ass” is now?
The “dewormer” works and the vaccine kills. But don’t expect much media coverage on the death of this outspoken vaxxer. In fact, as I read multiple articles about his untimely SADS death, I saw nothing about his death being related to Covid.
This despite Nwaneri’s obvious mocking of the unvaxxed in his tweet.
What professional athletes do you know who die at the age of 38 and from issues we know to be those from which people die from after taking Covid vaccines? “Enlarged heart with acute heart failure.”
Nwaneri fell for the BS of Anthony Fauci and his boss Joe Biden. His death is on their hands.As for Hamblin, his NFL career is over. And he too has Fauci, Biden, et al to blame for this.
But how many other non-descript people’s lives have been ruined, all because Leftists don’t have the balls to tell the truth about Covid vaccines?
Little Girl Swallows This COMMON Item Dies 2 Days After ChristmasURL of the original posting site: http://news.clashdaily.com/2016/01/little-girl-swallows-this-common-item-dies-2-days-after-christmas
This is sad and tragic — and should be a warning to all parents of toddlers about this common household item.
A two-year-old girl in rural Oklahoma died two days after Christmas and doctors say a battery smaller than the size of a coin is likely to blame.
Brianna Florer’s grandfather Kent Vice tells The Oklahoman that his granddaughter had not been feeling well for the past few days on Sunday, and had been registering a low grade fever.
The toddler’s parents, Brian and Stephanie Florer, called an ambulance when their daughter started throwing up blood and turned blue.
Little Brianna was rushed to a hospital in Tulsa where she immediately went into surgery, but she later died.
An x-ray revealed she had swallowed a small button battery.
‘They operated on her for 2 hours, but they couldn’t stop the bleeding,’ he said. ‘They believed the battery ate through to her carotid artery by way of her esophagus.’
Read more: Daily Mail



ATLANTA – S. Truett Cathy, the billionaire founder of the privately held Chick-fil-A restaurant chain that famously closes on Sundays but also drew unwanted attention on gay marriage in recent years because of his family’s conservative views, died early Monday, a company spokesman said. He was 93.
Chick-fil-A spokesman Mark Baldwin told The Associated Press that Cathy died at home surrounded by members of his family. Funeral plans had not yet been finalized, he said.
Cathy opened his first postwar diner in an Atlanta suburb in 1946 and by 1967 he had founded and opened his first Chick-fil-A Inc. restaurant in Atlanta. Over ensuing decades, the chain’s boneless chicken sandwich he is credited with inventing would propel Chick-fil-A expansion to more than 1,800 outlets in 39 states and the nation’s capital. By early 2013, the company says on its website, annual sales topped $5 billion as the chain offered up a taste of the South that went beyond chicken to such offerings as sweet tea, biscuits and gravy.
Those religious views helped win Cathy and his family loyal following from conservative customers, but also invited protests when Cathy’s son denounced gay marriage.
Cathy’s son, Dan, who is currently chairman and president of the chain, had told the Baptist Press in 2012 that the company was “guilty as charged” for backing “the biblical definition of a family.” Gay rights groups and others called for boycotts and kiss-ins at Cathy’s restaurants. The Jim Henson Co. pulled its Muppet toys from kids’ meals, while politicians in Boston and Chicago told the chain it is not welcome there.
The controversy later subsided.
The family-owned company has said it has had 46 consecutive years of positive sales growth. Cathy’s $6 billion fortune as the founder of Chick-fil-A puts him on the yearly Forbes magazine list of the wealthiest Americans in the country. The company has listed him on its website as its chairman emeritus after he left day-to-day operations to younger generations.
Truett Cathy began his career in the restaurant business by opening with his brother in 1946 an Atlanta diner called The Dwarf Grill, which was named for the short and stout shape of the restaurant.
He has attributed his hardworking nature — even as a little boy he made money by selling six bottles of Coca-Cola for a quarter — to growing up poor.
“I’ve experienced poverty and plenty and there’s a lesson to be learned when you’re brought up in poverty,” he said in 2007. “I had to create some good work habits and attitude.”
Even well into his 80s, Cathy was actively involved in the chain’s operations, including setting up a contract with his children that said they may sell the privately-owned chain in the future but the company must never go public.
“Why would I retire from something I enjoy doing?” Cathy said in a 2007 interview. “I can hardly wait to get here.”
An opportunity in 1961 led to the development of the restaurant chain’s trademark chicken sandwich when a company that cooked boneless, skinless chicken for airline meals wanted to sell him pieces that were too big for the airline customer’s needs. Cathy took those pieces and cooked them in a pressure cooker and served them in buttered buns.
The sandwich was sold at independent restaurants for a few years before he opened his first Chick-fil-A restaurant at an Atlanta shopping mall in 1967.
Cathy also was known for his efforts to help youth. In 1984 he created the WinShape Foundation to help “shape winners” through youth support programs and scholarships. He also created a long-term program for foster children that has foster care homes in Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee and Brazil.
His sympathy for children was demonstrated in August 2008 when he worked out a deal with the parents of two girls who were accused of causing $30,000 in damage to a home he owned in New Smyrna Beach, Florida. The girls were banned from watching TV and playing video games. They also had to write “I will not vandalize other people’s property” 1,000 times.
He told the Daytona Beach News-Journal that he didn’t want to have them prosecuted and left with a criminal record.
As the author of several books, his 2007 book “How Did You Do It, Truett?” outlined his strategy for success that included setting priorities, being courteous, cautiously expanding a business and not being burdened with debt.
“There’s really no secret for success,” he said then. “I hope it will open eyes for people. They don’t have to follow my recipe but this is what works for me.”
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