in

Military Flight Surgeon Files Affidavit, Says ‘Vaccinated’ Flight Crews Should Be Grounded Due To Substantial ‘Risk Factors’

Flight School students in D Co., 1st Bn., 145th Avn. Regt. clean up a variety of aircraft as part of their class community project here March 5. - Credit: CD Media

From CreativeDestructionMedia.com…

U.S. Army Lieutenant Colonel Theresa Long, a flight surgeon at Fort Rucker in Dothan, AL, has filed an affidavit declaring all flight crews which have received the ‘vaccine’ should be grounded for health reasons.

Military aviators are a subset of the military population that has to meet the most stringent medical standards to be on flight status. The population of student pilots I take care of are primarily in their 20s-30s, males and in excellent physical condition. The risk of serious illness or death in this population from SARs-CoV-2 is minimal, with a survival rate of 99.997%...

Literature has demonstrated that natural immunity is durable, completed, and superior to vaccination immunity to SARs-CoV-2. mRNA vaccines produced by Pfizer and Moderna both have been linked to myocarditis, especially in young males between 16-24 years old,2 The majority of young new Army aviators are in their early twenties. We know there is a risk of myocarditis with each mRNA vaccination. We additionally now know that vaccination does not necessarily prevent infection or transmission of SARs-CoV-2Therefore individuals fully vaccinated with mRNA vaccines have at least two independent risk factors for myocarditis after vaccination. Additional boaster shots add more risk. It is impossible to perform a risk/benefit analysis on the use of mRNA as counter measures to SARs-CoV-2 without further data… Use of mRNA vaccines in our fighting force, presents a risk of undetermined magnitude, in a population in which less than 20 active-duty personnel out of 1.4 million, died of the underlying SARs- CoV-2...

 

Read More

Leave a Reply

Loading…

Breaking: Senate Kicks Can Down The Road, Passes Last Minute Deal To Avoid Government Shutdown

Aha: What To Know About The Newest U.S. Airline