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Gil de Ferran dead...

3.8K views 30 replies 17 participants last post by  kerrynzl  
#1 ·
#8 ·
Nobody knows if this guy even took the shot and if so, it's highly unlikely it caused a heart attack. Heart problems stemming from the original vaccines were almost exclusively limited to young males. A heart attack in a 56 year old man can be caused by 100 different things.

So, theoretically possible - yes, on the order of about 10,000 to 1. Wait a few days after they autopsy this guy and you'll know.
 
#14 ·
Nobody knows if this guy even took the shot and if so, it's highly unlikely it caused a heart attack. Heart problems stemming from the original vaccines were almost exclusively limited to young males. A heart attack in a 56 year old man can be caused by 100 different things.

So, theoretically possible - yes, on the order of about 10,000 to 1. Wait a few days after they autopsy this guy and you'll know.
That's a gray area.......
It's VERY easy to attribute issues in older folks to "normal" age issues and nobody questions it. It's difficult to prove.
It's hard to do that in young adults.
Here we are just days after Christmas and we had another family party.
Once again......2 of the family, one from Boston and one from green bay, were slightly sick at the party. Both vaxxed and boosted of course.
Now six out of 17 people are sick. ALL 6 are vaxxed. Not one of the unvaxxed are sick. Coincidence again? Very similar to what happened at Thanksgiving here.
Attendees range from 2 years old to 94.
The vaxxed 94 year old we give ivermectin every 3 days cuz she lives in assisted living. Even she isn't sick, yet a 19yo female nurse, vaxxed of course, got so bad she went to emergency room and was sent home today. She's actually in the worst shape of the bunch.
 
#10 ·
Was he a smoker or a drinker. Maybe he liked the smell of coke. It’s not uncommon for people to smoke or drink themselves to death. Happens to people in their 20s if they’re really committed or have crappy genetics. That said I’m glad I’m not a social experiment waiting to find out.
 
#28 ·
This is how 1967 F1 world champion Denny Hulme died.
He pulled his car off the track [conrod straight, 1992 Bathurst 1000] and died of a heart attack.
He was exactly the same age [56]

Fitness in older drivers is very important .
In Road Racing [circuit racing] the drivers heartbeat can go from resting rate to 170 bpm [for 30mins +]

I see the results of this in Historic [Vintage] racing which is a "gentleman's class of racing" . You get overweight elderly men with very poor fitness.
When they finish the race their faces are bright red and they are short of breath.

Most of these drivers do not have any fitness regiment [even retired top level drivers are like this]

I was looking at a video of 2 x world champion Mika Hakkinen driving a M8 Canam car [he is now 56]
He has certainly lost fitness and conditioning

[this is him centre]
Image


Another issue could be demands on top level drivers from their teams [they are expected to be built like jockeys]
It must place stress on the heart over a long period of time.
 
#29 ·
This is how 1967 F1 world champion Denny Hulme died.
He pulled his car off the track [conrod straight, 1992 Bathurst 1000] and died of a heart attack.
He was exactly the same age [56]

Fitness in older drivers is very important .
In Road Racing [circuit racing] the drivers heartbeat can go from resting rate to 170 bpm [for 30mins +]

I see the results of this in Historic [Vintage] racing which is a "gentleman's class of racing" . You get overweight elderly men with very poor fitness.
When they finish the race their faces are bright red and they are short of breath.

Most of these drivers do not have any fitness regiment [even retired top level drivers are like this]

I was looking at a video of 2 x world champion Mika Hakkinen driving a M8 Canam car [he is now 56]
He has certainly lost fitness and conditioning

[this is him centre]
View attachment 647506

Another issue could be demands on top level drivers from their teams [they are expected to be built like jockeys]
It must place stress on the heart over a long period of time.
Bobby Issac, too...

As a motorcycle roadracer (moto and drag racing, too) for many, many years (think wearing full leathers in the hottest part of 110*F days for hours at a time sometimes) I can think of no racer who has collapsed and died during an event, even in club racing, although I am certain there has been a club racer or two that I can't remember. I have definitely seen racers get heat exhaustion and heatstroke...