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Myocarditis, or heart damage, is more common than previously thought. Studies in the US military and Thailand show that around 20% of people who receive the COVID vaccine develop myocarditis, as confirmed by echocardiograms and other tests. This means that out of every 1 million vaccinated individuals, 200,000 will experience heart damage. Unfortunately, 50% of those with myocarditis will die within 5 years. This alarming increase in myocarditis cases is due to the cardiotoxic nature of the vaccine. This information comes from Dr. Cressel and Shoemaker in Toronto, Canada.

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We have administered this type of vaccine to over one billion people, demonstrating its safety. While there is a very low risk of myocarditis, particularly in young men, the risk of developing myocarditis from COVID-19 is actually higher than from the vaccine.

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Myocarditis was found more in young men, with rates highest in those aged 16-17. The condition was less common in women and older age groups. Most cases were mild, but some were severe, impacting a person's life. Myocarditis was most common after the second vaccine dose and less frequent in younger children and with subsequent doses. Natural immunity from previous COVID infection was shown to be effective, even more so than two vaccine doses. Combining previous infection with vaccination provided even better protection. The speaker did not take a booster shot. Translation: Myocarditis was more common in young men, especially those aged 16-17. Most cases were mild, but some were severe. The condition was most frequent after the second vaccine dose. Natural immunity from prior COVID infection was found to be effective, even more so than two vaccine doses. Combining previous infection with vaccination provided even better protection. The speaker did not take a booster shot.

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The discussion centers on new evidence regarding myocarditis and pericarditis in the context of mRNA vaccination. It cites earlier 2022 German research showing that heart damage seen in myocarditis cases after vaccination may be a vaccine-triggered autoimmune reaction. The study analyzed endomyocardial biopsy samples and found that the cardiac tissue’s spike protein detection and CD4+ T cell–dominated inflammation suggested an autoimmune mechanism linking the vaccine to heart damage. This was contrasted with an Israel-based population study of hundreds of thousands of unvaccinated individuals that reported no increase in myocarditis or pericarditis incidence, highlighting a discrepancy with the vaccine-triggered autoimmune hypothesis. The center of the new claim is a study published in Circulation by the American Heart Association. The speakers emphasize the credibility of Circulation as a top cardiovascular journal. The study used an experimental mouse model to induce cardiac damage and then examined humans with similar heart damage after vaccination to see if the same mechanism applied. They report that T cells from patients with acute myopericarditis recognize vaccine-encoded spike epitopes that are homologous to cardiac self-proteins. In other words, the immune cells targeting the spike protein may also attack cardiac proteins due to molecular similarity. Further details from the study indicate that, in patients with mild pericarditis after mRNA vaccination (but not in those with COVID-19), there was an expanded pattern of cytokine production similar to that observed in myopericarditis–affected mice and in autoimmune myocarditis. The takeaway provided in plain language is that post-mRNA vaccine myopericarditis is driven by molecular mimicry, causing the immune system to fail to distinguish self from non-self in susceptible patients. The susceptibility is described as being influenced by the widespread distribution of the vaccine, which purportedly leads to heart-homing imprinting and a heart-targeted autoimmune response. The speakers stress that this journal is not fringe and highlight its high impact in cardiovascular medicine. They conclude that the data collectively suggest a mechanism by which the vaccine could provoke cardiac autoimmunity, with implications for clinical communication and understanding of post-vaccination myocarditis.

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We are witnessing a significant increase in cases of myocarditis, with thousands reported in recent studies compared to only a few cases in the past. The potential long-term effects of vaccine-induced myocarditis are concerning, with some cases leading to cardiac arrests years after vaccination. This suggests that the current cases may just be the beginning, and regulatory concerns should extend for at least 5 to 15 years post-vaccination.

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Myocarditis was most common in young men, with rates as high as 1 in 5000 vaccine recipients. The condition was mostly mild but could have lasting effects. Natural immunity from prior COVID infection was shown to be more protective than two vaccine doses. Combining prior infection with vaccination provided even better protection. The speaker did not take a booster shot.

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The discussion centers on evidence linking myocarditis and pericarditis to mRNA vaccination and the proposed mechanism behind it. It references a 2022 German study reporting that endomyocardial biopsy data from people with myocarditis showed cardiac detection of the spike protein and CD4+ T cell–dominated inflammation, suggesting a vaccine-triggered autoimmune reaction. The presenters note headlines at the time comparing myocarditis risk to infection, with claims that infection causes more myocarditis, and remind that vaccines were said not to stop transmission. They then cite a large Israeli population study from the same year involving subjects not vaccinated against SARS-CoV-2, which found no increase in the incidence of myocarditis or pericarditis, implying no observed vaccine-related signal in that cohort. Attention shifts to a more recent study published in Circulation by the American Heart Association, described as a high-impact, non-fringe journal, indicating a clearer mechanism has been demonstrated. The study described used an experimental mouse model to induce cardiac damage and then compared it to human cases with heart damage following vaccination. It states that T cells from patients with acute myocarditis or myopericarditis recognize vaccine-encoded spike epitopes that are homologous to cardiac self proteins, meaning the immune response to the spike protein can cross-react with heart tissues. The researchers further report that functional responses to potassium channels in patients with mild pericarditis after mRNA vaccination, but not in patients with COVID-19, showed an expanded pattern of cytokine production similar to that observed in myopericarditis mice and in autoimmune myocarditis. In plain terms, the summary of their takeaway is that post-mRNA vaccine myopericarditis is driven by molecular mimicry: the immune system cannot distinguish self from non-self, leading to an autoimmune attack on heart tissue in susceptible patients. The distribution of the vaccine (its widespread dissemination) is cited as a factor that makes patients susceptible by promoting heart-homing imprinting, effectively creating an anti-heart autoimmune response. The speakers emphasize that this Circulation article is a top-tier source, underscoring that the mechanism has been demonstrated with both animal models and human pathology, supporting the claim that the phenomenon has a defined immunological basis.

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The speaker discusses a significant increase in myocarditis cases post-vaccination, with studies showing abnormal cardiac scans in vaccinated individuals. They suggest a potential link between mRNA vaccines and heart inflammation, emphasizing the need for long-term monitoring. Research indicates that mRNA and spike proteins can cause myocarditis, posing a concern for all mRNA products. The heart appears to be a vulnerable target due to various factors.

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This vaccine has been widely used and is considered safe, with experience in over a billion people. While there is a very low risk of myocarditis, especially in young men, associated with the mRNA technology, the risk of getting myocarditis from COVID-19 itself is higher than the risk from the vaccine.

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Before COVID-19, I only encountered two cases of myocarditis in my entire career as a cardiologist. It was a rare condition, usually caused by parvovirus or adenovirus. However, now I see two cases per day in the clinic. We have learned that COVID-19 can cause myocarditis. Various organizations, such as the Israeli and US military, as well as college leagues, conducted screening programs in 2020 and found a few cases, but none were serious or resulted in hospitalizations or deaths. These programs were later discontinued when vaccines were introduced. However, within six months, regulatory agencies confirmed that the COVID-19 vaccines can cause myocarditis, and it can be fatal. It's important for people to understand the risks associated with each vaccine dose they take.

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The FDA is adding a warning to the COVID vaccine that it causes myocarditis, something that has been reported on and that many people have raised alarms about. It was found in preclinical studies, which had to be paused due to signals. The FDA release headline states the warning is about heart side effects for young males. The FDA press release says the warning has to go into the vaccine insert. A study found that at a medium follow-up of approximately five months post vaccination, persistence of abnormal cardiac magnetic resonance imaging findings, a marker for myocardial injury, was common. The clinical and prognostic significance of these findings is not known. Damage to heart muscles means they do not reproduce, which is potentially problematic.

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The speaker asks if there is a higher incidence of myocarditis among boys aged 16 to 24 after taking the vaccine. The other speaker responds that the data from the CDC actually show that there is less risk of myocarditis for those who get the vaccine compared to those who get COVID infection. The first speaker clarifies if they are saying that males in the 16 to 24 age group who take the vaccine have a lower risk of myocarditis than those who contract the disease. The second speaker confirms this.

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We have experience with this vaccine in a billion people, showing it is safe. The mRNA vaccine carries a very low risk of myocarditis, especially in young men. However, the risk of myocarditis from COVID is higher than from the vaccine.

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In the question, myocarditis is discussed in relation to COVID-19. It has been mentioned for some time that infection with the novel coronavirus can lead to myocarditis, and that in some cases myocarditis can be severe or progress to myocarditis with structural complications. It is noted that myocarditis can also occur after vaccination, but the incidence is small and the symptoms are mild, with most people recovering. The speaker emphasizes that even when myocarditis occurs after vaccination, the risk is small and the condition tends to be mild. The statement asserts that almost all individuals recover from vaccine-associated myocarditis. Therefore, even if people who have received a vaccine develop myocarditis, the situation is not something to be alarmed about. The speaker argues that the benefits of vaccination far outweigh the risks, and that the idea of significant changes or issues related to the vaccine is not supported. The overall conclusion presented is that the risks of myocarditis, whether from infection or vaccination, are outweighed by the benefits of vaccination. Key points reiterated include: - COVID-19 infection can cause myocarditis, sometimes with considerable severity or with structural heart complications. - Myocarditis can also occur after vaccination, but the occurrence is rare and the symptoms are generally mild. - The vast majority of people with vaccine-associated myocarditis recover. - The perceived risk of myocarditis following vaccination should not be a cause for alarm, given that the benefits of vaccination are greater. - There is no indication that anything about the vaccine itself changes in a way that would alter this risk-benefit balance. Overall, the message is that myocarditis is a potential outcome associated with both infection and vaccination, but the frequency is low, the illness is typically mild, recovery is common, and vaccination remains advantageous.

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The CDC is reviewing reports of heart inflammation in vaccinated teenagers and young adults and is investigating a possible connection to the COVID vaccines. Health officials in Washington have also received similar reports. These cases of heart inflammation are considered rare, with around 400 confirmed cases after receiving the Moderna or Pfizer vaccines. The FDA is expected to put a warning label on the vaccines. A CDC panel suggests a likely association between the heart condition and vaccinated young adults, but it's not yet proven that the vaccine caused it. Despite these cases, medical experts encourage young people to get vaccinated, saying the benefits of vaccination far outweigh the risks, and that these complications were not unexpected.

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We have experience with this vaccine in a billion people, showing it is safe. While there is a low risk of myocarditis with mRNA vaccines, the risk from COVID is higher than the vaccine's risk, especially in young men.

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Before COVID-19, I only encountered two cases of myocarditis in my entire career as a cardiologist. It was a rare condition, usually caused by parvovirus or adenovirus. However, now I see two cases per day in the clinic. We have learned that COVID-19 can cause myocarditis. Various organizations, such as the Israeli and US military, as well as college leagues, conducted extensive screening programs for COVID-induced myocarditis in 2020. They found a few cases that met the definition, but none were serious or resulted in hospitalizations or deaths. These screening programs were later discontinued when vaccines were introduced. However, within six months, regulatory agencies confirmed that the COVID-19 vaccines can cause myocarditis. It is important for people to understand that there is a risk of vaccine-induced myocarditis with every shot they take.

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- The discussion opens with a critique of how public health authorities in the United States and much of the media discouraged experimentation with COVID-19 treatments, instead pushing vaccination and portraying other approaches as dangerous. The hosts ask why treatments were sidelined and treated as heretical to question. - Speaker 1 explains that the core idea was to stamp out “vaccine hesitation,” which he frames not as a purely scientific issue but as a form of heresy. He notes a broad literature on vaccine hesitancy and contrasts it with the perception of the vaccine as a liberating savior. He points to a Vatican €20 silver coin (2022) commemorating the COVID-19 vaccine, described by Vatican catalogs as “a boy prepares to receive the Eucharist,” which the speakers interpret as an overlay of religious iconography with vaccination imagery. They also reference Diego Rivera’s mural in Detroit, interpreted as depicting the vaccine as a Eucharist, and a South African church banner reading “even the blood of Christ cannot protect you, get vaccinated,” highlighting what they see as provocative uses of religious symbolism to promote vaccination. - They claim that the Biden administration’s COVID Vaccine Corps distributed billions of dollars to major sports leagues (NFL, MLB) and that many mainline churches reportedly received money to push vaccination, with many clergy not opposing the push. The implication is that monetary incentives influenced public figures and organizations to advocate for vaccines, contributing to a climate in which questioning orthodoxy was difficult. - The speakers discuss the social dynamics around vaccine “heresy,” using Aaron Rodgers’ experience with isolation and shaming in the NFL and Novak Djokovic’s experiences in Australia to illustrate how prominent individuals who questioned or fell outside the orthodoxy faced punitive pressure. They compare this to a Reformation-era conflict over doctrinal correctness and describe a psychology of stigmatizing dissent as a tool to enforce conformity. - They argue the imperative driving institutions was the belief that the vaccine was the central, non-negotiable public-health objective, seemingly above other medical considerations. The central question they raise is why vaccines became the sole priority, seemingly overriding a broader, more nuanced evaluation of medical options and individual risk. - The conversation shifts to epistemology and the nature of science. Speaker 1 suggests medicine often relies on orthodoxies and presuppositions, rather than purely empirical processes. He recounts a Kantian view that interpretation depends on preexisting categories, and he uses this to argue that medical decision-making can be constrained by established doctrines, which may obscure questions about optimization and safety. - They recount the 1986 National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act and discuss Sara Sotomayor’s dissent, which argued that liability exposure is a key incentive for safety and improvement in vaccine development. They argue that the current system creates minimal liability for manufacturers, reducing the incentive to optimize safety, and they use this to question how the system encourages continuous safety improvements. - The hosts recount the early-treatment movement led by Peter McCullough and others, including a Senate hearing organized by Ron Johnson in November 2020 to discuss early-treatment options with FDA-approved drugs like hydroxychloroquine. They criticize what they describe as aggressive pushback against such approaches, noting that McCullough faced professional sanctions and lawsuits despite presenting peer-reviewed literature. - They return to the concept of orthodoxy and dogma, arguing that the medical establishment often suppresses dissent, citing YouTube removing a McCullough interview and the broader pattern of silencing challenge to the vaccine narrative. They stress that the social and institutional systems prize conformity and punish those who deviate, creating a climate of distrust toward official health bodies. - The discussion broadens into metaphysical and philosophical territory, with references to the Grand Inquisitor from Dostoevsky’s The Brothers Karamazov. They propose that elites—whether religious, political, or scientific—tend to prefer “taking care” of people through control rather than preserving individual responsibility and free will. The Grand Inquisitor tale is used to illustrate a recurring human temptation: to replace personal liberty with a protected, paternalistic order. - They discuss messenger RNA (mRNA) technology as a central manifestation of Promethean or Luciferian intellect—humans attempting to “read and write in the language of God.” They describe the scientific arc from transcription and translation to mRNA vaccines, noting Francis Collins’s The Language of God and the idea of humans “coding life.” They caution that mRNA vaccines involve injecting genetic material and point to the symbolic and ritual power of vaccination as a form of modern sacrament. - The speakers emphasize that the mRNA approach represents both a profound scientific achievement and a source of deep concern. They discuss fertility signals and potential adverse effects, including myocarditis in young people, and cite the July 2021 NEJM case study as highlighting safety concerns for myocarditis in adolescent males. They reference the FDA deliberative-committee discussions, noting that some influential voices publicly questioned the risk-benefit calculus for young people, yet faced pressure or dismissal within the orthodox framework. - They describe post-hoc investigations and testimonies suggesting that adverse events (like myocarditis) might have been downplayed or obscured, and they assert that public trust in health institutions has eroded as a result. They mention ongoing debates about whether vaccine-induced changes might affect future generations, referencing studies about transcripts of mRNA in cancer cells and liver cells, and they stress the need for independent scrutiny by scientists not “entranced” by the vaccine program. - The dialogue returns to the broader human condition: a tension between curiosity and restraint, knowledge and humility. They return to Dostoevsky’s moral questions about free will, responsibility, and the limits of human knowledge, concluding that scientific hubris can lead to dangerous consequences when it overrides open inquiry and accountability. - In closing, while the guests reflect on past missteps and the need for integrity in medicine, they underscore the ongoing questions about how evidence is interpreted, how dissent is treated, and how society balances scientific progress with humility, transparency, and respect for individual judgment.

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Before the COVID-19 vaccine, myocarditis cases were rare, with only 1 or 2 cases per year out of 15,021,000 autopsies. However, now it has become a common diagnosis, particularly among younger individuals.

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The CDC safety group has found a link between the COVID-19 vaccine and heart conditions in young adults. Reports of chest pain, fluttering, and inflammation around the heart have been investigated by the CDC. These side effects, known as myocarditis, can cause fast pains and shortness of breath. The Canadian Foodiatric Society also recognizes myocarditis as a potential side effect of the vaccine.

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Myocarditis, or heart inflammation, is more common than previously believed. Recent studies show that around 20% of individuals who received the COVID vaccine experience myocarditis, as confirmed by echocardiograms and other tests. This means that out of every 1 million vaccinated people, around 200,000 will have evidence of heart damage. Unfortunately, those who develop myocarditis have a 50% chance of surviving only 5 years. This alarming increase in myocarditis cases is due to the cardiotoxic nature of the vaccine. These facts, shared by Dr. Cussell and Shoemaker from Toronto, highlight the concerning impact of the vaccine on heart health.

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Before COVID-19, I only encountered two cases of myocarditis in my entire career as a cardiologist. However, now I see two cases per day in the clinic. We have learned that COVID-19 can cause myocarditis, and various organizations conducted screening programs in 2020. These programs found a few cases that met the definition of myocarditis, but none were serious or resulted in hospitalizations or deaths. After the introduction of vaccines, regulatory agencies acknowledged that the vaccines can cause COVID-19 vaccine-induced myocarditis, which can be fatal. It's important for people to understand that there is a risk associated with every vaccine shot they take.

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Vaccination introduces mRNA into the bloodstream, which is taken up by major organs, including the heart. This process leads to the production of spike protein in heart muscle cells, resulting in inflammation and an increased risk of myocarditis. A large study indicated a 500% higher risk of myocarditis following COVID vaccination. Symptoms of myocarditis can be triggered during early morning hours (3 AM to 6 AM) when catecholamines like dopamine and epinephrine surge, as well as during exercise. These triggers can lead to serious heart issues, including ventricular tachycardia and sudden death.

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We are witnessing a surge in myocarditis cases post-vaccination, with numbers far exceeding pre-pandemic levels. Previously rare, I now see hundreds of cases in my practice, some fatal. Studies show up to 18,000 cases reported. The Hoelscher paper suggests vaccine-induced myocarditis as a likely cause of sudden adult death syndrome, with cases emerging years after vaccination. FDA regulations indicate a potential 15-year window of concern post-injection. This issue may be more widespread and long-lasting than we realize.

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In October 2020, the FDA mentioned that myocarditis could be a result of the COVID vaccines. In June 2021, the FDA confirmed that the vaccines can cause heart inflammation. Prior to COVID, patients with myocarditis were advised not to exercise due to the risk of cardiac arrest. Now, there are 800 peer-reviewed papers on COVID vaccine-induced myocarditis. Two studies showed a 2.5% rate of heart damage after receiving the second or third vaccine dose. When heart damage occurs, there can be variations in electrical conduction, leading to reentry and fast heart rhythms like ventricular tachycardia. This can progress to ventricular fibrillation, which is fatal. A recent study confirmed that vaccine-induced myocarditis is always fatal.
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