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Bob Feldtman's avatar

As I mentioned, these were before covid. Also, the catheter you see is what I removed them a bit at a time, which breaks them up into the small pieces you see. Again. these are NOT COVID clots, but they would look exactly the same. Long and rubbery is what they are. but usually only seen after an autopsy where they can be removed as such. Cannot do that with a catheter in a live person like I did these.

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Aletheia.the.Younger's avatar

I hope you will come back and get this comment... not really a comment, but a question I just subscribed to your substack. I am trying to formulate a bill on blood transfusions from mRNA vaccinated individuals- as in the Pfizer formulation. I am getting pushback from the deep state: the legal department that writes the bills. I suspect they actually went to the evil side and asked our public health department (See SC DHEC) for their position, which is head in the ground full CDC and worse. It is a religion to them. Being deep state, they know better. I can create a substantial paper on the topic, but it would be nice if someone had done it, especially you.

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Bob Feldtman's avatar

I am but a retired heart surgeon- not a blood bank expert.. It is ALL about the money. Scientifically, I think the mRNA has likely gone through the whole population - vaccinated and unvaccinated. So it would be hard to find blood donors FOR SURE that didn't have the mRNA. Even the AIDS issue was handled by having a questionnaire about sexual habits, but not a blood test for an AIDS "virus" - As a surgeon I never went down the rabbit trail with patients about where the blood came from - who the donors were because I didn't know. If the patient had an issue, I could explain the added risks for avoiding ANY transfusion and let them know they were taking the risks. I never turned down anyone for surgery based on their decision to avoid blood transfusion. It is going to be nigh impossible to get a bill written that the "deep state" will go along with. Amazing isn't it that nobody has ever written much about this in the "lay press". It is kind of the third rail. Honestly, the majority of doctors don't know much about transfusions, surgeons maybe slightly more, pathologists maybe slightly more due to their involvement with the blood typing etc. See if anybody replies to our brief commentary here. I predict.. crickets, crickets... come on you very smart internists.. jump in.. surprise us. I might add (and should probably do a substack on it..) that we thought we had made things better, when we started using washed red blood cells..removing some of the antigens.. but that doesn't clot well, so then we would give a platelet pack (often from 6 people)-- and if the patient had clotting issues also another four or five "fresh frozen" plasma packs.. so before long you had exposed the patient to 10-12 donor antigen sources.. Only recently have we cut back on blood and blood product usage. as heart surgeons figured out the FRESH whole blood was the best for all parameters.. and exposed the patient to say three donors. period. But wait.. as I said, follow the money. Do the math on what the hospital and blood banks made on all those different "component therapy" packs. Plus they could be stored for quite a while. NOTE I said FRESH whole blood. So again, it is all about the money.

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Sun's avatar

(Second hand) photo evidence

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Sun's avatar

Covid clots I’ve seen have been long rubbery. Texture is often described.

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