When You Can't Talk About It
Family by family, we can change the future for the better, by learning to talk about it.
Friday, September 29th, 2023
Dear Freedom Friends,
Today, as I was reading a Tweet by Dr. Peter McCullough, a woman posted this comment:
“I sent all the information I could find to my dad, I practically begged him not to let my brothers get jabbed. This morning I got a message to say my brother, 21 years old has had a suspected heart attack and been diagnosed with myocarditis. Devastated.”
Can you relate to this woman’s tweet? I can.
A few months ago, my step-mother informed me that my younger brother was sick. Something was wrong with his heart. She was flying out to help him.
My brother is 38 years old. He cleaned up his diet about ten years ago, doesn’t drink or smoke, exercises regularly, is a good, lean weight, and there is little to no history of heart disease in our family. And, I believe my brother got the primary set of experimental Covid mRNA injections plus at least one booster.
Now, he has “idiopathic” heart disease. “Idiopathic” means “we don’t know the cause.” His heart specialist also gave him a second diagnosis — Long Covid.
When I told my step-Mom that I was thinking about texting my brother to say hi and express my love and hope for his improved health, she immediately said: “Just don’t mention vaccines.”
This is a very real problem, on so many levels.
From a science perspective, if we want our medical knowledge to evolve, we must be brave enough to face the data, and that includes talking about it openly and honestly.
From a healthy society perspective, if we want to increase our unity and strengthen our communities, the skills of diplomacy and respectful discourse about complicated issues are a must.
From the perspective of liberty and freedom from tyranny, we need to maintain a healthy level of skepticism toward authority figures — not only are humans fallible, but “power corrupts.”
But, most of all…
We need to be able to call up our friends and family and say, “Hey, I love you. I’m sorry this happened. Are you doing okay? Is there anything I can do to help?”