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Follow to the friend of a friend who died of myocarditis after getting the vaccine

In follow up to my post from Friday morning, we got
an answer. Friday afternoon the medical examiner
called me. After almost 10 months of tests and
consulting experts, he made the final determination
that my sweet Jared had myocarditis from the
vaccine, which resulted in a fatal cardiac arrhythmia
while he slept.
We had no warning he had this. He did have a high
fevers after he got the vaccine, and in retrospect I
understand now that was due to his heart inflaming.
But then he was better. No chest pain, no shortness
of breath. The day before he died he stood for 6
hours in a sound booth for our church's Saturday
night Easter service. We stayed up late that night
watching a movie, and then a recorded basketball
game.
Myocarditis wasn't even listed as a potential reaction
when he got the vaccine. It was soon after his death
those reports started coming out. It's been almost 10
months for them to finally link his death directly to
the vaccine.
Honestly it's pretty scary for me to publicly post this.
I understand how this topic can be controversial. I
have always been 100% for vaccinations. I was in the
first round of hospital staff that got it in December of
2020. But this experience has left me scared. And
these stories are not being shared, not given credit

@Breastman

The Bad Cat offers a different opinion on the Canadian Freedom Convoy complete with videos. Now I admit the article and the videos are pro-Freedom Convoy, but if your link has any validity one would expect to see an occasional swastika or Confederate flag. Alas, I don’t see even one. So do you think your link is misinformation or just seriously misguided in its advocacy? I am not understanding why you are not returning to defend your position. I would love to have a civil discourse with you. In the meantime read the Bad Cat and watch the videos. Maybe it will be persuasive enough to change your mind!




Oh, I almost forgot something I wanted to say. Even if there were swastikas being attached to trucks in the convoy, considering it was a “Freedom Convoy” I imagine the swastikas were displayed as an “in your face” to the Nazi-like tactics being used by the Canadian government. Even if there were American Confederate flags being flown somewhere within the convoy I doubt seriously the intention was to show support for slavery, but rather a not so subtle display to the tyrannical government that rebellion is an option.

Shootout at the Golden Corral

Well, not really a shootout, but this is better than the old Midsouth Wrestling “pandemonium in the ring!” moments. Great line from a different article: “All you can eat becomes all you can beat”. 😂😂😂

Best HS athlete you ever played against

Off-board conversation made me think of this topic.

Way back in my day, got to compete against some really good players, including a lot that ended up at OSU - Leland Edwards (wrestling at OSU, but was a damned good catcher and football player), Chabon Childers, JT Messick, Bobby Buzzard, Craig Wagner (all baseball at OSU). Some that didn't, like Mack Chambers, Ryan Franklin, Jamie Bluma.

I think probably the best all-around athlete I ever played against was Sand Springs' Jay Fleishman. The previously-impossible three-sport All-stater. Football, wrestling (5a state champ at 178) and baseball. Old timers around here will recall he was a starting safety as a true frosh at OSU in '88.

I caught a bullpen for a first-rounder once, and thats probably worth an honorable mention. Scott Ruffcorn. He came back to Baylor in the fall after rookie ball. His son was OU's closer the last year or two, after transferring from A&M.

/End reminiscing about the good ol days

Please Pray for my Friend and Fellow Poke

Erik Fleak. Erik has had a rough 3 years plus. I won’t go into all the details but he miraculously survived a bad stroke in September 2019. After spending about 70 days at St Francis, he was about 98% back to his normal self.

Last night he fell in the restroom at GIA while attending the wrestling match. He was initially responsive. They took him to Stillwater Medical then later life flighted him to St Francis. They have ruled out another stroke and his coil from the last time is intact. But he suffered extensive bleeding. And has been completely unresponsive. Fear is that there is no brain activity.

He’s as Orange as it gets. And, while it really looks grim, he’s proven he’s a fighter. Just lift him and his family up if you are moved to do so.

The ACLU is not a leftist organization???

That‘s what someone said on this board last week.

Yet, look at this story from today’s Dallas Morning News.

http://media.cdn.pagesuite.com/clip...fdd4b1f841d/11/20220202024002433/clipping.jpg

Yes, the ACLU is defending a transgender inmate who wants the government to pay for their trans surgery. No, that‘s not liberal at all! The ACLU attorney said that the inmate should be able to get “the care she needs and that the Constitition requires.” Yeah. I’m sure our Founding Fathers would have approved of this… NOT!

The Athletic: highlights Bullet recruiting photos

Great pub! OKState part of the article is posted below tweet

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A horse, a Rolls-Royce, 10 pairs of cleats? The growing importance of photo shoots in college football recruiting​

Antonio Morales and Ari Wasserman 6h ago
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There is a horse stall in the west end of Boone Pickens Stadium where Oklahoma State’s mascot, Bullet IV, is kept during home football games. The Cowboys staff had that precise location in mind for its next big photo shoot.

Director of football recruiting Todd Bradford knew he couldn’t have Bullet on campus for official visitors because NCAA rules prohibit photos with cheerleaders and mascots. But he knew he could have a horse. So he and the Oklahoma State staff got another one.

This could work: The official visitors would choose their uniform combination, swap out the helmet for a cowboy hat, straddle the horse and pose for the cameras.
“Photo shoots, man, that’s the most important thing on these visits,” Bradford said. “They’re a big, big deal. We wanted to do something that doesn’t look the same as everyone else. … I’ll tell you this — the players love it.”

These photographs aren’t shot with an iPhone. This is a major production requiring high-end cameras, proper lighting and an entire creative team to edit and produce the content. The photos make a statement. In 2022, statements travel on Twitter and Instagram.
These photo shoots are the latest wave of what matters now in recruiting (aside from the still uncharted territory of name, image and likeness deals, of course). They are flashy; they help prospects grow their personal brands by accumulating likes and clout online; they legitimize a recruitment. If a recruit takes a picture in a program’s uniform, that means something. That means they’re wanted.
“It plays a really pivotal role in recruiting,” said Malik “Fig” James, who visits several college campuses every year with his seven-on-seven team, Premium. “(If) you’ve got some crappy (photos), that’s less edits, and less edits mean less posts, and less posts mean less interactions with fans.”

There are a few downsides to this trend, too: It’s expensive, it can be a time-waster if prospects are visiting programs in which they aren’t really interested in, and creative departments — which are now also permitted to create videos for prospects — are overwhelmed. The funniest part? A lot of college staffers can’t stand them.
“At the very beginning it was a task, then it became a job and now it’s a department,” a Power 5 recruiting coordinator said. “If you don’t have a department now, you’re outgunned.”

The final product from Oklahoma State’s official visit weekend in January was a hit. Look at three-star receiver Stephon Johnson Jr.’s Twitter profile. You’ll see the former Oregon commit from DeSoto (Texas) High sharing pictures of himself up in the saddle, grinning into the camera. When Johnson announces his college decision this week, maybe he ends up at Oklahoma State. If he doesn’t, he’ll likely remember his visit for the rest of his life.

“Anytime teams go above and beyond to show kids they’re wanted, that’s great,” said Johnson’s father, Stephon Sr. “We had no idea that there was going to be a horse there. … He is no country boy by no stretch of the imagination, but his swag is different, and it appeals to the type of kid he is.”

The resources being poured into these shoots aren’t unique to Oklahoma State. Look at Louisville, which orchestrated photo shoots this year with Rolls-Royces and Mercedes-Benz G-Classes on the field. The flashier, the better.

“It’s a creativity thing,” Louisville director of player personnel Eron Hodges said. “It does add a little something special that they don’t see or get on a typical basis. That’s our whole goal. Whenever we do something, no matter what school you’re at, you don’t suit up to be second.

“And the cars? That’s important because that’s what these kids aspire to have. Part of it is giving people a vision of what the future can be. It gives them something to reach for.”

Newly released State memos undercut Democrats' Ukraine impeachment story


When are people going to get tired of Democrats lying to them for their own political gain?

@Syskatine, Part Three

I have never thought of Pat Buchanan as someone who hates America. But I guess he does if we apply your definition that anyone who criticizes our government’s policy in Ukraine as an America hater. Still, he makes a lot of sense as he questions the need to add so many countries to NATO, thus requiring our military to jump to their defense even though they have no strategic value to the US. Ask yourself: why, oh why, does our security state want this involvement?


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Tech gonna Tech!

Lubbock STD rate out of control!


By Camelia Juarez
Published: Jan. 31, 2022 at 8:41 PM CST|Updated: 16 hours ago

LUBBOCK, Texas (KCBD) - The Lubbock Health Department is gaining new resources to combat a rise in sexually transmitted infections across the area.

Lubbock county saw a nearly 300% increase in syphilis cases. Hockley and Terry county also saw a significant rise.

The state health department reported Lubbock County has seen cases increase from 111 to 452 (307.2%). Hockley County reports have increased from 3 to 36 cases (1,100%). Terry County has seen an increase from 13 to 24 cases (84.6%)
Health director Katherine Wells says a jump in cases is a result of the public health workforce redirecting their efforts to the covid-19 response.
Syphilis is a treatable sexually transmitted infection.

It often causes sores, rashes, and if left untreated, can lead to dementia and even blindness.

Without care, pregnant women can pass on the infection to their newborns.

Wells says syphilis goes undetected as a painless sore, but her clinic often finds folks in the second stage of the infection.

“That’s when we see a rash on the soles of their feet, or on the palms of their hands. People can also have hair loss, vision. Like a body rash, they’ll often see the whole trunk of the person when they take their shirt off, will have a red splotchy rash on their trunk,” Wells said
Fortunately, the health department received state grant money to hire disease intervention specialists.

“We’re anticipating receiving the grant for syphilis elimination starting in March, and we actually have those positions posted right now. So, we will have local resources here dedicated specifically to Lubbock County, to work in that area. And that will also allow us to adjust our resources here to ensure that those staffs continue to work even through the COVID pandemic,” Wells said
Wells encourages folks to get tested regularly and remember testing for syphilis is done by withdrawing blood.

If you do not have insurance, you can get tested & treated for $20 by the health department, or you can make an appointment for Planned Parenthood online as well.

Copyright 2022 KCBD. All rights reserved.
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