Vaccine victims with no voice (Vol. 20)

On December 11, 2020, the Food and Drug Administration authorized the first COVID-19 vaccine made by Pfizer-BioNTech.  

While the pharma companies and medical authorities have profited from every injection, the shots have injured countless people irreparably and destroyed the lives they knew.      

The media will not give voice to these injured whose ranks grow daily.      

Here we share some of their stories, in cooperation with RealNotRare. 

Emmanuel Torres

Whatever faith Emmanuel Torres had in government, he says it’s disappeared.

The 32-year-old New York resident received his second Pfizer dose in November 2021 due to a vaccine mandate decreed by then-New York City Mayor Bill DeBlasio. The next morning, Emmanuel felt feverish and strong chills. But he really grew concerned when the vision in his right eye began to fail. He looked down the street and saw a large black dot in his peripheral vision His vision dropped to 20/30 overnight.

He was diagnosed with Central Serous Retinopathy (CSR), which is when fluid builds up behind the retina. Emmanuel thought it was the vaccine, but doctors insisted it was caused by stress.

Within the next seven months, Emmanuel was treated with laser therapy, which seemed to help — but he says he continues to have recurring issues.

“I do believe now I could have left my job, let them fire me and seen where the road would have led me,” says Emmanuel. “It is my single biggest regret.”

He also says he wishes other people really appreciated freedom. 

“Now I understand it is our God-given right to be sovereign over our own bodies.”

Carissa Lynn

Carissa Lynn never took her second Moderna dose.

The 33-year-old received her first vaccine in September 2021, but only because she was ostracized from family events and, she says, because she is “not very intelligent”.

Driving home from her vaccination, Carissa’s hands and feet turned numb. Her ears were ringing. She was sweating and her heart started racing.

At the emergency room she was given a sedative, but her heart rate still wouldn’t drop below 145. They referred her to a cardiologist to check for myocarditis and sent her home.

The cardiogram — performed weeks later — showed nothing, but she soon began to feel more severe symptoms. She became nauseous and started vomiting daily. She was dizzy. She suffered extreme memory loss. Doctors tried diagnosing her with COVID-19.

This went on for five months, during which she lost 20 pounds. But she almost never went to the ER because Ontario was under lockdown and she figured she would die in her sleep anyway.

“Well over a year out now, and my health improved slightly but turned into an illness that goes undiagnosed, because it doesn’t exist,” says Carissa. Some days she feels back to her old healthy, energetic self. Other days she passes out while standing.

She also gets disoriented and forgetful, making it hard to hold down a job, so she expects to file bankruptcy soon.

Carissa says, “[I am] sharing my horrific story, so that one day the ones that survive will know what happened to us for factual, historical purposes.”

Mane Páez

In January 2022 Ecuador resident Mane Páez received her third vaccine — AstraZeneca, following two doses of Sinovac.

The 26-year-old felt a fever for the next two days but otherwise remained fine. A week later, she started taking painkillers.

Mane’s body began to ache, followed by strong headaches. Doctors diagnosed her with stress, but then she developed numbness in her legs, and petechia, bleeding spots on the skin. Doctors told her it was an allergic reaction to the painkillers. 

But Mane had a hunch. She began doing her own research and reading articles on AstraZeneca’s vaccine and the condition she was suffering. She asked her doctor to test her platelet count, and results show it had reduced. She was referred to a hematologist and taken off painkillers.

She begged her doctors to investigate her condition as vaccine-induced, but she was shot down. She brought them scientific research she found online but they refused to look at it.

By February she could no longer feel the left side of her body. She was taken to the hospital where she began having seizures and was admitted to the ICU. Soon after she suffered a stroke and has been trying to recover her body movement ever since.

“My life changed forever,” says Mane.

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