Everyone with a phone or computer has seen the mega-viral videos and photos of 28-year-old pop star Justin Bieber. “As you can see, that eye isn’t blinking,” he told his 241 million Instagram followers last weekend. Bieber’s handsome face is droopy and lopsided; he “can’t smile”, his “nostril doesn’t move” and “there is complete paralysis” on the left side of his face.
The artist’s doctors diagnosed him with Ramsay Hunt syndrome, a “rare neurological disorder” characterized by facial paralysis “caused by the varicella-zoster virus” (which causes chickenpox in children and shingles in adults) , according to the National Organization for Rare Disorders. .
Media around the world rushed to assure the Beliebers (the celebrity’s huge global fanbase) that the dark singer’s medical condition could have absolutely nothing to do with the experimental COVID-19 injections.
EuroNews, which reaches an audience of 440 million households in 160 countries across Europe, flatly said there was “no connection to the COVID vaccination” associated with Bieber’s facial paralysis.
Dr Anthony Youn, who bills himself as America’s ‘holistic plastic surgeon’, told his nearly 4 million YouTube viewers that it was ‘unreasonable’ to raise concerns about COVID-19 bites and the fate of Bieber, largely because the federal vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS) (where he says he found 62 cases of HHR linked to the COVID-19 vaccine) is “unconfirmed and unverified.” He dismissed these cases despite medical professionals considering the government-run VAERS database a critical early warning system since 1990 and crediting its passive monitoring with “improving data quality.” reported and a significant contribution to safeguarding public health”. As a research team noted in the peer-reviewed journal Pediatric Annals, “The investigation that led to the voluntary withdrawal of the rotavirus vaccine was triggered by nine reports of intussuception at VAERS, eight of which were were produced within a week of the first dose of this vaccine.”
(Takeaway: An online doctor who works on breasts for a living is no more qualified than you or me to parse The Science, no matter how many degrees he puts after his name or how many views that his videos accumulate.)
Rolling Stone medical experts mocked ‘anti-vaxxers’ for ‘turning on Justin Bieber’s facial paralysis’ and relied on an expert who cited ‘significant stressors in life, such as a divorce or a move” as a more plausible cause of the pop star’s ailments than anything related to the beatings of COVID-19. The left-leaning salon has also taken to the story to portray vax COVID-19 critics as “conspiracy” propagators.
HITC, a popular games, sports and movies website, has proclaimed that any link between Ramsay Hunt Syndrome (RHS) and COVID-19 strokes has already been “debunked”. The “rumors are false,” claimed his reporter, because “there has been no clear evidence” of vaccine-induced HRH.
The truth is, no one knows, and anyone who makes a definitive statement one way or the other is 1) lying; 2) ignorant; 3) politically motivated; 4) paid, or a combination thereof. It doesn’t help that Bieber isn’t clear on whether he’s been vaccinated against COVID-19, what vaccine(s) he received, and how many boosters, if any, he received and when.
What we do know is that Bieber’s concert crew implemented a vaccine requirement for attendees; Bieber reportedly tested positive for COVID-19 in February; Bieber’s healthy young wife Hailey suffered a mini-stroke when a blood clot traveled to her brain; blood clots are a rare but real side effect of the COVID-19 vaccination; and researchers have documented a small but real number of incidents of Ramsay Hunt syndrome as a possible result of COVID-19 vaccination or “coexistence” with COVID-19 infection.
It’s downright quackery to unequivocally deny that experimental COVID-19 bites could cause HRH, just as it was bogus science and journalistic malpractice to deny or downplay “rare” but real cases of paralysis. of Bell induced by the bite of COVID-19. And it’s an outright lie to claim, as University of Illinois at Chicago epidemiologist Dr. Katrine Wallace tweeted, that Justin Bieber’s Ramsay Hunt Syndrome is a “disease vaccine-preventable” that serves as a “great example (of) why vaccines are important.”
The truth is, a research team reported in the Journal of Neurology last November that varicella zoster virus (VZV)-induced neurological diseases such as RHS “could be a possible event triggered by COVID vaccination.” -19″. This is the exact opposite of Wallace’s Twitter propaganda masquerading as unassailable “science”. The researchers were careful to point out the benefits of the COVID-19 hits because, well, we know what happens to anyone who dares challenge Big Pharma orthodoxy. But despite this enormous pressure, the researchers urged further investigation of the potential association between COVID-19 bites and VZV reactivation – and recommended that clinicians “promptly start…specific antiviral therapy” for patients who suffer from neurological disorders after vaccination.
You can keep an eye out for vaccine injury reports at https://openvaers.com/covid-data and read the scientific literature published on Pub Med for yourself. Do your own homework. Beware of all corporate media. And always remember:
“Misinformation” is information they want you to miss. “Misinformation” is the truth they reject.
Michelle Malkin’s email address is [email protected] To learn more about Michelle Malkin and read articles by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.
Photo credit: spencerbdavis1 at Pixabay