Friday, August 13, 2021

Stockholm Syndrome?

Alyssa Kent: 40-year-old Australian woman has three brain surgeries, five seizures, stroke after first AstraZeneca shot, so will take Pfizer or Moderna for second shot

A 40-year-old mother of two, wife and pharmaceutical executive is taking industry and “vaccine” loyalty to heights that even this blog has never seen.

Mrs. Alyssa Kent received the first dose of experimental AstraZeneca viral vector DNA on May 27, according to her Instagram page. The adverse effects were swift and harsh. She immediately suffered debilitating headaches that spanned 10 straight days. But she continued working as the Senior Business Unit Director of Virology in the New Zealand/Australia division of Gilead Sciences.

The California-based company is perhaps best known for developing the expensive anti-viral drug remdesivir. The Food and Drug Administration granted emergency use authorization for the drug as a treatment for COVID-19 on May 1, 2020. Pfizer signed a multi-year agreement with Gilead in August 2020 to produce remdesivir at the Pfizer plant in McPherson, Kansas.

The good doctors at the Front Line COVID-19 Critical Care Alliance (FLCCC) said that remdesivir would be useless if the war on Ivermectin would stop. President Donald Trump used remdesivir, the MATH+ protocol, and monoclonal antibodieswhen he allegedly contracted COVID-19 in October 2020.

Downward spiral and near death

Mrs. Kent was at a work conference on or around June 6. She had a seizure and was rushed to Cessnook Hospital. Mrs. Kent had four more seizures before being transferred to John Hunter Hospital. At least one blood clot was found in her brain. She was placed in a medically-induced coma in an attempt to have her life. Meanwhile her family was told to say their last goodbyes.

While in the medically-induced coma, doctors performed three brain surgeries and 18 total MRIs and CT scans. She also developed aspiration pneumonia, meaning vomit or something else got into her lungs. A sepsis episode caused her to be readmitted to the intensive care unit.

Mrs. Kent finally came out of the coma in late June. She suffered severe brain damage, and had to teach herself how to walk, talk and eat again upon waking up. Doctors transferred her back to a rehab facility in Melbourne. The family concedes that Mrs. Kent will live in the rehab center for at least a year, but likely much longer.

A July 17 Instagram update featured Mrs. Kent speaking from her hospital bed. But it’s the final minute-and-a-half of the video that is extremely bizarre. Mrs. Kent said she “wholeheartedly believes” that the experimental shots are the only way forward for humanity. She “doesn’t want to scare anyone off,” but also wants everyone to make informed decisions.


Georgia Clark: 27-year-old Australian reporter hospitalized with pericarditis 10 days after Pfizer injection, encourages others to still get the injections


A 27-year-old Daily Telegraph reporter with no preexisting conditions is out of the hospital, but still displaying signs of psychological impairment.

Ms. Georgia Clark received her first dose of experimental Pfizer mRNA on July 2, according to her Twitter account. She posted a short video, along with a tweet saying “first step to freedom.”

Ms. Clark reported severe headaches and fatigue days after the first injection. She received the second dose on July 25. Ms. Clark not only basked in seeing a long line of people in front of her at the vaxx clinic, but again tied the experimental injections to freedom.

The rest of her tweets that day spoke of having a potential “vaccine party,” while also promoting the arrest of protesters against lockdowns and “vaccine” mandates.

She tweeted only twice from July 29 to August 10, before re-emerging yesterday. And now we know why.

Ms. Clark checked into the emergency room on August 4 after suffering from severe chest pains and a high fever. But doctors discharged her after brief observation. The pain and fever persisted for the next several days, leading her to check into Concord Repatriation General Hospital on August 9. Ms. Clark was diagnosed with pericarditis, or swelling of the protective sac (pericardium) around the heart. It is a known side effect from the Pfizer injections

She posted a disturbing video from her hospital bed that displays a common psychological disposition among people who have received these injections and suffer severe adverse reactions. Ms. Clark said the pain is being managed with medication. She emphasized that her potentially-permanent heart issues as a result of Pfizer are “very rare.” Ms. Clark went further, saying “despite these side effects, I would get the vaccine again.” She said it’s a sacrifice for the greater good, and that it’s better than getting COVID-19.

Ms. Clark encouraged everyone to get the injections and “take the side effects on the chin.” She continued tweeting that day, apparently trying to convince herself that potentially-permanent heart problems are better than COVID-19 and that these side effects are “rare.” Ms. Clark was discharged yesterday, saying she would be “down and out” for a couple of days.


The term “Stockholm Syndrome” was born after the August 23, 1973 Sveriges Kreditbanken bank robbery in Stockholm, Sweden. It was a real-life drama played out on Swedish television live as it happened. Foreign news services also chronicled the events as they happened. The robbers, Jan-Erik Olsson and Clark Olofsson, held four bank employees hostage in a large vault. But he was “nice” to them, giving one hostage a jacket when she was cold and allowing all of them to call their families.

The hostages and robbers were all on a first-name basis. Hostage Kristin Enmark even volunteered to accompany the robbers in the getaway car so police wouldn’t try and harm them. All of the hostages felt that the police were a much bigger threat to their lives than the robbers. The robbers got desperate on Day 2 of the standoff and threatened to shoot the only male hostage, Sven Safstrom, in the leg to show the police they were serious. The other hostages thought it was a kind act to only threaten shooting him in the leg.

When the standoff ended on August 28, 1973 (five days later), the hostages shook hands, hugged and kissed the robbers. The hostages even forced the police to take the robbers first so they wouldn’t gun them down once the hostages were freed. All of the hostages frequently visited the robbers in prison. Olsson was finally released from prison in 2009 and penned his autobiography, entitled “Stockholm Syndrome.”


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