Hospital pulls deceptive commercial
A twisted and manipulative animated commercial featuring a young girl with Myocarditis has been pulled due to “public outcry”.
Thank God.
In case you didn’t have the wretch-worthy experience of seeing the original spot (lucky you, approach with caution), presumably created by New York Presbyterian Hospital (or from now on, Satan’s Den):
The animated, almost whimsical, commercial follows Suri — a sweet preteen girl as she explains:
“I’ve been into fashion since I can remember. But one day, I had a stomachache so bad I didn’t want to do anything.
The team at NewYork-Presbyterian said it was actually my heart. It was severely swollen — something called ‘myocarditis’.
But doctors gave me medicines and used machines to control my heartbeat. They saved me. So now I can become the next great fashion designer.”
The commercial ends with the self-aggrandizing, sweep-reality-under-the-rug, self-denial caption, “Stay amazing.”
Of course what NYPH didn’t mention was that all the Covid-Jabs they’d been dosing up kids with for the year and a half prior, came with the known side effect of myocarditis — acknowledged by the CDC since June of 2021.
In fact there were 23,926 cases of myocarditis and pericarditis reported to VAERS after “vaccination” from Dec 14, 2020 through Sept 16, 2022. Which as many of us know by now statistically represent closer to 1% of actual cases occurring.
They also didn’t mention how prior to these “safe and effective vaccines”, almost no child had myocarditis, and if they did it was extremely rare.
Rather, they presented what feels like a very normalized condition, common almost, that once diagnosed by them — they could easily cure.
Hence erasing the reality of what actually caused the condition in the first place, and removing NYPH’s responsibility for encouraging and promoting it.
In this world no one is responsible for Suri’s myocarditis, it simply is “there”. So NYPH has denied the cause of it, denied its severity, denied their part in it, then cast themselves as the hero for its discovery and cure.
Originally reported by Suzanne Burdick, Ph.D, via The Defender.