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by Nicolas Hulscher, MPH
We Have the Data—It’s Time to Cancel mRNA.
In my interview with Dr. Drew, I walk through the latest data linking COVID-19 mRNA shots to global surges in death and serious harm:
Among 184 Million Test Subjects, The Verdict Is Clear
The two largest COVID-19 vaccine safety studies ever conducted, involving 99 million (Faksova et al) and 85 million people (Raheleh et al), found that mRNA injections are not safe for human use. The shots significantly increase risks of the following serious adverse events:
Myocarditis (+510% after second dose)
Acute Disseminated Encephalomyelitis (+278% after first dose)
Cerebral Venous Sinus Thrombosis (+223% after first dose)
Guillain-Barré Syndrome (+149% after first dose)
Heart Attack (+286% after second dose)
Stroke (+240% after first dose)
Coronary Artery Disease (+244% after second dose)
Cardiac Arrhythmia (+199% after first dose)
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Writing tryout
Charles-Jean-Baptiste avait rarement vu sa mère aussi furieuse, et il recula de plusieurs pas quand elle s'approcha. "Mais…Enfin, maman…Ce n'était que quelques branches de sapin, puis le bois fut offert aux pauvres. N'est-ce pas une belle façon de célébrer la naissance de notre Seigneur ? -Les branches en elles-mêmes, je m'en fiche. C'est plutôt la raison de ton acte, et ses implications en termes de rivalité. Une telle démonstration d'irrespect des coutumes Alsacienne ne sera pas ignorée ni de Barré, et surtout de son neveu. Déjà, ce petit Nicolas, il est loin de ses proches, et ne peux ambitionner un office bien payé. Alors, de voir un riche héritier gâcher ses petites joies…Tu comprends qu'il t'en voudras pour un temps." expliqua froidement Anne-Marthe, son expression dure comme fer. -Oui…Mais nous n'avons pas de lien de sang, alors je m'en fiche un peu… -Puis, nous devons, pour éviter que tu ne sois supplanté, inspirer un dévouement sincère à nos domestiques. À cela s'ajoute que ton rival le plus proche, et le plus à même de te faire destitué à deux ans de plus que toi, et la plupart des aspirants au poste de Monsieur de Paris sont déjà adultes et expérimentés. Il y en a au moins une dizaine, un peu partout en France. Je fais de mon possible pour les éloigner, alors, n'en crée pas plus. Tu comprends que nous avons au moins une vingtaines de rivaux suseptibles de nous jeter à la rue, et je fais de mon mieux pour remédier à cette situation. -Oui…Je comprend, mère. -Tu comprends que pour cela, j'ai besoin de ta coopération, ou au moins que tu ne me mettes pas de bâton dans les roues. Puis, nous ne pouvons pas trop espérer des gens en dehors de notre caste. Tout comportement qui encourage les rivalités devra être écrasé dans l'oeuf, et durement. Je vais aller chercher ton petit frère, tu m'attends ici."
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Prince Jacques of Monaco and Princess Gabriella of Monaco, accompanied by their parents, Prince Albert II of Monaco and Princess Charlène of Monaco, attend their first day of school at the École Catholique François d'Assise - Nicolas Barré in Monaco -September 11th 2023.
📷 : Eric Mathon/Palais Princier de Monaco.
#prince albert#prince albert ii#princess charlene#prince jacques#princess gabriella#monegasque princely family#monaco#2023#september 2023#school#school 2023#official portraits#official portraits 2023#royal children#my edit
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“La Folle Histoire de Max et Léon” de Jonathan Barré (2016) avec Grégoire Ludig, David Marsais, Dominique Pinon, Alice Vial, Nicolas Marié, Julien Pestel, Bernard Farcy, Nicolas Maury, Bruno Wolkowitch, les participations de Christophe Lambert, Jonathan Cohen, Kyan Khojandi, Florence Foresti, Simon Astier, Alban Lenoir, Philippe Duquesne, Thomas Séraphine, Kad Merad, Pascale Arbillot, Fatsah Bouyahmed, Nabiha Akkari et la jeune Saskia Dillais De Melo, avril 2025.
#films#WWII#Palmashow#Barre#Ludig#Marsais#Pinon#Vial#Marie#Pestel#Farcy#Maury#Wolkowitch#Lambert#Cohen#Khojandi#Foresti#Astier#Lenoir#Duquesne#Seraphine#Merad#Arbillot#Bouyahmed#Akkari#DillaisDeMelo
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1842, Paris
‘I do not say this lightly’ said Augustin, putting the last pages of the manuscript back on the table ‘But this one is looking to be your best work yet.’
Nicolas flushed bright red and beamed.
‘One small thing, if I may’ Augustin went on ‘I really like what you did with Violetta, but she seems a completely different woman than she was in the early chapters. If I were you I would either re-write her to match her later personality from early on, or explain to the reader how or why he changed so much.’
Nicolas hissed and nodded - the critique was fair enough. Somewhere along the way his heroine - originally only there to be pretty, swoon when appropriate and provide a motivation for the Dashing Hero - not only developed a distinct personality, but also took over much of the plot. She was still a shy, quiet, skittish kitten of a person, but she grew more decisive about enforcing her boundaries and acting on her own. She had a certain air of mystery about her and did not talk a lot, but when she did she was wise. She also got an affinity for the spirit world, which she used to save the Hero, and a somewhat unladylike interest in architecture and mathematics.
Also the love story changed in tone - instead of viewing her as a prize, an ice-covered summit to conquer, now the Hero was striving to win her friendship first an foremost.
‘One last thing’ said Augustin with a cheeky little grin ‘Keep her blue eyes, but you would do well to make her a brunette instead of a blonde. Your inspiration is transparent as it is.’
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Climat - rédactions d'information : un défi systémique - Jean-Marc Jancovici
Climat – rédactions d’information : un défi systémique – Jean-Marc Jancovici
Encore du Jancovici vous allez me dire. Alors oui, c’est l’intervenant le plus prolixe de la partie et surtout celui qui présente la réalité la plus réelle ! Je m’expliquer car ce pléonasme c’est pas apparu par hasard. Lorsque l’on écoute des écologiste de type Y Jadot, Y Marignac ou encore S Rousseau, on entends un discours presque agréable avec un fond d’alarmisme. Lorsqu’on écoute JM Jancovici…
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#Agence France Presse#Climate Changing#JM Jancovici#Les Echos#Nicolas Barré#Sophie Huet#TF1#Thierry Thullier#Visiting Research Fellow#Wolfgang Blau
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J’ai adoré ce « voyage-voyage » ^^
Direction l’arctique russe et l’Oblast de Mourmansk pour un voyage incomparable en train.
Regard finlandais, dialogues russes économes : un vrai diamant brut pour une anti love-story qui dépoussière si joliment les comédies romantiques, avec ses rudesses truffées de finesses, grace à une tension narrative de première classe.
Quelle prouesse que cette violence qui menace sans cesse mais reste feutrée dans son huis clos ferroviaire étouffant avant qu’explose une frénésie libératoire si belle dans la tempête de neige sur les épaves de la mer de Barents !
J’ai adoré ce film et sa drôle de petite touche finale, tellement raccord avec cet humour finlandais si singulier et barré que j’aime tant. Pure beauté brute que ces beautiful loosers qui m’ont fait remonter les mots de Nicolas Bouvier : on croit qu’on va faire un voyage, mais en vérité c’est le voyage qui te fait ou te défait. Une beauté brute absolute… vodka. Sorte de « Lost in translation », sans whisky japonais cette fois mais arrosé de sbitène.
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2020-21 1st NHL Goals
January 13, 2021
Nils Höglander (Vancouver) at Edmonton.
January 14, 2021
Ty Smith (New Jersey) vs. Boston.
Kirill Kaprizov (Minnesota) at Los Angeles.
January 16, 2021
Tim Stützle (Ottawa) vs. Toronto.
Yegor Sharangovich (New Jersey) vs. Boston.
January 17, 2021
Eetu Luostarinen (Florida) vs. Chicago.
January 18, 2021
Alexander Romanov (Montreal) at Edmonton.
January 19, 2021
Josh Norris (Ottawa) vs. Winnipeg.
Philipp Kurashev (Chicago) at Florida.
January 21, 2021
Jack Studnicka (Boston) vs. Philadelphia.
January 22, 2021
Adam Brooks (Toronto) vs. Edmonton.
Dylan Cozens (Buffalo) at Washington.
January 24, 2021
Pius Suter (Chicago) vs. Detroit.
January 25, 2021
Olli Juolevi (Vancouver) vs. Ottawa.
January 26, 2021
K’Andre Miller (New York Rangers) at Buffalo.
Michael McLeod (New Jersey) vs. Philadelphia.
January 28, 2021
Oliver Wahlstrom (New York Islanders) at Washington.
Alex Lafrenière (New York Rangers) at Buffalo.
Ty Dellandrea (Dallas) vs. Detroit.
January 30, 2021
Janne Kuokkanen (New Jersey) at Buffalo.
Mathieu Olivier (Nashville) at Tampa Bay.
Cal Foote (Tampa Bay) vs. Nashville.
Aleksi Heponiemi (Florida) at Detroit.
February 2, 2021
Arthur Kaliyev (Los Angeles) vs. Anaheim.
February 6, 2021
Pierre-Olivier Joseph (Pittsburgh) at New York Islanders.
Isac Lundeström (Anaheim) vs. San Jose.
February 7, 2021
Jason Robertson (Dallas) vs. Chicago.
Zach Whitecloud (Vegas) vs. Los Angeles.
Jaret Anderson-Dolan (Los Angeles) at Vegas.
February 10, 2021
Julien Gauthier (New York Rangers) vs. Boston.
February 11, 2021
Ian Mitchell (Chicago) vs. Columbus.
Nicolas Beaudin (Chicago) vs. Columbus.
February 13, 2021
Alexander Volkov (Tampa Bay) at Florida.
February 15, 2021
Artyom Zub (Ottawa) at Toronto.
John Leonard; Jr. (San Jose) vs. Anaheim.
February 16, 2021
Trent Frederic (Boston) vs. Philadelphia.
Mikhail Maltsev (New Jersey) at New York Rangers.
February 17, 2021
Juho Lammikko (Florida) at Carolina.
February 20, 2021
Gabriel Carlsson (Columbus) vs. Nashville.
February 23, 2021
Brandon Hagel (Chicago) at Columbus.
February 24, 2021
Ross Colton (Tampa Bay) vs. Carolina.
Nico Sturm (Minnesota) at Colorado.
March 1, 2021
Dakota Joshua (St. Louis) at Anaheim.
March 2, 2021
Steven Lorentz (Carolina) at Nashville.
March 4, 2021
Mark Friedman (Pittsburgh) vs. Philadelphia.
Mason Marchment (Florida) at Nashville.
March 6, 2021
Jacob Bryson (Buffalo) at New York Islanders.
March 8, 2021
Niko Mikkola (St. Louis) at San Jose.
March 10, 2021
Dylan Coghlan (Vegas) at Minnesota.
March 11, 2021
Ryan Lomberg (Florida) at Columbus.
March 12, 2021
Fredrik Händemark (San Jose) at Anaheim.
March 13, 2021
Alexandre Carrier (Nashville) at Tampa Bay.
March 18, 2021
Jamie Drysdale (Anaheim) vs. Arizona.
Trevor Zegras (Anaheim) vs. Arizona.
March 21, 2021
Rhett Gardner (Dallas) vs. Nashville.
March 22, 2021
Keegan Kolesar (Vegas) vs. St. Louis.
March 25, 2021
Radim Zohorna (Pittsburgh) vs. Buffalo.
March 27, 2021
Samuel Morin (Philadelphia) vs. New York Rangers.
Logan Stanley (Winnipeg) at Calgary.
March 31, 2021
Steven Fogarty (Buffalo) vs. Philadelphia.
Nikolai Knyazhov (San Jose) vs. Minnesota.
April 2, 2021
Lane Pederson (Arizona) at Anaheim.
April 7, 2021
Luke Johnson (Minnesota) vs. Colorado.
Jake Walman (St. Louis) vs. Vegas.
Ilya Lyubushkin (Arizona) at Los Angeles.
April 10, 2021
Wyatt Kalynuk (Chicago) at Columbus.
April 11, 2021
Arttu Ruotsalainen (Buffalo) at Philadelphia.
April 13, 2021
Tanner Jeannot (Nashville) vs. Tampa Bay.
April 17, 2021
Wade Allison (Philadelphia) vs. Washington.
April 18, 2021
Vitali Kravtsov (New York Rangers) at New Jersey.
Marián Studenič (New Jersey) vs. New York Rangers.
April 20, 2021
Nolan Foote (New Jersey) at Pittsburgh.
April 24, 2021
Joachim Blichfeld (San Jose) vs. Minnesota.
April 25, 2021
Alex Barré-Boulet (Tampa Bay) vs. Columbus.
April 26, 2021
Alexander Barabanov (San Jose) vs. Arizona.
May 1, 2021
Cole Caufield (Montreal) vs. Ottawa.
Tobias Björnfot (Los Angeles) at Anaheim.
May 4, 2021
Mike Hardman (Chicago) at Carolina.
May 5, 2021
Shane Pinto (Ottawa) vs. Montreal.
Morgan Barron (New York Rangers) vs. Washington.
May 6, 2021
Riley Stillman (Chicago) at Carolina.
May 7, 2021
Jan Jeník (Arizona) at San Jose.
Victor Söderström (Arizona) at San Jose.
May 8, 2021
Rasmus Kupari (Los Angeles) vs. Colorado.
May 9, 2021
MacKenzie Entwistle (Chicago) vs. Dallas.
May 12, 2021
Parker Kelly (Ottawa) vs. Toronto.
May 19, 2021
Connor Mackey (Calgary) vs. Vancouver.
#Sports#Hockey#Goals#NHL#Boston Bruins#Carolina Hurricanes#Colorado Avalanche#Los Angeles Kings#Dallas Stars#Anaheim Ducks#Awesome
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The curious situation of the Sanson Fourth generation
There is a lot of strange behavior in this tangled family tree. I’ll go sibling by sibling, eldest to youngest
Madeleine-Claude-Gabrielle Sanson,
Eldest child of Charles-Jean-Baptiste Sanson and his first wife Madeleine Transon. We know very little of her, but the few details we have are...Interesting. She was born in circa 1738 and married Pierre Hérisson in 1754, at the young age of fifteen. Now, here is the interesting part. This probably was not a love marriage, since he was at least 10 years older than her and lived in another city (which ment they had even less opportunity to let them know each other). 10 years isn’t a huge age gap for an adult, but she was only sixteen. Also, it is important to note that the average age of marriage at the time was not so different from today. But, for an arranged marriage, it didn’t really benefit her family that much. He was poorer than the Sanson family, and he took none of her brothers as apprentices. They had one daughter: Marie-Madeleine Geneviève Hérisson, born in 1762, when her mother was 24 years old. She herself married in 1779 to her own uncle Louis-Cyr-Charlemagne Sanson. Now, why Madeleine was married to this Pierre Hérisson, the most likely explanation to me was that her family wanted to put her out of the reach of her father’s rivals (who was handicapped at the time), who may or may not be the most scrupulous in the means to achieve their end. They were a case were the rival of an executioner beat his rival’s children in an attempt to provoque them into doing something illegal. She died in 1779, age 41.
The second child of Charles-Jean-Baptiste Sanson and his first wife Madeleine Transon was Charles-Henri Sanson, born in Febuary 1739. He and he sister lost their mother the following year. At around age of 10, he was sent to a boarding school in Rouen. The boy seemed to enjoy himself there (I do have my doubts on the subject) until in 1753, his identity was recognized. He was expelled. His father tried to sent him to another school, but it didn’t last long (maximum a few months). Then, he studied at home under an certain abbé Grisel as a tutor. He also began to assist his father full time as oposed to seasonally and very occasionally. He quickly gained the reputation for being extremely clumsy on the scaffold. In winter 1754/1755 , his father was hit by a stroke, leaving his clumsy 15 year old son as his replacement. To be fair, the techniques taught by Jean-Baptiste required a lot of cordination, which his eldest son lacked. It went...not this well. In 1757, he proceeded to the quartering of Damien. He was still kind of clumsy on the job until his fourties. In the mean-time, in 1766, he married Marie-Anne Jugier after a history of scandalous affairs with loose women and men, for that matter. There was also rumors about him continuing to have affairs with aristocrates even after his marriage. He officially became executioner in 1778, a few weeks before the death of his father. (Mind you, at the time, Jean-Baptiste was severely handicapped and couldn’t harm a fly.) His wife gave him two sons (Henri, born in 1767 and Gabriel born in 1769) (the existance of the second is debated by historians), and potencially a daughter (who may or may not have existed, simply was not his daughter). When the Revolution hit, Charles-Henri was an advocate of the guillotine, for practical and humanitarian reasons. In 1792, a tragedy hit the family: the accidental death of Gabriel by a particularly clumsy incident. The Revolution had slowly eaten away at M. Sanson’s sanity, due to the sheer number of executions (the Royal family, the Terreur and many victims of political intrigue, including one of his ex-lovers, Madame Dubarry). The execution of a certain Cécile Renault, along with fiftie other people (chosen specifically for their innocence), for attempted murder of Robespierre, in an attempt to descridit him, really drived Sanson over the edge. Cécile Renault was very child-like, both in terms of looks, intellect and personality, which could have struck his more parental cord. He eventually quitted his job in 1795, due to a nephretic colic. He died in 1806, after seeing his two grand-children and spending the last decade of his life in physical and mental .
The third child of Charles-Jean-Baptiste Sanson and the first child of his second wife Jeanne Gabrielle Berger was Louis-Charles-Martin Sanson, born in 1744. He is in my eyes, the least sympathetic of this brotherhood. Little is known about his youth exept that he served as an assistant to his half-brother until 1768, were he became executioner of Tour, and later Auxerre. He married his second wife in 1787, who was quite an agressive woman and the brother of an volunteering executioner. Unlike his brothers, Louis-Martin led a politically active career were he joined an extremist revolutionary tribunal in Tour, at the expense of his primary duties, causing a lot of butched executions. When he was (finally) arrested for his professional faillings and his sympathy for Hébert, his wife defended him quite wildly, and ended up reclaiming the head of a high placed man named Chalmel. He also got a post somewere in the South of France. It didn’t turn too well for him, since the prejudice against his profession was much stronger in the Midi. Instead of telling like an intelligent problem that he had trouble getting in and out of his house, he invented some story about being alergic to the Meditteranian climate. Naturally, it wasn’t believed. He died in 1817, leaving behind his wife and his adult son.
The fourth child of Charles-Jean-Baptiste Sanson and the second child of his second wife Jeanne Gabrielle Berger was Nicolas-Charles-Gabriel Sanson II (he had an uncle of the same name), born in 1745. He became an assistant to his brother until 1765, were he became executioner of Versailles as a replacement of his uncle of the same name. He gave this office to his older brother Charles-Henri in 1778, to take the post of questionnaire of Paris, in succession to a mysterious, not quite alive Jean-Baptiste Barré. He remained in this place until the abolition of judicial torture by Louis XVI in 1780. He kept assisting his older brother until he obtained the post of Blois in 1795, then Montpellier. He married during this year a certain Anne Françoise, devoid of surname, widow of François Fromentut. Nicolas-Charles was unable to keep any post long due to his love of the bottle. He died in 1800, of one too many alcohol poisonings.
The fifth child of Charles-Jean-Baptiste Sanson and third child of his second wife, Jeanne Gabrielle Berger was Louis-Cyr-Charlemagne Sanson, born in 1748. He was famous in his life for two things, one being the husband of his own niece and two, his diplomatic activities during the French Revolution. He began assisting his older brother Charles-Henri in 1760 at the age of 12. Although, how and why he was kept around his incompetent's older brother who routinely faced the risk of being lynched is frankly beyond me, especially given the fact he had a competant and adult brother-in-law. He became executioner of Provins in 1768, age of 20. In 1779, he married his own niece, who was 17 at the time, maybe during his sister’s funeral, at age 37. He became a widower in 1784, and eventually remarried a certain Marie Fare Gendron in 1792. It is more towards the Revolution that his life became...interesting. And by interesting, I mean dangerous. He became executioner of Versailles in 1790, after his post was abolished. Fearing for the future of his profession, he along with his half-brother, became the representatives of their social class, constantly doing a moutain of paper work to insure the future of themselves and their colleagues, and preferably, prevent the nomination of sadistic individuals. In the 10th of August 1792, he was imprisonned as a suspected royalist, along with two of his brothers. They were all released but he was imprisonned again at the prison of Abbaye, only to get out two days before the Septembre Massacres. After his release, he was buzier than ever before. He died in 1794, leaving behind his adult son and grand-children in abject poverty, without saving their reputation.
The sixth child of Charles-Jean-Baptiste Sanson and fourth child of his second wife Jeanne Gabrielle Berger was Marie-Josephe Sanson, born in 1751. In 1773, she married her first cousin Jean-Louis Sanson at the age of 22, who was competant on the scaffold but bad at paper work. She became a widow in 1794 and became a washer woman until her death in 1813. She would be one of the rare members of the family to eventually get out of infamy on her own merits.
The seventh child of Charles-Jean-Baptiste Sanson and fifth child of his second wife Jeanne Gabrielle Berger was Pierre-Charles, born in 1753. We don’t know when he died. He assisted his older brother Charles-Henri, then went to live in Eastern France as a riffleur, leading a discreet, lonely and honest life until his death.
The eighth child of Charles-Jean-Baptiste Sanson and sixth his second wife Jeanne-Gabriel Berger was Pierre-Jean-Baptiste Sanson, born in 1754 and who died young.
The nineth child of Charles-Jean-Baptiste Sanson and seventh his second wife was Joseph-Claude Sanson, born in 1757 and who died at the young age of 22 in 1779, age 22, no spouse, no children, no charge.
Gabrielle Sanson, youngest of the bunch, was born probably a year later. She probably died as an infant.
Sources:
DESMOREST, Michel et Danielle, “Dictionnaire historique et philosophique des bourreaux”
DELARUE, Jacques, “Le métier de bourreau, du Moyen Âge à aujourd’hui”
ARMAND, Frédéric, “Les bourreaux de France, du Moyen Âge à l’abolition de la peine de mort.”
MARCHAL, Gilles, “Bourreaux de Travail”
http://racineshistoire.free.fr/DOC/PDF/Dynasties-de-Bourreaux.pdf
My history of the Renaissance course
The channel “Revue du monde”, a historical vulgarisation channel.
Also, this family tree website: https://gw.geneanet.org/geneavendeemili?lang=en&n=sanson&oc=0&p=madeleine+claude+gabrielle
https://gw.geneanet.org/antistar?lang=en&n=herisson&oc=0&p=marie+madeleine+genevieve
https://books.google.ca/books?id=6wdYK4KpO04C&pg=PA149&lpg=PA149&dq=charles-henri+sanson+n%C3%A9phr%C3%A9tique&source=bl&ots=bT6lYyNh1Z&sig=ACfU3U0WSOnLIzxAmaggCtG1J7ZNHtnDcg&hl=fr&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjGz7-RjezvAhUIQ80KHdG4AsMQ6AEwD3oECAUQAw#v=onepage&q=charles-henri%20sanson%20n%C3%A9phr%C3%A9tique&f=false
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The largest study ever conducted for Covid mRNA “vaccines” has confirmed that the injections have caused an alarming surge in heart failure and other deadly adverse events.
A team of 22 leading researchers at the Global Vaccine Data Network (GVDN) analyzed the records of a whopping 99,068,901 “vaccinated” people for the peer-reviewed study.
The study’s paper was published in the prestigious journal Vaccine.
In total, the study investigated 183,559,462 doses of mainly Pfizer, Moderna, and AstraZeneca.
The researchers found that most of the severe side effects occurred within 43 days of receiving the injection.
There were unacceptable population risks of Guillain-Barré syndrome, blood clots, encephalomyelitis, heart failure (myopericarditis and pericarditis), and swelling in the brain and spinal cord.
The study identified massive spikes in serious health conditions among individuals who had received Covid shots.
Leading epidemiologist Nicolas Hulscher MPH responded to the study by warning that Covid mRNA injections are “NOT SAFE FOR HUMAN USE”
In a post on X, Hulscher noted that the study confirms:
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Writing tryout
Anne-Marthe et La Blancheur passaient en revue tous les restes et l'inventaire du garde-manger pour savoir ce qui allait très-bientôt pourrir, ce qui manquait et ce qui était abondant. Il y avait : des conserves à l'acide lactique de feuilles de bouleau, de rutapagas et d'oignon, des pommes salées, des graines de fenouilles, du cidre, du sorbier en poudre, des pois secs et du thym. Les conserves de groseilles et de cassis ont déjà été mangées. Les réserves de saindoux salés étaient presque vides (quoi de plus normal après le repas de Noël), de même pour celle du vin et de pain. Des restes de hier, il y avait : du bouillon d'oie bien gras, quelques boudins frits, quelques parts de tourte à cervelle de porc, les petits pains à la choucroute et au cassis salé, le vin chaud qui avait depuis largement refroidi, la tisane de sorbier et la tisane de fenouille. En raison la quantité de décoction au sapin que ses fils ont avalés (issue de branches qu'ils n'avaient pas dû toucher avant le matin de Noël), il n'était pas étonnant que les boissons furent beaucoup moins consommées que prévu. Alors qu'Anne-Marthe et La Blancheur faisait leurs dernières inspections, Renée descendit dans la salle à manger. "Mère, que dois-je faire des branches de sapin…Que diable leur est-il arrivé en une moins d'une nuit ? -Tes deux petits frères ont eut la brillante idée d'en faire des tisanes qu'ils ont but cul sec." Renée sourit avec satisfaction et claqua la langue. Anne-Marthe eut un soupir exaspéré : "Je t'interdis de les en féliciter. On ne méprise pas ainsi les coutumes d'autrui. -Désolé. Voulez-vous que j'aide un peu à décorer la salle à manger pour diner ? -Non. Toi, tu mangeras avec tes frères et Nicolas Barré dans la chambre d'enfants. -Mais, pourquoi nous ne pouvons pas manger tous ensemble un jour de fête ? -Parce que je dois discuter avec Johan, mais aussi avec maître François et Jules. Vous nous dérangeriez. Tu as le droit cependant d'allumer le cheminer pour réchauffer le bouillon." Renée fit la moue. Que diable fallait-il qu'elle discute avec trois autres personnes, et pourquoi c'était si confidencielle que personnes ne pouvait utiliser la salle à manger. Elle aida un peu à ranger, puis fut, en guise de remerciement, renvoyée dans la chambre à l'étage avec le lourd chaudron rempli de bouillon. La Tatouée, qui la suivit, transporta aussi la tisane de fenouille transférée dans une bouilloire, les petites tasses en bois, les petits pain et les quelques boudins. Les deux posèrent les aliments sur la petite table. Jean-Baptiste, Nicolas Barré et Nicolas-Gabriel regardèrent avec appétit la nourriture disposée. Ils dirent ensemble le bénédicité avant de s'attaquer aux petits pains. "Au fait, Charles (c'était ainsi que le petit Barré appelait Charles-Jean-Baptiste pour le différencier de son oncle), tu es un véritable rabas-joie. On devait pour une fois, apprécier un truc joli, et tu t'en a fait à boire pratiquement pour toi tout seul. -Bon, c'est vrai, j'aurais dû t'en laisser. T'es content ? répondit Jean-Baptiste -Tu refuses de lui tout sauf les coups. À chaque fois qu'il essaye un truc à peu près supportable, tu t'empresse de tout gâcher. Je n'en peux vraiment plus ! -Écoute-moi bien, pauvre idiot. Ton cher oncle veux, quand il ne me corrige pas, m'amadouer pour que je lui cède volontairement mon poste une fois majeur et me jeter ensuite dans la rue. Je ne lui faciliterais pas la tâche."
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Prince Jacques of Monaco and Princess Gabriella of Monaco, accompanied by their father, Prince Albert II of Monaco, return to school at Institution François d’Assise-Nicolas Barré (FANB) school in Monaco -September 6th 2021.
📷 : Monaco Infos.
#prince albert ii#prince albert#prince jacques#princess gabriella#monegasque royal family#monaco#2021#september 2021#school#school 2021#fanb#royal children#my edit
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Bientôt la fin de l’assurance-vie ?
Quelque 38 millions de Français possèdent une assurance vie, un placement sans risque jusqu'ici. Mais cela pourrait changer, selon les informations de notre éditorialiste Nicolas Barré.
“Les Français adorent l’assurance-vie, et en particulier les contrats dits en euros, pour une raison simple: le capital est garanti, c’est un placement sûr. Au point que le gros de l’épargne de ce pays, 1400 milliards, soit l’équivalent de plus de la moitié du PIB de la France, est placé dans ce type de contrat. Mais les assureurs qui gèrent cette épargne ont un problème: comme le capital est garanti, l’argent doit être placé dans des produits très sûrs. Or ce qu’il y a de plus sûr, ce sont les emprunts d’Etat. Mais aujourd’hui, les emprunts d’Etat, français, allemands, ne rapportent plus rien puisque les taux d’intérêt sont à zéro voire même négatifs! Bref, gérer de l’assurance-vie est devenu une équation impossible.
Sauf à changer légèrement les règles…
C’est ce à quoi réfléchissent les assureurs comme les autorités de tutelle. L’une des pistes consisterait à remettre en cause le principe du capital garanti: pas d’affolement, seul un tout petit pourcentage du total ne serait plus garanti. Mais ça allègerait la pression sur les gestionnaires. L’idée, c’est aussi de convaincre les épargnants d’accepter une petite dose de risque en échange d’un meilleur rendement. Si une plus grande partie de l’argent de l’assurance-vie était placée en actions plutôt qu’en emprunts d’Etat qui ne rapportent rien, les épargnants auraient de bonnes chances d’être mieux rémunérés. Et l’épargne des Français serait aussi mieux utilisée: mieux vaut financer les entreprises que la dette de l’Etat. Ce qui est sûr, c’est que l’époque où l’assurance-vie offrait un rendement élevé pour un risque zéro est derrière nous. Il va falloir s’y habituer.”
Par
Europe1 .fr
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circa 1854, Paris
Nicolas was getting worried. It was not unusual for René to zone out or to remain in one position for a long while, in silence, but this spell has been nearing a whole day. Also he was even paler than usual, his expression drawn - Nicolas feared he might be in pain. Sure René ate a bite, but otherwise spent the day sitting pressed up against their bed’s headboard, curled into a ball, occasionally rocking.
For the past hour Nicolas had been alternating between talking to him and cuddling him in silence, in hopes of having him talk at least long enough to tell Nicolas how he may help.
When he finally spoke up it was so quiet Nicolas almost missed it.
‘They tore down another block.’
Nicolas blinked.
‘...Oh. Is that what’s bothering you? Sure the renovations seem a bit ham-fisted, but I would have thought as an architect you would approve. Is your boss not involved with them?’
‘He is’ René murmured with disdain ‘I’m rather close to leaving him. See, progress and modernism are all well and good, but here I think Gus is in the right when he says that here by ‘making the city safer’ they do not mean ‘keeping its citizens safe’ but ‘making it harder to build barricades’. Also, people were living in those houses.’
Nicolas kissed his crown.
‘I understand. You want to ease their suffering, but René...’
He was cut off by René’s humourless laugh.
‘Of course it bothers me, how could it not, but that is not why I’m in this state. I’m much more selfish than that. See, it’s easy for the government to ignore the complaints of the living, but I cannot ignore the dead. They have been bound to these lodgings for literal centuries and now they are swarming. Wailing, crying, clawing at all they can touch.’
He took a deep, shuddering breath and raised his head an inch.
‘Nico, I cannot bear this. If the renovations go on I may have to leave Paris, if only for a while. This is unbearable.’
Nicolas felt a lump of lead settle inside his stomach. Leave Paris? Still, he took René’s head into his large hands and kissed his forhead.
‘Do what you must. I’ll be there with you.’
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Princess Charlene present at Water Safety Day
The “Water Safety Day” was held on Thursday, June 30, 2022, on Larvotto Beach in the presence of Princess Charlene, and organized by her Foundation. Princess Charlene with students & sports celebrities ©Stéphane Danna / Direction de la Communication Around 40 children from the 6th grade classes of the Collège Charles III and the Institution François D’Assise-Nicolas Barré participated in the…

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#HSH Princess Charlene of Monaco#Principality of Monaco#Swimming#The Princess Charlene of Monaco Foundation#water safety day
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CDC: Johnson & Johnson Vaccine Benefits Outweigh Risks
An advisory panel to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said the benefits of COVID-19 vaccines "far outweigh" potential risks amid an ongoing review of reports of a rare nerve disorder in a small fraction of J&J jab recipients. However, given the possible link, a new update will advise patients with a history of Guillain-Barré syndrome to seek mRNA vaccines.
CDC's Dr. Hannah Rosenblum, who presented during the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) meeting Thursday, said "this assessment demonstrates that the benefits of COVID-19 vaccination far outweigh the potential risks."
Dr. Nicola Klein with the Kaiser Permanente Vaccine Study Center noted eight confirmed cases of GBS following J&J vaccination amid a backdrop of over 345,000 doses administered, per data collected through the Vaccine Safety Datalink. Nearly all confirmed cases occurred within 21 days of vaccination and involved adults aged 18-64. Researchers noted a reporting rate of 8.1 GBS cases per million J&J doses administered, versus 1.1 such cases following mRNA vaccination, compared to approximately 1.6 expected cases of GBS per million doses administered, per data collected through a national surveillance system, VAERS.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.foxnews.com/health/jj-covid-19-vaccine-benefits-far-outweigh-risks-cdc.amp
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