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Sanjoy Mahajan's avatar

The case of Daniel is awful. We knew him, as he was the father of our daughter's good friend when we lived in Maskachusetts. So we were shocked when we heard that he had died suddenly and "of no known cause."

The death, on April 20, was 1 day after his age group (55 and under) became "eligible" as they say (as if it were akin to being an "eligible bachelor"). It happened in a city of jab fanatics, so my guess was that he had got his first jab the previous day and had a cardiac event or stroke.

But none of the many other parents who knew him ever said anything about the likely even obvious cause. And 1 month later, when all their kids became "eligible" after the FDA/CDC criminally EUAd the jab for 12+, their kids got jabbed and were bragging about it to my daughter within days.

I eventually asked the mother of my daughter's friend whether the jab might possibly be related (to Daniel's death). No answer, even though she had responded right away to my wife's message of condolence. I tried again a few months later, suggesting a VAERS report if relevant, as it might help others to judge the risks. Still no answer.

Jonestown, where the CIA was developing its methods of mind control, seems like playacting in comparison to what is being done to the population now.

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Pete Lincoln's avatar

Excellent. I have been thinking the Grand Jury route is the best way to go but clearly the Feds wont convene one. I was unaware of a state “Citizens Grand Jury”. But to my understanding in most of the US, only a judge or a prosecutor has the power to convene a jury. Clearly they are coerced to not do so. Seems only Kansas, Oklahoma, Nebraska, North Dakota, New Mexico, and Nevada allows citizens themselves to call one.

https://www.robertreeveslaw.com/blog/citizens-grand-jury/

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