Governor Ned Lamont has announced a series of executive actions his administration is implementing to ensure that Connecticut residents who wish to be vaccinated continue to have access to these vaccines.
“Making vaccines accessible is grounded in health and safety, which is too important to leave to the whims of a political agenda. Vaccines have been proven for many decades to prevent serious illness, hospitalization, and death, and patients and their doctors should be able to decide what is the best course of treatment for themselves,” Lamont said. “We will not allow gridlock in Washington to put the people of our state at risk.”
Over the last two years, Connecticut has seen a sharp rise in cases of what some physicians call ‘turbo’ cancer, strokes, myocarditis, neuropathies and autoimmune conditions, all of which have been attributed to the genetic expressive alterations that Pfizer’s mRNA tech enables.
An NIH publication details what magnetic resonance found; substack author and former NYU professor Mark Crispin Miller continues to track “died suddenly” statistics across the US and the world. A telegram channel has quietly tracked CT cases of vaccine reactions and sudden deaths; and not all accounts of “died suddenly” specify a cause of death.
NIH Table 1 excerpt:

Pharmaceutical companies are scrambling too. As incidents of post-Covid-vaccination strokes have accelerated, new drugs called MiRNA inhibitors aim to stop them. MiRNA is smaller than mRNA, and here’s where it gets interesting: the miRNA can bind to specific mRNA and block them from being read and turned into protein through physical sitting on the mRNA. Or, the miRNA can bind to mRNA and subsequently send the mRNA to be degraded and therefore not turned into a protein. More here.
In other words, the pharmaceutical cure is for the pharmaceutical-induced problem: MiRNA is supposed to fix the mRNA “oopsie” that affected millions of lives.
The CT Department of Health issued five pages of Interim Vaccination Guidance, saying this “reflects evidence-based recommendations from groups including the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, and the American Academy of Family Physicians.”

Governor Lamont and the CT Department of Health have never issued warnings on potential Covid-19 shot side effects. While the state offers Paid Family Medical Leave, it currently does not offer a specific financial compensation program to those who have suffered from Covid shot side effects.
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