Ο Carlos Tejada, ένας 49χρονος συντάκτης στους New York Times, πέθανε λίγες ώρες μετά την ανάμειξη-και-ταίριασμα του πλάνου του J&J με ένα “booster” από τη Moderna.
Ο Tejada πήρε τη λήψη J&J τον Ιούλιο ενώ ζούσε στη Νότια Κορέα με τη σύζυγό του και τα δύο παιδιά του:
Πήρε ένα ενισχυτικό Moderna στις 17 Δεκεμβρίου.
“Double-vaxxed. Janssen-fueled, Moderna-boosted. Hey, Omicron: Χτύπα με με την υγρή σου μύξα”, αστειεύτηκε ο Tejada. «Το μόνο που έπρεπε να κάνω ήταν να συμπληρώσω αυτήν τη φόρμα σε μια γλώσσα που δεν μπορώ να διαβάσω».
Ο Tejada πέθανε από καρδιακή προσβολή αργότερα το ίδιο βράδυ.
«Αν αυτό δεν ξυπνήσει τους Times, τίποτα δεν θα γίνει», σχολίασε ο πρώην συγγραφέας των New York Times Alex Berenson
Οι New York Times όχι μόνο αρνήθηκαν να αμφισβητήσουν εάν τα δύο γεγονότα σχετίζονται, αλλά αρνήθηκαν να αναγνωρίσουν τι συνέβη στο άρθρο τους για τον θάνατό του.
“Δεν έχουν πραγματοποιηθεί ποτέ κλινικές δοκιμές για να εξεταστεί η ασφάλεια ή η αποτελεσματικότητα της ανάμειξης διαφόρων τύπων αυτών των εμβολίων και ο Carlos δεν έδωσε ενημερωμένη συγκατάθεση, καθώς το έντυπο συγκατάθεσης ήταν στα κορεατικά, μια γλώσσα που δεν μπορούσε να διαβάσει”, ανέφερε ο Berenson.
Carlos Tejada, a 49-year-old editor at the New York Times, died just hours after mixing-and-matching his J&J shot with a “booster” from Moderna.
Tejada got the J&J shot in July while living in South Korea with his wife and two children:
He got a Moderna booster on December 17th.
“Double-vaxxed. Janssen-fueled, Moderna-boosted. Hey, Omicron: Hit me with your wet snot,” Tejada joked. “All I had to do was fill out this form in a language I can’t read.”
Tejada died of a heart attack later that night.
“If this does not wake the Times nothing will,” former New York Times writer Alex Berenson commented.
The New York Times not only declined to question whether the two events were related but refused to even acknowledge what happened in their article on his death.
“No clinical trials have ever been conducted to examine the safety or efficacy of mixing various types of these vaccines, and Carlos did not give informed consent, as the consent form was in Korean, a language he could not read,” Berenson reported.
RIP.
![]() Carlos Tejada, a 49-year-old editor at the New York Times, died just hours after mixing-and-matching his J&J shot with a “booster” from Moderna.Tejada got the J&J shot in July while living in South Korea with his wife and two children: He got a Moderna booster on December 17th.
“Double-vaxxed. Janssen-fueled, Moderna-boosted. Hey, Omicron: Hit me with your wet snot,” Tejada joked. “All I had to do was fill out this form in a language I can’t read.”
“If this does not wake the Times nothing will,” former New York Times writer Alex Berenson commented. The New York Times not only declined to question whether the two events were related but refused to even acknowledge what happened in their article on his death.
“No clinical trials have ever been conducted to examine the safety or efficacy of mixing various types of these vaccines, and Carlos did not give informed consent, as the consent form was in Korean, a language he could not read,” Berenson reported.
RIP. |

Carlos Tejada, a 49-year-old editor at the New York Times, died just hours after mixing-and-matching his J&J shot with a “booster” from Moderna.
He got a Moderna booster on December 17th.









