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rafunrafun

04/23/21 9:24 AM

#336615 RE: fsulevine #336612

But CVD takes many, many years to develop

You mean that it almost never kills the young and the healthy, just like COVID? With that I agree. If you plan on giving me a unique example of COVID killing a young, healthy person, check out the statistics for that.

and our lifestyles tremendously contribute to it.

Exactly! Despite us knowing this, CVD is still the #1 killer -- what does it say about how dangerous it is?

The only way lur lifestyle contributes to Covid is because we are a social species and like to interact with others.

Yeah, that's what people do in a society, they interact.

Plus, Covid kills in a matter or weeks, not years or decades like CVD

This doesn't make CVD any less deadly.

Comparing them is really apples and oranges.

We have to be able to compare the leading causes of death, because if not, we're just lying to ourselves and allowing media to tell a story. Look at the data. Numbers don't lie.

And those numbers were without the vaccine. CDC reported that after being fully vaccinated, the chance of catching COVID is .008%. The chances of death is just about 0%.

P-File

04/23/21 9:27 AM

#336616 RE: fsulevine #336612

This information isn't necessarily accurate either. Saying CVD is based on diet, exercise, etc. Yes, in most cases it can be, but not all the time. People are having heart attacks much younger each and every year. Here are a couple of outliers from last year specifically.

100% blockage on a 26 year old NFL athlete:

https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/raiders-nick-o-leary-recovering-from-heart-attack-surgery-for-100-percent-blockage-154857116.html

Another 27 year old college athlete, and Pro Basketball Player (EU):

https://www.tallahassee.com/story/sports/college/fsu/mensbasketball/2020/08/07/florida-state-fsu-basketball-alum-michael-ojo-seminoles-death-nigeria-center-leonard-hamilton/3317263001/