Pathologist, Dr. Ryan Cole - mRNA and Fibrous Clotting

6 months ago
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Pathologist, Dr. Ryan Cole, describes how—since the rollout of the experimental mRNA injections—embalmers and clinicians have been finding strange, rubbery, foot-long clots in both the deceased and the living, that can be broken down and cleared from the body using a natural enzyme called 'Nattokinase'.

"They are white and fibrous, they're unusual, they're firm, they are rubbery, they're long. I have some that are a couple of feet long... I've looked at them under the microscope, and that spike protein is really what's inducing this clotting pathway."

"You get one of these clots laying down somewhere in the body, can it cause a heart attack? Sure. Can it cause a stroke? Sure."

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