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Monday, November 4, 2024

Military officers injured by the COVID shot demand Congress investigate DOD vaccine requirement

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A report compiled by several active duty military officers in Florida detailing injuries experienced by the COVID vaccine was recently sent to members of Congress.

“This report demonstrates how widespread and significant these injuries are throughout the military, including among pilots,” said Mat Staver, founder, and chairman of the Liberty Counsel law firm.

Claims from December 7, 2021, through August 22, 2022, include a service member who experienced four strokes after vaccination and a Marine officer denied a medical exemption from his second Pfizer dose despite developing pericarditis from the first.

“As the Department of Defense continues to mandate the COVID-19 vaccine, a clear and concerning trend of vaccine-induced injuries has become apparent across the force,” the report states. “As more vaccine injuries are discovered, it is apparent that the vaccine poses a great risk to our Nation’s Security both by forcing the loss of highly qualified service members and causing potentially career-ending or life-threatening injuries to those who remain in service.”

The active-duty military officers are requesting that Congress launch an immediate investigation into the alleged harmful effects that vaccine mandates are having on service members.

“Members of Congress need to immediately investigate these unlawful actions by the Department of Defense to stop these unlawful shot mandates and hold accountable those who pushed these harmful injections,” Staver said.

Included in the report are written statements from Department of Defense pilots, such as a 42-year-old U.S. Navy Pilot Commander who experienced constant tightness in his chest, heart palpitations, elevated heart rate, dizziness, and difficulty breathing which continued to plague him for more than a month after receiving a second dose of the Pfizer mRNA shot.

"You have to have the ear of someone in Congress that's on one of the oversight committees that has investigatory authority," said Mark Chenoweth, president and general counsel with the New Civil Liberties Alliance.

He further stated that what Congress can do outside of an oversight committee is limited to very specific actions.

“What Congress usually likes to do is fix things by clarifying the law in different places, and maybe reducing the authorities of some of the people who were making these monstrous errors,” Chenoweth added. “Retrospectively, Congress can certainly require that federal employees and military people who have been fired, be rehired. That's something that is within Congress' ability.”

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