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Star high school athlete dies 'out of nowhere' after being pulled out of swimming poolSee also: Rip currents kill 6 tourists in 2 days along Florida beaches; 10 drown in 24 hours on Egyptian beaches amid 'turbulent weather'
An incoming freshman football player expected to be a star athlete died days after almost drowning in the pool at Chino High School.
Pending a full investigation into the mysterious incident, the student hasn't been identified by the school district, NBC Los Angeles reported.
The school, located on the outskirts of the Los Angeles metro area, did confirm that the boy was participating in an afternoon activity with the football team when he suffered a medical emergency in the pool on Friday.
Paramedics arrived on the scene within five minutes, at which point the boy had already been pulled from the water, according to the Chino Valley Fire Department.
EMS crews rushed him to the hospital, where doctors were able to keep him alive throughout the weekend. His family made the heart wrenching decision to take him off life support on Sunday.
'We would like to reassure our community that the appropriate staff is examining all of the details surrounding the situation,' Andy Johnston, a spokesperson for the Chino Valley Unified School District, told NBC.
A parent of another player on the football team said they thought the boy was set to be a great athlete.
The parent added that he was a good swimmer, which only raises more questions about how the boy died.
Other students were at the pool when this tragedy unfolded, and they've spoken to investigators, ABC reported.
It's also unclear what state he was in while being transported to the hospital.
Close friends and family of the boy gathered on Sunday at the school's football field to honor his memory. Flowers were left on the track surrounding the field.
Students from the high school swimming in a neighborhood pool - not the pool at the school - shared their shock at the boy's sudden and explained death.
'He just passed away out of nowhere,' said sophomore Jose Juarez.
'He was in the pool, and he was having fun but things happened. I feel bad for his parents and his family.'
The school district said it is making mental health counselors available to students and faculty.
The CDC recently made a tragic announcement that drowning deaths are on the rise for the first time in decades, calling it an 'urgent' public health issue.
"Because COVID-19 vaccines were approved without long-term safety data and might cause immune dysfunction, it is perhaps premature to assume that past SARS-CoV-2 infection is the sole common factor in long COVID."He declared that "COVID-19 vaccination per se might contribute to long COVID, giving rise to the colloquial term 'Long Vax(x)'", since the "spike protein of SARS-CoV-2 exhibits pathogenic characteristics and is a possible cause of post-acute sequelae after SARS-CoV-2 infection or COVID-19 vaccination". Not to mention the "class switch to IgG4 antibodies", which Tindle thinks could lead to autoimmunity and cancer.
"According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the prevalence of autism among U.S. children has risen significantly in recent years. While 6.7 in 1,000 children were diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) in 2000, that number had risen to 27.6 in 1,000 children by 2020. This means that currently 1 in 36 children in the U.S. get diagnosed with ASD, up from 1 in 150 children 20 years ago.Acolytes of The Science™ will simply claim over and over that the reason there appears to be more autism at an ever-increasing clip is that doctors are just getting better at diagnosing it.
The reasons for this increase in prevalence are not fully understood and likely complex. Some possible factors that have been proposed include better awareness and screening for autism, changes in diagnostic criteria and environmental or genetic factors. Regardless of the reasons, this rise in the number of children with autism highlights the importance of early identification and intervention to help children with ASD reach their full potential."
Suddenly, it's okay to question the vaccine narrative. The Lancet estimated that vaccinations prevented 19·8 million excess deaths. Mathematical modelling should not be used to justify the policy — the latest report shows the numbers don't add up.Of course, it isn't only the Lancet that has relied on nonsensical mathematical modelling to justify widespread adoption of mRNA technology. Disappointingly, both Rod Liddle and Fraser Nelson in recent articles published in the Times and Telegraph respectively repeated the farcical claim that the AstraZeneca vaccine saved six million lives. Claims that 500,000 lives were saved by lockdown, that 20 million lives were saved by mRNA vaccines or six million were saved by AstraZeneca all rely on modelling. However, we have real-world data that paint a very different picture.
Comment: Whilst cultural shifts, travel, and so on, will likely effect the rate of infections in the past decade, the spike recorded in the past few years is likely due to the experimental covid jabs and the harm they cause to the immune system. Malaysia authorised the use of a variety of covid jabs, including AstraZeneca, Pfizer, as well as Sinovac.
Notably STDs, as well as plethora of other disease and illness, that is associated with vaccine damage has surged across much (but seemingly not all) of the planet; and particularly those which deployed the mRNA jabs: