More Airline Pilots Tell Of Vaccine Injuries And Say Many Are Still Flying

Article reposted from TCW Defending Freedom | Written by Kathy Gyngell

SINCE our previous reports on pilot deaths and injuries following the vaccine rollout across the world – mandatory  in the US and Australia amongst other countries, and all but mandatory here – more pilots have come forward to speak to The Defender about the injuries they have sustained as a result of the vaccines, and the impact on their careers and livelihoods. The injuries include myocarditis and pericarditis, heart attacks, strokes and subsequent blindness. You can read the full report here. 

In summary: ‘According to these individuals and groups, the number of pilots speaking out about their vaccine injuries is dwarfed by the number of pilots who are still flying despite experiencing concerning symptoms – but not speaking out because of what they describe as a culture of intimidation within the aviation industry.’

Steven Hornsby, a 52-year-old passenger airline pilot, US Marine Corp veteran and once-active weightlifter and cyclist, is one who did dare tell his story. As per Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) requirements, he had passed 24 medical exams in the past 12 years, including 12 electrocardiograms (ECGs), and had no cardiovascular or other major health issues. He is not flying today because of being coerced into get the Covid-19 vaccine. On the 12th day after receiving his second dose of the Pfizer vaccine he felt sharp chest pains, ‘pain radiating through my left arm, and my heart rate spiked as if beating in my neck.’

He was told by a series of medical professionals that his symptoms were not likely to be related to the vaccine. Despite diagnosing him with high blood pressure, doctors told him they would not report his case to the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS). He was told that his heart was healthy, and the symptoms were most likely from stress or a musculoskeletal problem. Even a union doctor dismissed Hornsby’s concerns that his symptoms were related to the vaccine.

Yet intermittent pains continued. It was only in December 2021, when his medical certification was due for renewal, that his medical examiner advised him to wear a heart monitor for one week.

He discovered he had arrhythmia issues, heart palpitations and an irregular heart rate, and he was grounded. The following month a cardiologist diagnosed him with vaccine-induced myocarditis – heart inflammation, dilation and fluid behind his heart. Hornsby believes other pilots with similar symptoms are still flying.

One such is a pilot currently flying for a US commercial airline which threatened to sack anyone who didn’t get the vaccine. Speaking on condition of anonymity, he said his chest pain began about a week after the second Moderna vaccination. With a family to feed he felt he was left with little choice but to keep working. ‘Fear of loss of my pilot medical [certification] after being mandated to get this vaccine is the path I am currently on.’

The Defender also talked to an Australian pilot who was sacked by Virgin Australia after 19 years as a captain for refusing the Covid shot. Glen Waters is now a spokesman for a group of the airline’s employees suffering vaccine injuries.

He says that none of the injured pilots is prepared to talk because the company actively tries to terminate anyone reporting vaccine injury, characterised by the airline as ‘unrelated’ to the vaccine.

The reasons he said these pilots will not come forward include the stigma attached to anti-vaccine sentiment in any form; the reluctance of the medical community to get involved with possible vaccine injuries; vaccine-makers actively fighting injury claims; insurance companies distancing themselves from claims involving the vaccine, and fear of losing their medical certifications and careers.

Of approximately 900 pilots flying with Virgin Australia, he is aware of nine who are no longer flying because of medical complications that could be linked to the vaccine and he believes there will be many more who are continuing to fly with troubling symptoms.

He told The Defender: ‘We have one captain [who had] a stroke and went blind, and another had a heart attack and fell down the boarding stairs after landing.

Read the full article HERE

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