© Brighteon.com All Rights Reserved. All content posted on this site is commentary or opinion and is protected under Free Speech. Brighteon is not responsible for comments and content uploaded by our users.
Midazolam doses inflicted on our elderly to fake the Covid-19 pandemic:
With doses as high as 10mg for 'Covid-19' patients, no wonder so many died unnecessarily to create the illusion of a deadly pandemic and to get the public to roll up their sleeves...Ten milligrams of midazolam for a 79-old-old ‘Covid-19’ patient in Dublin’s Tallaght Hospital - the same dose given to Death Row inmate Denis McGuire in Ohio as part of his 2014 execution for the rape and murder of a pregnant woman. The controverisal drug was used in combination with hydromorphone. According to an article in The Guardian newspaper on January 16, 2014 it was, by all accounts, a slow and painful death, taking 25 minutes to kill the 53-year-old prisoner:
"His lawyers had warned ahead of the proceeding
that the experimental combination of the sedative midazolam and
painkiller hydromorphone might subject him to “air hunger”, an
insufficient flow of air into the lungs causing the sensation of
suffocation".
In court proceedings last week, an Ohio state
prosecutor said bluntly: “You're not entitled to a pain-free execution,”
and a judge allowed the execution to proceed. According to a BBC report
on lethal injections for capital punishment from March 5, 2018,
midazolam was feared by hardened criminals on Death Row.
The drug midazolam –
a sedative used by several states to cause unconsciousness – has proved
so controversial that, in 2017, Alabama inmate Thomas D Arthur asked to
be executed by firing squad. Arthur lodged an appeal with the Supreme
Court to postpone his execution on the basis that midazolam, one of the
drugs in Alabama’s three-drug lethal injection combination, could
contribute to ‘prolonged torture’. The Supreme Court denied the appeal,
and Arthur was executed (by lethal injection) in May 2017.
Ireland’s Health Products Regulatory Authority (HPRA) says Do Not Take Midazolam If:
• You are allergic (hypersensitive) to midazolam or any of the other ingredients of the medicine (listed in section 6).
•
You are allergic to other benzodiazepine medicines, such as diazepam or
nitrazepam. • You have severe breathing problems and you are going to
have midazolam for conscious sedation.
You must not be given
midazolam if any of the above apply to you. If you are not sure, talk to
your doctor or pharmacist or nurse before you are given this medicine.
So
why was midazolam used so liberally in Ireland to treat a respiratory
illness if medics were officially advised NOT to use it for ‘severe
breathing problems’?
According to the HPRA, possible side effects include:
•
Anaphylactic shock (a life-threatening allergic reaction). Signs may
include a sudden rash, itching or lumpy rash (hives) and swelling of the
face, lips, tongue or other parts of the body. You may also have
shortness of breath, wheezing or trouble breathing.
• Heart attack
(cardiac arrest). Signs may include chest pain. • Muscle spasm around
the throat, causing choking. Life-threatening side effects are more
likely to occur in adults over 60 years of age and those who already
have breathing difficulties or heart problems, particularly if the
injection is given too fast or at a high dose.
On January 13, 2023,
The Irish Examiner ran a story about a woman who died from a heart
attack while undergoing a routine procedure at a dental clinic. The
coroner’s inquest returned a verdict of medical misadventure, putting
her death down to the use of midazolam as the ‘most likely cause of her
sudden cardiac arrest’. It is obvious we need to talk about midazolam,
the dosages used on Irish patients during the so-called ‘pandemic’ and
how it effected their breathing and ultimately their ability to survive.
We need to study the medical records of those who died ‘with Covid’ and ask if midazolam was a factor in their deaths.
It
is a matter of grave public importance that we understand this Death
Row drug and why it became the favoured choice of medication for
patients with a respiratory illness in Ireland and across the world
during the so-called pandemic. Many watching will know someone who
appears to be suffering a serious adverse reaction, or perhaps recognise
apparent symptoms in themselves.





