Pathologist Dr. Ryan Cole describes how since the launch of experimental mRNA vaccinations, embryologists and doctors have found strange, rubbery, meter-long clots in both the deceased and living, which can be broken down and removed from the body using a natural enzyme called "Nattokinase.

"They are white and fibrous, they are unusual, they are firm, they are rubbery, they are long. I've got some that are a meter long.... I looked at them under the microscope and that spike protein is really the cause of this clotting pathway."

"If such a clot stays somewhere in the body, can it cause a heart attack? Sure. Can it cause a stroke? Definitely."
Pathologist Dr. Ryan Cole describes how since the launch of experimental mRNA vaccinations, embryologists and doctors have found strange, rubbery, meter-long clots in both the deceased and living, which can be broken down and removed from the body using a natural enzyme called "Nattokinase. "They are white and fibrous, they are unusual, they are firm, they are rubbery, they are long. I've got some that are a meter long.... I looked at them under the microscope and that spike protein is really the cause of this clotting pathway." "If such a clot stays somewhere in the body, can it cause a heart attack? Sure. Can it cause a stroke? Definitely."
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