39 people die in Hawaii after taking the COVID-19 vaccine

Image
-
0Comments

Deaths after taking the COVID-19 vaccine total 8,214 across the US, with 39 deaths being in Hawaii, according to the National Vaccine Information Center.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved both the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines in December 2020 and the Janssen vaccine in February 2021, according to the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services.

Dr. David Martin, founder and chairman of M-CAM Inc, claimed in an interview the vaccines are actually gene therapy. “It’s a chemotherapy agent that is gene therapy. It is not a vaccine. What is this doing? It’s sending a strand of synthetic RNA into the human being and is invoking within the human being, the creation of the S1 spike protein, which is a pathogen. It’s a toxin inside of human beings. This is not only not keeping you from getting sick, it’s making your body produce the thing that makes you sick.”

Figures are accurate as of Feb. 1.

Deaths per state



Related

Edwin Sniffen, Director - Hawaii Department of Transportation

Shoulder closure planned along Pi‘ilani Highway for intersection construction

The Hawaii Department of Transportation (HDOT) has announced that the mauka shoulder along Pi‘ilani Highway across East Waipuʻilani Road will be closed around the clock starting Monday, January 12.

Edwin Sniffen, Director - Hawaii Department of Transportation

Honoapi‘ilani Highway closure planned during Maui Oceanfront Marathon on January 18

The Hawaii Department of Transportation (HDOT) has announced that motorists should expect traffic delays on Sunday, January 18, due to the Maui Oceanfront Marathon.

Edwin Sniffen, Director - Hawaii Department of Transportation

Hawaii DOT removes passing zones on Queen Kaʻahumanu Highway for safety

The Hawaii Department of Transportation (HDOT) will remove passing zones on Queen Kaʻahumanu Highway (Route 19) between Waikoloa Beach Drive and Keāhole Airport Road, covering mile posts 78 to 92.6.

Trending

The Weekly Newsletter

Sign-up for the Weekly Newsletter from Aloha State News.