U.S. citizens: Demand Congress investigate soaring excess death rates
SÃO PAULO (LifeSiteNews) — A Uruguayan soccer player has died after collapsing in the 84th minute of a match last week due to a heart-related incident.
Twenty-seven-year-old Juan Izquierdo passed away in a Brazilian hospital in São Paulo on Tuesday night after suffering what officials called a “cardiorespiratory arrest associated with his cardiac arrhythmia.”
Izquierdo, who was married with two children, was rushed to Hospital Albert Einstein last Thursday during a game between his club Nacional and São Paulo at Morumbi Stadium. The fixture was part of the Copa Libertadores tournament. Uruguay has since postponed this coming weekend’s league games.
Hospital officials announced that Izquierdo had been on a ventilator since Sunday and was receiving critical care for neurological injuries due to heightened intracranial pressure.
Con el más profundo dolor e impacto en nuestros corazones, el Club Nacional de Football comunica el fallecimiento de nuestro querido jugador Juan Izquierdo.
Expresamos nuestras más sinceras condolencias a su familia, amigos, colegas y allegados.
Todo Nacional está de luto por… pic.twitter.com/mYU28mqw6m
— Nacional (@Nacional) August 28, 2024
Izquierdo’s sudden passing is all too common among professional athletes today, many of whom were coerced into receiving the experimental COVID shot.
“It was almost impossible to continue playing soccer without the vaccine,” German star Joshua Kimmich of Bayern Munich revealed in a documentary this year.
Since the rollout of the jab in 2019, there has been a dramatic rise of young, previously healthy athletes collapsing during competition. In the U.S., NFL player Damar Hamlin suffered a cardiac arrest on live TV during a Monday night game in 2023 after a routine tackle. Medical expert Dr. Peter McCullough theorized the incident may have been the result of “vaccine-induced myocarditis.”
Scores of other athletes have experienced similar episodes. Bronny James, the son of NBA star LeBron James, went into cardiac arrest while practicing with the University of Southern California in July 2023. Twenty-one-year-old college football player Hunter Brown of the Air Force passed away after experiencing a “medical emergency” while walking to class last winter. Former NFL linebacker Jessie Lemonier died suddenly at age 25 after having played several seasons in the league.
While it is not known if Lemonier received the COVID shot, the NFL essentially forced players to receive it. The league currently touts a 95 percent jab rate among players.
In an apparent attempt to blame anything but the COVID shot for these and other deaths, medical officials have blamed “Sudden Adult Death Syndrome” for the uptick. The term became one of the most searched for phrases on Google in 2022.
The Centers for Disease Control’s (CDC) Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System has shown that the shot has been blamed for millions of deaths and other serious side effects, including miscarriages. Many high-profile public individuals, including Tesla CEO Elon Musk, former Fox News host Megyn Kelly, and ex-CNN anchor Chris Cuomo, have publicly acknowledged being injured by the jab.
Over the past five years, excess deaths have skyrocketed in countries where the mRNA shots were administered en masse. Similarly, the CDC recently disclosed 780,000 new reports of serious side effects from the jabs. The latest conservative estimate is that over 17 million people worldwide died from the injections, making it the worst man-caused medical catastrophe in history.
Izquierdo’s parents as well as Nacional executives were at the hospital at the time of his passing. His professional soccer career began in 2018.
U.S. citizens: Demand Congress investigate soaring excess death rates