A living memorial to honor the vaccine injured or deaths caused by the "vaccine"
Do these exist or should ones be started? Should there be one central one or one in each state?
Because so many people have been affected by the vax, both injury and death, is there a public (or private) physical place out in the open where people can go to place pictures, stuffed animals, or letters to publicly express their remorse? Like a living memorial? Perhaps at or near the population center of the United States ( https://thehill.com/homenews/state-watch/581744-a-tiny-missouri-town-is-now-the-center-of-america-us-census ) near Hartville, Missouri. Or a living memorial could be made in each state. It would need to be a place where items could not be taken away.
Thoughts anyone?
Kayla said it was okay for me to share her thoughts here:
"Great idea! I’ve seen this kind of memorial display before and it can really open people’s eyes. Most effective is for groups of people to organize displays in their own cities, I think. I’d suggest people make posters (for example, 16x24 inches), each with a large photo, the person’s first name, and a brief caption (for example, “Daniel - 79 years old – Active, no health problems - Died of a heart attack 3 hours after his 2nd Pfizer COVID-19 shot” or “Cheryl - age 25 - happy and healthy - got her first Moderna shot - hospitalized with seizures and paralysis four days later - has not recovered, now in a nursing home). Homemade posters neatly lettered with magic markers would be fine – no need for a fancy print job.
Where/how to display these posters? Here are a few ideas. (1) High impact: Have a spread-out line of people holding posters where many people are in line to enter some big event like a professional ball game or a big concert...Have the posters maybe every 8 to12 feet, so people in line for the event have to walk by (or turn away from!) one poster at a time. (2) Have several people spread out along a busy downtown sidewalk, each holding a poster. Recruit volunteers to hold posters so, in case poster-holders get harassed by passers-by, it’s not the grief-stricken relatives who are being harassed. (3) Have a booth at the county fair. Display some large posters and a bunch of smaller ones. Have a big poster, and a handout, giving the latest VAERS statistics (from the Red Box page of openVAERS.com). Volunteers at the booth could talk to people and tell them a few resources for getting help re: injury from the COVID shots. (There’s information online if you know where to look...there are doctors figuring out treatments.)"
Central one to shame the Federal Government, maybe right across the street from the CDC headquarters in Atlanta. And other smaller ones in the capital of each state right across from the entrance of the capital buildings themselves. I think a really powerful way to do this would be to project a scrolling list of names from a projector onto the buildings every night just as the sun is going down.