Who knows why this child dropped dead during a basketball game?
The fact is that nobody can know the reason.
Science is a dogma, and that dogma forbids large areas of curiosity which are forever screened from the clawing curiosity of America’s inquiring minds.
As for me, I remember about fifty similar deaths that occurred just in my home town during my childhood. It’s always been a normal occurrence.
An 11-year-old boy collapsed and died while playing basketball at a Massachusetts youth club.
George-Levi Njuguna was playing basketball at the Dana Barros Center on Washington Street in Stoughton – located 20 miles outside of Boston – when he mysteriously collapsed and died around 8pm on Tuesday.
Emergency services quickly arrived on scene and found the young boy unresponsive, according to Boston 25 News. They used a defibrillator and attempted resuscitation, but were unsuccessful.
‘Unfortunately, the 11-year-old boy didn’t make it,’ Stoughton Fire Chief Michael Carroll said.
George, who played on the DB Gladiators team, was transported to Good Samaritan Hospital in Brockton, where he was pronounced dead.
His cause of death is currently unknown. However, a large majority of sudden deaths in elementary and middle school athletes are cardiac-related, according to Boston 25 News.
Unknown?
Large majority?
Sudden deaths?
In elementary school???
Cardiac-related????
Cause of Death for 23-y-o Track Star Revealed: Death Caused It
Death has always caused sudden deaths in elite college athletes, including through aneurysms.
However, Carroll said George had ‘no real cardiac issues historically’ and was a ‘normal, healthy child,’ according to Boston.com.
Really?
That’s weird.
Because back in my day, most 11-year-olds did have cardiac issues.
Besides, even if kids these days have stopped having all those heart issues, that doesn’t mean you should ask questions about other causes.
Especially not vaccines.