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@clacke Are Scandinavian languages close enough together that there is still some mutual intelligibility? If someone from Sweden and someone from Norway meet, can they each communicate in their native language while still being understood by the other?
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Report: 23 people in #Norway ( #NO ) died after receiving the Pfizer #mRNA vaccine
https://greatgameindia.com/norway-investigation-covid-19-vaccine/
#COVID-19 #vaccine
Note: I've never heard of GGI before. They could be making this up out of almost nothing. I believe the original article is "this one":{https://legemiddelverket.no/nyheter/meldte-bivirkninger-etter-koronavaksine-pr-14-januar-2021} ... but I haven't thrown it into Google Translate yet.
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Turns out there's an on-site EN translation: https://nu.federati.net/url/279348
Certainly a different tone, if not a different conclusion, from the Great Game India summary.
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> - The reports suggest that common adverse reactions to mRNA vaccines, such as fever and nausea, may have contributed to a fatal outcome in some frail patients ... .
> The large studies on Comirnaty (BioNTec/Pfizer) did not include patients with unstable or acute illness - and included few participants over 85 years of age. In Norway we are now vaccinating the elderly and people in nursing homes with serious underlying diseases, therefore it is expected that deaths close to the time vaccination may occur.
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@lnxw48a1 @clacke They indeed should. Exception: the Finns, they'll have to talk with the Hungarians and the Japanese, oddly.