There's something fishy going on with this whole Damar Hamlin story.
More speculation on what really happened:
Caustic Sarcasm. Providing topical internet content since 1862.
Allow Cookies for optimal viewing. Disclaimer: Bottom of page. Occasionally Provocative. SENSITIVE CONTENT: You clicked and agreed to the "Sensitive Content" Landing Page Advisory. Deal or go Elsewhere. "Pearl-Clutchers", stop reading now, close window. Out you go.
There's something fishy going on with this whole Damar Hamlin story.
More speculation on what really happened:
Is what some are saying:
Recall the oddities and questions over the ambulance that removed him from the field.
Nothing would surprise me at this point. There are too many people and organizations who are fully vested in their false dogma that the JAB is the Holy Grail for humanity.
I wasn't publishing when his happened, but I did see this video Tweet, saving it thinking possibly it would be removed. Other than this, I haven't seen any other coverage on this. What the person in the clip says makes a lot of sense.
I don't think the questions raised are conspiracy theory. They're legit questions. Listen and watch. Link to the Tweet is below the video. View full screen:
As if being in a car accident that left him seriously shaken wasn’t enough, the Duke of Edinburgh is now at the center of a public relations storm, and Buckingham Palace courtiers can’t seem to keep a lid on it. The 97-year-old royal hit a small Kia sedan with his Land Rover while leaving the Sandringham estate last Thursday. The incident has provided tabloid fodder for days, and continued to do so Monday when one of the passengers involved made an appearance on national television on Monday. She criticized the treatment she has received by the police and what she called disappointing behavior on the part of the royal family.
Emma Fairweather, a passenger in the car, said she feels the royal should have reached out to her personally after the accident, which involved another woman and a nine-month old-baby. Fairweather suffered a broken wrist while the rest of those involved escaped the crash uninjured. According to a witness, Philip said at the scene that he was “dazzled” by bright sunlight when he pulled out onto the busy road and smashed into the Kia. Philip’s Land Rover flipped across the motorway, and the sedan was badly damaged when it crashed into the shoulder.ET Online: Prince Philip driving two days after car crash.
[.]
Land Rover scored some good publicity when they delivered a new vehicle to the Palace the next day. But outrage ensued when the Daily Mail published photographs of the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh—back in the driving seat less than 48 hours after the crash—on the road apparently without their seatbelts. There have been calls for the 97-year-old Duke to give up his drivers license, prompting a debate about whether a man of his age should still legally be allowed to drive.
The duke drove former US president Barack Obama and his wife Michelle during their state visit in 2016.
Mr Obama said later: "I can report that it was very smooth riding.
The incident is bound to raise questions about whether Prince Philip, who retired from public engagements in 2017 and had a hip replacement in May last year, is still able to drive safely.Yeah...we've had our share of (now departed) family members who've had hip replacement, at ages younger than 97. Mid-70's and early 80's. Recovery was slow but successful. I remember Docs advising "don't drive for at least 3 months." So, for someone at 97, driving six or seven months after hip surgery? That seems risky to me; a risk to himself and others - both of which he, unfortunately, succeeded.
The Duke of Edinburgh sent an apology letter to Emma Fairweather, who sustained a broken wrist when his Land Rover hit the Kia minivan in which she was traveling near the royal estate of Sandringham on Jan. 17.And then...Phil was off in his new Land Rover, to run over more commoners. Nah, just kidding.
In the note, written on Sandringham stationery and dated Jan. 21, the duke said he was “deeply sorry” and wished Ms. Fairweather a “speedy recovery.” He also acknowledged that the accident had left him “somewhat shaken,” a rare admission from a member of the royal family.