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5
Saunders 5 points ago +5 / -0

Fucking Gawd Awful for this little girl!

5
Spanishguns 5 points ago +5 / -0

Murder Suicide, carbon monoxide poisoning, could've been anything.

4
Trilby 4 points ago +4 / -0

But they show a picture of the house and everything!

People© wouldn't steer people wrong, would they?

4
usdodsgssog 4 points ago +4 / -0

There's something seriously missing here... 11 year old kid means the parents weren't very old... I wonder, did they recently get the vax?

2
DebbieinDallas 2 points ago +2 / -0

Read the article and agree that more info is needed here. Then I clicked on a link to another covid tragedy...Michigan...black boy had both hands and legs amputated due to covid infection and lack of circulation. Kill me first.

2
TheGreenDragon 2 points ago +2 / -0

Don't trust the story, her parents were only in their 40's and the article said they, I guess hospital, thought the mom had a stoke but than said covid and sent her home and than the husband tested positive and he stay home. something is really off on this story. why did they not give them one of the treatments IE: HCQ etc. Just sent them home ? and if the parents got sicker why didn't they call for an ambulance ? it is, as fishy as the fainting nurse still being alive, but no one has seen her.

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Olds77 1 point ago +4 / -3

They have left so many details out. The odds of young adults dying from Covid is next to nothing and both simultaneously is ridiculous. There is more to the story, there always has been. Like the new born who "died of covid" who actually was born with their organs outside of their body and under no circumstances could survive that, the young TX hockey player who "died of covid" only to find out he had an opiate addiction and took more than a lethal dose of it or the infant who "died of covid" who was actually suffocated by a caregiver.

The article clearly states they were quarantining in their basement. You know what else likes to collect in the basement carbon monoxide, because that's usually where folks furnaces are.

When winter temperatures plummet and home heating systems run for hours the risk of carbon monoxide (CO) poisoning increases.

Every year, at least 430 people die in the U.S. from accidental CO poisoning. Approximately 50,000 people in the U.S. visit the emergency department each year due to accidental CO poisoning. There are steps you can take to help protect yourself and your household from CO poisoning.

https://www.cdc.gov/nceh/features/copoisoning/index.html#:~:text=When%20winter%20temperatures%20plummet%20and,U.S.%20from%20accidental%20CO%20poisoning.