They were withholding her from us until we were willing to let her die. --Christina Croft
Hard to watch? Imagine being present and going against the masses. https://t.co/rYDrRzoOBF
— Kelly DNP🐭Functional/Integrative Med (@kacdnp91) December 12, 2023
00:04. Christina Croft.
00:07. And this is about your mama? Okay, first question did your mom take any COVID-19 shots?
00:12. No, she was not vaccinated.
00:15: do you know why she didn't take one?
00:16. Probably because of me. I kept encouraging her not to take it, because I felt like it was not going to be good for her; I thought it would be dangerous for her. She had asthma and allergies, and I kept encouraging her not to take it. My dad took it, but my mom didn't.
00:35. What was going on that made her go to the hospital?
00:38. So she had gotten covid and handling it at home we got her a prescription for Ivermectin unfortunately the pharmacy refused to fill the prescription for her we went to several different pharmacies and no one would fill it.
00:53. Did they say why they wouldn't fill it?
00:55. They just said they wouldn't. They wouldn't even let us talk to the pharmacist they just said you know we're not filling it and so she we had an oximeter at home and she eventually hurt oxygen went down below 90 and that scared them so they went into the hospital in August of 2021 and she was completely corn from us we weren't allowed to be with her at all.
01:20. Did she have a phone where she could text you or . . . ?
01:21. She did actually. She was texting my dad quite a bit. He was allowed to sit outside the room if he had full PPE on, but they kept the door locked and they would just text each other.
01:34. Is that because he was vaccinated by any chance?
01:36. They had that rule for everybody in the hospital. They had literal security guards at the entrance to the hospital and would not let people into the hospital. And then once if you were cleared, you could go up to her room and sit outside the glass wall, but you weren't allowed to go inside her room.
01:54. So did they give your mom and remdesivir?
01:56. They did. We did not know at first. They told her it was called the "Trump protocol" or "Trump cocktail," or something, I guess what they gave Donald Trump is what they said they were giving her. She said it's something with an "R." She didn't really know what it was. And we had to do some research before we found out it was Remdesivir. And we begged the doctors to . . . can you just give her her Ivermectin, she's already got a prescription for it? They refused. We showed them studies that it was working, and they said, "Well, that's just anecdotal." They wouldn't even listen to us. We asked them to give her high-dose vitamin C, IV, but they said that the hospital doesn't do that, which we found out was a lie; they do offer high-dose vitamin C IVs. So she had the full course of Remdesivir.
02:51. When was last time she stopped communicating?
02:55. So on September 6th, she texted my dad at 7:30 in the morning and said, you know, "Good morning. I love you. I'm not getting better," and then she texted him and said, "There are no fluids, no IVs hooked up." And my dad texted her back and said "What, you don't have any IVs hooked up?" And she said no. And then she just wrote the word RICHARD. And my mom is a very sweet woman. If she said, "Richard," that was like pay attention, something is wrong. And he said what's going on and she said please find out what's wrong and that was the last time anybody heard from her so they vented her without telling anyone and that was the last time she spoke with my dad.
03:36. So when did you hear that she had passed were you there?
03:38. We were there. When they took her to the ICU, they told us basically verbatim what they told everybody, "As soon as you're ready to let her go, we'll unhook her and you can just . . . everybody can gather in her room." They wouldn't let us go near her while she was on the ventilator, but they were willing to let everybody in the room if we decided to let her die. And so after she died, I can't remember what day it was . . . it was the 16th. She she died on September 16th.
04:12. How long was she taking off the ventilator before she died?
04:14. 10 days. So she was on the ventilator for 10 days, and I think that's their protocol; that was pretty much what everybody would get, 10 days. And then they would bring in the palliative care doctor to try to make you feel better about letting your family member go, and we have a lot of siblings and we all met together, and she was really, really bad at that point. So we all decided that it was just best to . . . she wasn't responding to pain, she had no gag reflex, and so once they decided to turn the vent off everybody . . . it was all like, all of a sudden, COVID didn't matter anymore. There was no protocol. There was nothing. We were allowed to be in the room. Nobody was worried about germs; no one had masks; nobody had gloves, nothing. We were all hugging her, so we knew at that point that it wasn't . . . they weren't really scared of everybody getting it. They were withholding her from us until we were willing to let her die. And so she passed away about an hour after we took her off the ventilator. We just sat and sang hymns with her . . . until she died. She was married to my dad for almost 43 years she was a pastor's wife and we have seven kids lots and lots of grandkids and great grandkids and she was just a beautiful person that I feel was unjustly killed they refuse to have us have any say and how she was treated I even have text messages where she would text my dad before she went into the ICU and say like 4:00 in the afternoon I finally got my lunch you know they weren't feeding her regularly she had had an accident and they left her soiled for hours until they came in and changed her but no one was there to advocate for her because we weren't allowed to be in the room we weren't allowed to be in there to you know say hey she needs to be changed or she needs to get her food or whatever I tried to have the hospital investigated but I no one no one will listen no one will help so.
06:28. Did you get her medical records?
06:29. I did.
06:30. Have you been through them?
06:32. I've tried. I'm not very medically intelligent. I don't know what the word is. A lot of it is hard to read, but I got to the day that she actually died, and they said that they came in and they said her skin looked dusty and that they decided to put her on a ventilator. I guess maybe it was turning colors. But she was texting my dad, so she was still aware. She knew something was wrong. She knew something was about to happen. And even before they vented her, the nurse would say things like "Well, you let us know if you want to go on a ventilator if something goes south." They just kept asking her, prodding her. They kept telling her, "You need to calm down. You need to let us give you morphine or put you to sleep, so you can calm down." [That sounds like they were building a case against the min, recording it somewhere as a justification for the kill shot.] My mom was not a very excitable woman. She wasn't panicking, but obviously, anybody in the hospital would be scared. But it was like they knew what they wanted to do. [Yeah. They had a COVID death schedule and they knew the payout once that took place.] They knew what the protocol was and they were moving her as quick as they could, moving her to get to the end so that they could bring in the next patient.