Monday, June 03, 2024

"dallas cowboys legend and super bowl champion Larry Allen 'dies suddenly' at 52"

By A Texas Reader
monday, june 3, 2024 at 03:17:15 p.m. edt

https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2024/06/dallas-cowboys-legend-super-bowl-champion-larry-allen/



4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Ehhh.350 lbs and dropping dead?Was he into fentanyl too?Or just steroids.

--GRA

Anonymous said...

Ruin their bodies playing foo-baw and die prematurely.

AbolishTenure said...

Remember when the Sainted Journalists would have immediately pulled out their CTE script including the blacks-disproportionately-affected subplot. Then they would lecture us about violence in sports and why we need to shut down Pop Warner football and turn little boys into soccer players. Seems like CTE would be a good cover to use now if they want to avoid talking about the death vax. But this time, hardly a murmur about CTE.

Anonymous said...

FOR THE MORE DISCERNING FENTANYL CONNOISSEUR,THERE'S A NEW COMBO THAT'S MADE TO KILL YOU FASTER WITHOUT A CHANCE OF REVIVING;CHICAGO AND PHILLY HAS IT CURRENTLY.

(ZH)Public health authorities are warning of a new fentanyl drug concoction laced with a veterinary sedative more potent than previous cocktails.

Both cities of Chicago and Philadelphia have issued health alerts warning of the drug medetomidine being mixed with fentanyl after an increase in overdoses.

According to the Chicago Department of Public Health (CDPH), medetomidine is more potent than xylazine, also a veterinary sedative that has made it into street narcotics labeled the “zombie drug.”

“Multiple associated drug samples from the West Side of Chicago tested positive for elevated levels of medetomidine,” the CDPH said. “Medetomidine has not previously been detected in Chicago, although it has recently been detected in Philadelphia. In Chicago, medetomidine has been detected in combination with fentanyl, heroin, xylazine, alprazolam and nitazenes.”

Medetomidine is similar to Precedex in humans and can cause respiratory depression, the CDPH said, adding that its effects can’t be reversed by Naloxone, a medication that restores breathing after an overdose.

GRA:blacks are not chemists,so take this stuff at your own peril.

--GRA