So you are calling her mother a liar, right oh,
Ill informed....gullible......not a liar
So you are calling her mother a liar, right oh,
I'll informed....gullible......not a liar
Oh do **** off, you pointless bobble head.
No, but here’s you calling the poor girls own mother ‘ill informed’ when talking about the heartbreak of her own daughters death. She saw it unfold and yet some brainless twat from the Valleys thinks he knows better as her daughter cause of death doesn’t suit his narrative.Every ****s dies of covid when it suits hey.....got ew fella
No, but here’s you calling the poor girls own mother ‘ill informed’ when talking about the heartbreak of her own daughters death. She saw it unfold and yet some brainless twat from the Valleys thinks he knows better as her daughter cause of death doesn’t suit his narrative.
You really are a complete ****.
A truly rancid comment.Maybe she should try getting onto Britain's got talent the British public love a good sob story
What ‘truth’?Truth fking hurts doesn't it
What ‘truth’?
All you’ve posted is baseless bullshit & insulted the mother of a dead 15 year old girl, as the poor girls death doesn’t suit your narrative. You’re a truly vile individual imo.

Ffs fella your are a lazy little fat fk ain't ya
Analysis: Subsequent Covid infections likely to be milder
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Nick Triggle
Health Correspondent
Covid is on its way to becoming like the common cold, according to two leading experts, Oxford University’s Prof Sir John Bell and Prof Dame Sarah Gilbert, who designed the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine.
For a virus that has caused such devastation, that may seem like a bold claim. But what past pandemics show is that the virus comes in waves. The initial waves are big, causing a huge amount of serious illness, but then get smaller and smaller.
This is not because the virus disappears, but because the immunity we have built up lessens its impact. The illnesses caused are less severe even though we get infected repeatedly.
The vaccines that have been developed have basically given our immune systems a head start, teaching them how to fight off the virus.
The protection against infection may wane over time, but it remains stronger against serious illness.
That means while we face repeated infections in the future, they are likely to be milder for most and in the process keep our immune systems topped up.
As we see with other viruses, older people and those with compromised immune systems will remain at greater risk. That is why they are likely to be offered repeat vaccinations in future years.
This does not mean there will be no Covid deaths in the future – a bad flu winter can still claim 25,000 lives – but instead it will reach a level that society considers acceptable.
The big question is just how quickly we get there.
Tedious ott as per......put that handbag away fella........makes no odds what you say.
Cry me a river



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How many posts has everyone got in here?
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