A woman posted a video of her having muscle spasms back in May 2022, and blamed the Pfizer vaccine for them, captioning the video ‘Thanks Pfizer’.
Little did she know that this could get her trolled for days in a few months time. The video has gone viral on social media recently, with netizens making funny and often rude remarks at the original poster.
It’s kinda weird to get your phone out and film yourself flopping around to lie to the internet. I mean you do you I guess, but it’s pretty weird.
— Akilah Hughes (@AkilahObviously) January 21, 2023
Angelia Desselle claims to be an advocate for people who were “adversely affected” by the COVID vaccine jabs. She posted a video of herself, apparently showing her legs in a spasm, as she blamed the Pfizer vaccine.
Is the Pfizer in the room with us? pic.twitter.com/lqbj8L5lv5
— Plant Dad 🪕 (@MattieLandrigan) January 20, 2023
One tweep pointed out that while the woman in the camera was having a ‘spasm’ (and not the time of her life), the camera from which the video was shot remained as stable as a painter’s hand throughout the length of the video.
Girl, why ain’t the camera shaking tho? pic.twitter.com/P2NA6wvdMR
— Jon Paul, Ed. D. (They/Them/Tired)🏳️🌈✊🏾 (@DoctorJonPaul) May 8, 2022
Ricky Chu couldn’t help but ask if the body was really reacting to the Thanks Pfizer jab or there was some other ‘tool’ making it shake like jelly.
Pfizer makes vibrators?
— Ricky Chu (@RikDaddy) January 19, 2023
Sean Kent decided to go with the hold no punches approach however and said what everyone wanted to say. Grossed out? Not really!
Please stop masturbating on camera and posting it.
— Sean Kent (@seankent) January 21, 2023
Someone posted this Andrew Tate video saying the vaccine could affect different people in different ways. Don’t worry. The guy’s being sarcastic.
This happened to my friend Andrew. pic.twitter.com/EpcBhSwFhD
— mike (@MC0wbell) January 19, 2023