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Give Aubrey Huff some credit.

Sure, the two-time World Series champion throws out some annoying, stupid, hateful and ignorant things on social media, but he doesn’t let it stop him from being wrong.

So, days after Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamlin believed he was dead or “in bad shape” and joked on Twitter that the NFL was covering it up, he’s back with a new COVID-19 vaccine. concept.

And, Hamlin dived straight into this one without revealing how wrong he was in his tweet — the 24-year-old Mackie Rocks native was hammered by conspiracy theorists to that point. He had to release a video that you can see here – But it works for him because he has more than 228,000 followers on the platform.

  • 2-time World Series champion Damar Hamlin believes dead or ‘in bad shape’ and the NL is covering it up

This time, Huff sandwiched the idea of ​​vaccination between the tweets of a young girl punched in the face, which he says feminists want, and another tweet calling marriage commercial.

Therefore, in any case, the idea of ​​​​vaccination should not be surprising.

“I believe that within 3-5 years, the people who took the poison will be dead or lying in bed with the flu. Huff wrote. “It’s bad that I say this… but the elites do not hide the fact that they want public control. And what better way than a bullet that kills slowly.

His comments came as Clay Travis retweeted a post MSNBC host Yasmin Vossovia had admitted on air about having myocarditis. Vossovian said her fight came in the cold.

To be fair, while there’s no data yet on the long-term health risks of Covid-19 vaccines, this somehow isn’t even in the same comic code as Hamlin’s tweet.

That tweet?

“No wonder @BuffaloBills Damar Hamlin has been the biggest story for two weeks,” Huff posted. “Now we have media silence. Not a social media post, image or live video. Something fishy. The @NFL is either covering up its death, or it’s in bad shape.

A follower was quick to point out that Hamlin was active on Instagram. Another person replied: “He tweeted yesterday.”

Both point out that Huff’s claim that “it’s not his social media post” was inaccurate — among other things. The former baseball player’s response?

“Wow, very stupid comment in the thread. Congratulations.

Hamlin posted a photo of himself standing in front of a mural painted in his honor and wrote, “Clone.”

But somehow that conspiracy theory got out of hand until Hamlin posted the entire video on Instagram last week.

For Hamlin, there is no connection between the vaccine and the heart attack on the field — after being hit in the chest by Bengals receiver Tee Higgins on a play — several weeks ago. There was a “doctor” who went on social media and said he gave Hamlin a boost.

Turns out that doctor wasn’t a doctor at all.

  • The ‘doctor’ who said he gave Damar Hamlin a covid-19 boost last week was not true

Huff was a good baseball player in his day. The 46-year-old had stints with Tampa Bay, Houston, Baltimore, Detroit and San Francisco during his 12-year career. He hit .278 with 242 homers and 904 RBIs.

Since then, it has been constantly circulating on social media.



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