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Message Subject Red Cross staffer told me her latest observations of blood they are drawing from donors.
Poster Handle BEETLEFOOT
Post Content
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Since I’m O-negative, I donate blood to the Red Cross every 60 to 75 days (O-neg blood can be transfused into any other blood type).

As blood is drawn directly from a return vein, the blood is always a dark purple/burgundy color because it’s been depleted of oxygen that is absorbed by muscle and organ tissue in the body.

Today, I asked the woman drawing my blood if she has observed any odd or strange abnormalities in the blood she is drawing from people lately (I didn’t ask if she was vaxxed or not, so I kept my question neutral).

She never mentioned clotting, but instead she said, “Yes, I’m seeing a lot more bright colored blood. Some is even orange, some is green.”

Remember: Blood becomes bright red in color when it leaves the lungs because it is oxygen rich. As the oxygen is depleted from the circulating red blood cells by the body’s muscle and organ tissue, it becomes a dark purple/burgundy.

As to orange or green colored blood, sometimes an infection can cause discoloration in blood. Sometimes medications can cause blood discoloration.

But every blood donor is always pre-screened with a long list of knock-out questions that specifically ask about antibiotics, sickness, illness, infection, medications, etc., so most people donating are usually healthy. This has always been my personal observation as well.

The staffer had no explanation for the high levels of discolored blood she is seeing from donors.

So think about it…. If the blood being drawn is from a return vein and the blood is supposed to be depleted of oxygen and is therefore supposed to now be a deep purple/burgundy, but is in fact bright red, that means the body itself is failing to draw the oxygen from the red blood cells, OR something in the red blood cells is preventing the oxygen from being unloaded and transferred to the muscle and organ tissue.

Moreover, if blood being drawn from donors is orange or green tinted, that would indicate underlying infection or disease, and the donors have no idea their body is slowly succumbing to breakdown of the immune system.

Where there is lack of oxygen in the body, cancer cells thrive. I imagine these vaxxed people will soon develop all kinds of cancers since their blood cells are not properly transferring oxygen to the muscles and organs.

As for me, my blood always flows quickly, and rapidly fills a pint bag, and I can see it’s dark purple/burgundy (I am UN-vaxxed).

It will be interesting to continue monitoring this issue every 60 to 75 days that I donate blood.

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[EDIT] Yes, the Red Cross accepts blood from vaxxed donors. However, today I noticed they altered one of the screening questions from “In the past 90 days, have you received a covid19 vaccination?” to: “Have you EVER received a covid19 vaccination?”

So they ARE tracking and testing the blood of vaxxed vs unvaxxed donors.

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 Quoting: Zovalex


Yup I'm O-neg and I donate 2 units in the Alyx machine every 112 days. I give them the choice and they always choose to get platelets. I have not asked about the difference but I did advise them giving blood from vaccinated to unvaccinated people could end up killing them in the mid-term period.
 Quoting: Anonymous Coward 79470017



I can tell you this, you should learn what a plasms donation is.
The plasma contains lots of goodies including the white blood cells. Your immune system lives in the plasma.
The moisture to properly run your body is also the plasma.

Your sitting your own immune system and stressing your body out with dehydration by donating.

But, if it makes you feel good....

I donate to, once in a while but only whole blood.

They can make more money and treatments from just plasma, that's why they try to get it more.
 Quoting: Anonymous Coward 76538212


I make regular weekly donations of plasma that go toward helping or saving the lives of two or three critically ill patients a week. I’m very healthy, unvaxxed, and the questionairre I have to take before each donation doesn’t include any questions about Covid or Covid vaccinations (I don’t know whether this has any relevancy or not). But after reading the OP’s interesting observations, I remembered some of my own among the plasma donors:

There are usually anywhere from 10 to 20 other donors hooked up next to or across from me. The plasma is separated from the red blood cells inside a machine and pumped into what looks like a clear plastic water bottle while the red blood cells are returned to your body through a tube in your arm. Everybody’s plasma bottle is out in the open and the range and depth of colors is astonishing. Mine is consistently a golden honey color, but others can be a muddy brown, a muddy yellow, deep gold, pink gold, or a reddish yellow. A couple looked like urine samples and one guy’s was even the color of warm diarrhea! I haven’t worked up the courage to ask what causes the different color changes (although they do warn you that eating a high-fat meal the day before makes the process take longer because the fat in your blood clogs up the filter in the return tube) but the OP’s story really has me wondering now!
 
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