ABC’s vaxx pin-up Aboriginal dead six days after Covid shot

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This article comes courtesy of The Covid Blog and Cairns News. It was originally published on November 4, 2021. It remains relevant given the removal of aborigines in the Northern Territory to the Howard Springs Covid Gulag, the death in custody of an aboriginal inmate there last week, and the ABC’s complete indifference to the matter.

A 65-year-old Wakka Wakka tribal elder is dead after believing he was doing the right thing for his community by allowing the ABC to promote his vaxx shot to entice other smarter Aborigines to get a jab. The vaccination maniacs of the ABC dropped the poor Cherbourg elder’s promotional clip like a hot cake after he died from the jab.

Cherbourg elder Bevan Costello would wish he hadn’t been conned by the ABC and Queensland Health if he lived long enough. Instead he was dead six days after getting the experimental Covid jab.

Mr. Bevan Costello, known as Uncle Bevan Costello in his community, received his second Pfizer mRNA injection on or around September 9 at a local pop-up event, according to the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC). He told ABC that many of his fellow Wakka Wakka tribe members were hesitant to receive the injections due to “misunderstanding of the information, mostly on social media.”

Uncle Bevan would have discovered social media was correct about the experimental jab had he lived long enough.

ABC reported that Cherbourg, an aboriginal settlement with about 1,200 residents, was only 4.6% fully-vaccinated as of September 9. Uncle Bevan said in the televised interview below that he’s more confident now that he’s fully vaccinated. He also said he was diabetic and that the vaccine should protect him if he gets COVID-19.

Details about Uncle Bevan’s death are scant. But the Cherbourg Aboriginal Shire Council Facebook page made two announcements six hours apart about his death on September 14 and 15 Queensland time. The first says it was a “sudden passing.” The second describes it as a “sudden death.” The two posts garnered a total of 339 comments and over 1,500 engagements as of writing, by far the two most popular most on the channel since at least June.

Spin doctoring at its best.