So is it true that they used footage from a 2019 heart surgery? If so, why would they do that and risk ruining the whole message? It wasn't necessary.
Indeed, why WOULD Stewart do that?
This gives the debunkers a softball to hit out of the park to discredit not only this video but the entire anti-jab movement at large. Hmmm. Maybe that's why. If that's your intention, then it WAS necessary.
We all know that people are dropping dead of the jab ... even mainstream and the pharma companies are admitting it ... due to blood clots and heart attacks. This could have been a very effective video, but Stewart not only ruins it with this nonsense, but he does great damage to the anti-jab movement.
I've suspected that of him from the beginning, and of Carrie Madej. Madej had SOME good stuff, but then said quite a few things that were SO outlandish that she literally became the poster child for the debunking and the discrediting of anti-jab.
One thing I've pieced together about Stewart is that he was desperate to become famous. There were two rap songs of his I saw that were about that subject, one lamenting the fact that he didn't "make it" (meaning make it to the big time, i.e. get famous and rich).
This is from his Wikipedia page:
n 2000, he auditioned for a film directed by Tyrel Ventura, son of then-Minnesota Gov. Jesse Ventura. After landing one of the lead roles, Peters wanted to impress Ventura with his Hollywood connections. So he told a lie: His brother was a teen heartthrob who starred in a popular 1990s sitcom. Believing that Peters had flown in from Los Angeles, Tyrel invited him to stay at the governor's residence in St. Paul during filming. Peters went home to Apple Valley, a suburb 16 miles away and packed a bag then moved into the guest room of the residence for several weeks, until the state troopers who provided security for the governor evicted him.
This incident, together with those rap songs, indicate a strong drive to become famous (and rich). BTW, I don't recommend his rap songs, as they're rather filthy.
So, as I said earlier, there are two theories about why Stewart broadcasts some outrageous stuff --
1) to make a name for himself (the more outlandish you are, the more you get noticed). He took jumped on the anti-jab bandwagon and hit the pedal to the metal, becoming one of the leading figures against the jab. He had just been factual and scientific, he probably would not have gotten anywhere near the notice that he did.
2) to serve as a paid disinfo agent (with his personal motivation being #1). Perhaps he made a deal with someone ... whether in big pharma or the government, etc. ... that he would become the fact of the anti-jab movement, becoming rich and famous, rich not only due to the revenue generated by the show itself, but also from being on his handlers' payroll
So when you see blatant stuff like his insertion of the heart surgery clip into this video, giving the debunkers a softball to hit out of the park, to discredit not only the video but the entire anti-jab movement, that's evidence that we're dealing with #2 here.