After trying to force as many of their citizens to get the COVID-19 jabs as possible, many countries around the world are now backtracking and warning that these shots could cause serious heart problems in young men.

CBN News reported that Japan’s Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare “raised the alert level for ‘side reactions'” to both Pfizer and Moderna about the potential side effects for young men from their shots on December 3. They warned that “serious” symptoms of myocarditis and pericarditis are being reported “more frequently in young men than usual” among those who have gotten the shots.

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The NHK, the website of the Japan Broadcasting Corporation, reported that the country’s ministry listed inflammation of the heart muscle and of the outer lining of the heart as potential side effects of the COVID shots. For every million males in Japan who were injected with the Moderna shot, 81.79 males aged 10 to 19 and 48.76 males in their 20s were affected. The ministry has since required that all hospitals in Japan “report in detail” about people developing symptoms within 28 days of receiving the jabs.

This comes after several Nordic countries either suspended or discouraged use of the Moderna COVID-19 shot among certain age groups due to risk of inflammation of the heart. Both Sweden and Finland have suspended the use of the Moderna shot for anyone under the age of 30, while Denmark has suspended this jab for those under 18. Meanwhile, Norway is encouraging those under 30 to get the Pfizer shot instead of Moderna.

U.S News & World Report has stated that myocarditis has also been linked in some young people to the COVID shots. However, experts are trying to downplay this by claiming that there is a greater risk that inflammation of the heart muscle will occur in those who get an actual COVID infection.

“We’re still learning about how the virus attacks the heart,” claimed lead researcher Dr. Jean Jeudy, a professor of radiology at the University of Maryland School of Medicine. “Myocarditis is part of the body’s reaction to fighting the infection, but it’s also in response to the virus trying to attack the heart.”

Back in August, the journal Cardiology Advisor noted that the CDC has reported heart conditions among young people who had received the COVID-19 jab.

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“The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recently reported myocarditis cases (along with some cases of pericarditis) that occurred after receipt of the mRNA COVID-19 vaccines by Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna. These cases have been primarily observed in male adolescents and young adults and tend to occur following the second vaccine dose,” contributing writer Tori Rodriguez noted.  “Given the relative rarity of such cases in the context of hundreds of millions of administered vaccines in the United States to date, the CDC continues to recommend vaccination for individuals aged 12 years and older.”

Red Voice Media would like to make a point of clarification on why we do not refer to any shot related to COVID-19 as a "vaccine." According to the CDC, the definition of a vaccine necessitates that said vaccine have a lasting effect of at least one year in preventing the contraction of the virus or disease it's intended to fight. Because all of the COVID-19 shots thus far available have barely offered six months of protection, and even then not absolute, Red Voice Media has made the decision hereafter to no longer refer to the Pfizer, Moderna, or Johnson & Johnson substances as vaccinations.