Here’s Why Alabama Governess Kay Ivey’s Health Coverup Works
Posted by Warm Southern Breeze on Wednesday, October 17, 2018
Here’s some food for thoughtful consideration:
Alabama Governess Kay Ivey is now saying “Mayor Maddox’s campaign is trying to push this issue three weeks out from election day.”
–HOWEVER–
Alabama Political Reporter (APR) FIRST published that Spencer Collier, former Alabama Law Enforcement Agency (ALEA) Secretary under former Governor Robert Bentley (whose wrongful termination suit against Bentley the state is still footing to defend Bentley) learned of Ivey’s hospitalization because of a State Trooper security escort team member’s honest reimbursement claims during an unexpected extended stay in Colorado.

Elected as Lt. Governor, Kay Ivey, a 74-year old life-long politician and Republican, was sworn into office as Governess April 10, 2017 following Governor Robert Bentley’s guilty plea bargain to misdemeanor campaign finance violations, in lieu of a possible trial amidst corruption allegations, including those of salacious sexual impropriety which led to his longtime spouse Diane’s divorce from him, which were also among numerous widely published accounts of his misbehavior in office. A concern over the condition of Ivey’s health continues to plague her candidacy for a full term after it was discovered she attempted to cover up a hospitalization in Colorado while attending an aerospace consortium in her official capacity as Lt. Gov. Her opponent is a healthy, well-loved, highly successful 45-year old three-time reelected Mayor of Tuscaloosa, Walt Maddox, a Democrat.
APR recently CONFIRMED with Collier about Ivey’s cover-up about her emergency hospitalization in Colorado in April 2015 during a trip to the Aerospace States Association Annual Meeting in Colorado Springs.
She’s denying it all, of course – at least to the extent she can – claiming that she had “altitude sickness.” {NOTE: Altitude Sickness (AS) doesn’t typically occur until elevations around 8,000 feet. Colorado Springs average elevation is about 6,000 feet. Physically fit people are more likely to experience AS because they exert themselves more. There’s not less oxygen at high elevation, there’s always about 21% oxygen in the air. The difference is because of reduced air pressure at altitude.}
She’s also saying things like:
“My health is fine. I’ve never felt better. What’s the old saying? There’s never a step too high for a high stepper.”
-and-
“After lunch, I was presiding and got light-headed and whatever. So everybody said, ‘Oh you need to go get checked out. Well, that’s logical. So we did. So on Friday night and Saturday and I got out of the hospital on Sunday. They ran all kind of tests. And I’ve never had a stroke, not then, not since.” {NOTE: A stroke occurs when a blood vessel to the brain is either blocked (called an ischemic stroke), or bursts (called a hemorrhagic stroke), which prevents oxygen from reaching the brain, and damage begins within minutes. As a result, the parts of the body controlled by that part of the brain affected will not work properly.}
So, on one level, she’s almost sorta’ being kinda’ honest a little bit, but it’s actually more like a “pussy grabbing” sexual assault, insofar as there’s no evidence that can be had to prove it, per se, because of the very nature of the event (a Transient Ischemic Attack, or TIA). {NOTE: Transient Ischemic Attack “translates” as Transient, meaning quickly passing, Ischemic, meaning deprived of blood supply, and Attack, meaning sudden.}
Why?
Ivey’s physician, Dr. Brian Elrod MD, wrote of her that “During my examination I saw no evidence of a transient ischemic attack and learned that the extensive work-up done at the Denver hospital, including an MRI (Magnetic Resonance Imaging), a carotid ultrasound and labs were all negative.” Kay Ivey’s MD letter 2018
The reason why the good doctor “saw no evidence of a transient ischemic attack” is because they rarely leave any evidence.
TIAs may be witnessed, but there’s rarely any “evidence” of them afterward, because the blockage resolves itself by being “washed away.” Absent a baseline (a “before” image) MRI, no changes would be seen.
US (UltraSound) won’t always show.
CT (Computed Tomography) won’t always show either.
Or, as the British Medical Journal’s Practical Neurology section put it in their February 2014 edition, “The main diagnostic challenge of TIA is that the symptoms and signs have usually resolved by the time of assessment. There is no test for TIA.”
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