I work in healthcare in the UK. I have seen no one within my practice and in any of my jabbed colleagues with anything more than a localised allergic reaction to the jab and a couple of days of mild tiredness/flu symptoms. I have not seen any cases of myocarditis apart from a few severe post-covid related paediatric cases long before the jabs came out (paediatric post viral inflammation syndrome) There may have been some mild cases that I would not have been involved with, as I only see severe critical illness. Many of the COVID patients got arrythmias, myocarditis, clotting abnormalities. I have seen no "turbo cancer". Cancer spreads, sometimes fast, sometimes slow. Lots of people get it young. People very likely weren't trawling twitter pages pre-covid for people declaring they had cancer. Same goes for young sportsman sudden deaths. They unfortunately have always happened, that's why there are screening programmes in many countries. I suspect these screening programmes have also suffered due to COVID restrictions.
I am aware of an older friend who had a DVT and then PE a couple of weeks after the jab, which probably is related.
However, what I have seen is a huge increase in suicide, even in young females which is usually much rarer than in males. I was actually talking to an organ donation specialist nurse, questioning whether our hospital is simply an outlier in not seeing any complications but she confirmed my experience all around the region. Also we have seen an increase in more severe illness due to influenza A and strep, in particular in younger patients. This seems all to be related to lockdown and changes in microbial development and spread. People are also fatter and much less fit.
We are seeing poorly treated chronic disease complications due to increased waiting lists as a result of the years of restrictions: diabetes for example, and also cancers such as bladder and bowel that would usually be quite treatable but have developed due to delays I'm treatment. There has been no increase in miscarriage in our area, but the Obs&gynae team did report then jab affected menstrual cycles in the short term.
I guess what I'm saying is that this thread seems to be an host of Twitter posts with some very dubious claims, poorly summarised studies or even literal lies, and a lot of confirmation bias that bares no relation to what I see daily in healthcare. Who knows, perhaps I'm in an outlier area. But I feel we are very much missing the point, and getting angry at a jab rather than the people who have ruined a healthcare system, mismanaged an emergency and who's decisions will have consequences long into the future. I suspect this post will be unpopular here, but echo chambers need to be opened sometimes.