Yes, it's "his version." Tyler Durden isn't just some guy out there reporting the facts, it's pretty clear he has an agenda, narrative, angle... His source is fvcked since they simultaneously claim a 98x jump in myocarditis when vaxxed while admitting they don't have a baseline to measure against. BTW, you can sift through the data out there and find the baseline for myocarditis from covid, it's tracked by the CDC.
You were all over Covid reporting and never heard of heart disease from Covid until the vaccines; that strikes me as nearly impossible. You must have been all over the wrong places then; heart problems from Covid was being reported very early on. I even remember your comrades in arms complaining about heart attacks being blamed on Covid to jack up the death count. Funny how that works - when Covid causes heart issues, it's "fake news," but when the vax does it's part of some sort of gov't cover up even though it's the CDC that's telling us the vax causes myocarditis.
The vaccine causes blood clots, myocarditis, gillian bards syndrome and all the other symptoms that actual covid causes (duh?), only at a greatly reduced rate and with less severity. Not trying to be insulting, but maybe you lack an understanding of how the human immune system works and what causes these symptoms. Reader's digest version, inflammation, clotting, etc are immune responses (or over responses). Your body can have these same responses in reaction to any virus or vaccine. Ie, look up myocarditis symptoms - the look a lot like the flu because you're probably having some mild myocarditis when you catch the flu. So, obviously, compared to the uninfected, you're more likely to have a adverse reaction if you get the vax. OTOH, you're way less likely to have an adverse or severe symptoms if you get vaxxed vs getting Covid - that's just how the math and vaccines work.
As far as I can tell looks like it'll be pretty hard to get through this life without getting some Covid, so you probably should get vaxxed. OTOH, Omicron seems pretty tame, so if you don't get your flu shot, I don't see why you'd run out get the Covid vax. If you've had Covid, then your immune system already knows what to do. The only benefit to having the Covid vax is to stop/slow the spread, but if you're not working healthcare, a nursing home, caring for elderly parents, etc, then I don't see a pressing need for it.
However, if you really fear myocarditis, I'd definitely look at getting the vax, because you have people in cardiac clinics daily suffering long heart issues from covid and very few suffering long term heart issues from the vax. Play the odds.
I feel bad for people who are negatively impacted by the vaccine, but they most likely would have caught Covid and had a much worse go of it.