Elvis Presley: Due to a family history of INCEST, the legendary singer was doomed to die young
According to the singer’s biographer, the singer’s defective genes were one of the main causes of his numerous health problems.
Elvis Presley was one of the greatest artists to ever pick up a microphone, and his untimely death saddened his devoted fans. According to Sally Hoedel’s report on the rock ‘n’ roll legend, the crooner was supposed to die young. According to the biographer, the singer’s early death was inevitable.
According to Sally Hoedel’s book about Elvis Presley, the singer’s death was caused by genetic errors caused by incest in his family line. His maternal grandparents, who married despite being first cousins, are accused of passing on the defective DNA, according to the book. Elvis died of a heart attack at the age of 42. The Jailhouse Rock star was found unconscious on the toilet floor of his Graceland mansion.
Elvis Presley: Was His Death Preordained?
Sally Hoedel revealed some alarming information to The Sun, claiming that the singer’s defective genes were a major cause of his numerous health problems, which he then treated with a mix of prescription drugs. Elvis’ mother, Gladys, died at the young age of 46 and had three brothers who also died at similar ages of heart and lung problems, according to Hoedel, who continued, “There’s definitely a lot of trouble in this first cousin marriage. ”
Hoedel continued, “So much happens in this family tree that when it comes to Elvis, it’s no longer a coincidence.”
According to Sally Hoedel, the mother of Elvis, who died 19 years almost to the day before her son, has a lot of information about how he died. In her 40s, the singer’s mother’s health gradually deteriorated. She apparently became addicted to drugs and alcohol and disappeared on August 14, 1958 as an alcoholic. Hoedel noted that Gladys was “always portrayed as this mother whose son became famous, bought her a big mansion, and she just struggled to cope with it all and essentially died of a broken heart.”
But that’s not how it works, she continued. Before he joined the army, I believe that both Elvis and Vernon [Elvis’ father] was aware of her condition. Hoedel claims that the genetic condition alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency, which damages the liver and lungs and causes other health problems, was primarily responsible for Elvis’ mother’s death.
Elvis’ maternal grandparents had genetic diseases.
Sally Hoedel claimed that Doll Mansell, Elvis’ maternal grandmother, may have been diagnosed with tuberculosis and that she herself may have been affected by a genetic abnormality that may have been passed on and aggravated by her marriage to her first cousin.
This book shows that tuberculosis was definitely a misdiagnosis in the early 1900s, Hoedel said. “Again, something that doesn’t make sense, but continued to be passed down the family tree and then recorded the history of Elvis as well. From there, we can conclude that thanks to her first cousins marrying, Gladys most certainly received two defective genes and a more severe form of the disease.