The other morning a middle aged woman asked a group of us to pray for her seventeen year granddaughter who was just diagnosed with a very unusual type of cancer. My immediate thought was … “it’s due to the Covid vaccine.”
Obviously, however, one unusual situation, or one unusual type of cancer in a teenager does not a pattern make. But more to the real issue: Are these unusual, aggressive or “turbo” cancers becoming more of an issue?
At this point some of those who perhaps coincidentally were “anti-vaxxers” seem to think that this is a real issue, while others in respected positions think not.
From C&C:
“Canadian anti-vaccine Doctor William Makis published an encouraging new Substack yesterday, along with a summary on Twitter. Dr. Makis, who has been de-credentialed in Canada for his online advocacy during and after the pandemic, is well known for his regular and diligent articles describing sudden deaths and reporting new vaccine studies.
He reported that just in the last two weeks, six new academic papers have been published linking covid mRNA vaccines to cancer, bringing the running total (by his count) to twenty-six.”
[Dr. Makis then listed the six new papers.]
“Of course, these cancer papers follow a long, significant trend of papers — thousands now — linking injuries apart from myocarditis to the jabs.”
On the other hand:
“David Gorski, a breast cancer surgeon at Wayne Stare University in Detroit, summarized the “turbo cancer” phenomenon as “the usual misinformation techniques used by antivaxxers: Citing anecdotes, wild speculation about biological mechanisms without a firm basis in biology, and conflating correlation with causation.”
The best I can say at present is that I am suspicious that Dr.Makis may turn out to be right.
Meanwhile, I will keep the seventeen year old girl in my prayers.
4/22/24