SOURCE:
Praise for Makis on this reporting. Praise to Dr. McCullough for his advocacy and work.
See next table from the Japanese Pfizer study report showing where the lipid nano particles bioaccumulate (see the 48 hours time period relative to the starting at 0.25 hour:
Makis:
‘Wherever COVID-19 vaccine spike protein accumulates, we see a “spike” in cancers: bone marrow (leukemias), lymph nodes (lymphomas), liver, kidney, pancreas, ovaries, testes, breasts, colon, brain, spinal cord, thyroid gland and more.
There is undoubtedly a direct local effect by the vaccine spike protein on the tissues it accumulates in, this is not just a systemic effect of the mRNA circulating and affecting the overall immune system.
Oncologists cannot continue to turn a blind eye to these rapidly progressive cancers, or “turbo cancers” as they’ve come to be known. Sooner or later, doctors will have to face the reality that they may have recommended something unsafe to their patients that was catastrophically damaging to their bodies.’
Start here:
‘Testicular cancer in young athletes
What is going on?
When a “fact check” vigorously denies something, it is very often true. Sure enough, a fact check denying the link between COVID-19 vaccines and testicular cancer exists (click here).
The fact check says “there is no evidence” but admits: “Grain of Truth: Four football players from the German first league have got testicular cancer since the spring of 2022.”
Except it’s not just 4 German football players (one article claims it’s actually 14). It’s also rugby players, skiers, cricket players, etc.
It’s athletes as well as non-athletes:
Some cases are extremely rapidly progressive, like this one: “late stage less than 2 months from 2nd jab…spread everywhere”.
Or in the case of 21 year old Irish cricket player Daniel Donnan, only a few days from diagnosis to death.
Or the case of VAERS 1232833 – a 32 year old military man who developed testicular pain 4 days after 2nd Pfizer COVID-19 mRNA dose and 20 days later was diagnosed with testicular cancer with metastatic spread to retroperitoneal lymph nodes.’
See Makis substack here (support):
Click this link for the original source of this article.
Author: Dr. Paul Alexander
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