Is The COVID Vaccine Causing Turbo Cancers? (Del Bigtree Interviews Dr. William Makis)

“Before and after, the black dots represent the cancer it explodes inside this person body

This is a very important case since this is one of the first cases of turbo cancer ever published.

A 66 year old man with 2 Pfizer shots 5 months later developed lymph nodes in the neck and the doctors they diagnosed him with lymphoma

and at the time the doctors didn’t realize there could be any connection between the 2 Pfizer vaccines he took and his lymphoma.

and so in preparation for chemotherapy they said we gonna give you the Pfizer booster shot
so they gave him the Pfizer booster shot to protect him during chemotherapy

and within a few days he feels his neck node just swelled up

they do the 2nd image and see to their horror the cancer just exploded
this is 8 days after his Pfizer booster shot

The original tumor grew to much larger size and then there are new lymph nodes in the exila and
abdomen, and in the groin area as well.
cancer spread all over his body in a matter of 8 days

They published it and it’s the first example and first imaging example that we have of what turbo cancer
looks like and what it could do.

How long should it take to evolve into that position of cancer like that.

That could take a couple of years, certainly it would take many months.
Look at the first image, It took 5 month to get to the first image, and he already had 2 Pfizer vaccines,
and then you add the booster into the picture and that’s just 8 days his cancer explodes.

We come back to the idea the more shots you take the more damage your immune system takes
and I think that was what the Cleveland clinic study shows.

More dosages, more immune system damage. And the more aggressive your cancer can be.

now that you completely destroy your immune system of surveillance of cancer”

The Pfizer mRNA vaccine is contaminated with the plasmid DNA vector that was used as the template for in vitro transcription reaction.

This DNA could be the cause of some of the rare but serious side effects like death from cardiac arrest.

The DNA can and likely will integrate into the genomes of transfected cells.

There is a very real hazard for genome modification of long-lived somatic cells, which could cause sustained autoimmune attack toward that tissue.


There is also a theoretical risk of future cancer, depending on the piece of DNA and site of integration.
Phillip Buckhaults, Ph.D.
Professor of Cancer Molecular Genetics
University of South Carolina

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