Japanese researchers find first evidence of link between mRNA spikes and turbo cancer
A recently published study investigating the association between repeated COVID-19 vaccinations and faster disease progression in pancreatic cancer raises new and troubling questions about the safety of mRNA vaccines. The study, published in the journal Cancers, shows that patients who received three or more mRNA vaccines died from pancreatic cancer much faster, on average, than those who received fewer or no vaccinations. This finding challenges previous assumptions about vaccination and calls for a critical reassessment of vaccination strategy.
The study found that patients who received three or more vaccinations had significantly higher levels of IgG4 antibodies. These antibodies are known to be less effective at fighting pathogens or tumors. Researchers suspect that the increased production of IgG4 due to vaccination may impair the immune system’s ability to effectively fight cancer cells, which could lead to faster tumor spread.
Suppressed discourse: an inconvenient truth
The results of this study shed a completely new light on previous vaccination propaganda and public discourse. While vaccines have been promoted worldwide as an important measure in the fight against COVID-19, little attention has been paid to their potential long-term effects and side effects on other health problems. In particular, the question of the extent to which mRNA vaccines may affect the immune system and thus promote cancer has received little public discussion.
This information gap and lack of focus on potential health risks casts a shadow over the transparency of the medical and scientific community. Instead of openly discussing the long-term consequences, negative data has often been ignored or silenced. The lack of detailed, independent scientific studies on the long-term effects of COVID-19 vaccines on cancer and other chronic diseases contributes to public confusion and mistrust.
Undermining trust in the vaccination campaign
Now the question arises as to why such studies are only now emerging. Why was the possible link between vaccination and increased cancer incidence not studied in depth before? Why has so little attention been paid to the long-term effects of vaccines, given that their global administration was such a large-scale measure?
Conclusion: Urgent reassessment needed
This study highlights the urgent need to review the long-term effects of COVID-19 vaccines. The current findings should be understood as a call for a thorough, open and transparent investigation of potential risks. Only through honest and impartial investigation of the potential long-term consequences can public trust in vaccination campaigns be restored.























