“no biological mechanism for a vaccine to cause cancer”
https://www.avma.org/resources-tools/pet-owners/petcare/vaccines-and-sarcomas-concern-cat-owners
Cats get cancers at immunization sites. At least one such cancer has been reported following injection in a 4 year old child.
It is kind of you to reassure Freepers that there is no such mechanism in humans however researchers are not in agreement and the data is not yet in. There would be a huge economic implication in admission of a link between COVID jabs and development of cancers or more aggressive cancers in multi-vaccinated persons which has the potential to result in investigator bias.
Ah. It is not the vaccine that causes the sarcoma, but oxidative stress due to the physical injury caused by the insertion of the needle. Any injection, regardless of the contents of the syringe, can cause this kind of injury. Cats are especially prone to this kind of injury, but even cats have a very low incidence of injection related sarcomas. The AVMA article you linked states that it occurs in one out of 10,000 to 30,000 vaccinations.
I had a cat develop a vaccine-injection site sarcoma. Because we noticed it early, we had him treated right away. He ended up having four surgeries, the last of which completely removed one of his larger leg muscles. He was a bit gimpy after that, but still lived another nine years. Oh, and he still got his annual vaccinations.
As I said, there is no biological mechanism for the natural function of the immune system to cause cancer.
If the small amount of spike mRNA contained in a vaccine dose is somehow carcinogenic, think just how carcinogenic it must be to have active virus distributed through the entire body. That virus forces cells all over the body to make not just spike mRNA, but mRNAs coding all virus proteins. If that were the case, then every single person who has survived Covid is at great risk of cancer.
I will mention that in the medical literature, I found several articles on feline injection-site sarcoma (ISS), three articles mentioning canine ISS, and one article each mentioning ISS in a ferret, a rabbit, and three weaver birds.