This is exactly how my neighbor died. He always claimed that he had never been sick a day in his life. His hospital administrator wife insisted that he get jabbed. A week after that he was having trouble mowing his lawn, and he admitted to me that he was feeling a little under the weather... Another week later he was dead, supposedly from cancer that had spread to basically everywhere.
Both my cardiologist and my personal physician advised me to get the jab. I trust them both very deeply, but I declined to get vaccinated.
Alas, your neighbor’s case is typical. We all have cancerous cells — cells that have simply gone rogue — popping up all the time. A healthy immune system simply sniffs them out and disposes of them. But the “vax” does significant harm to the immune system, allowing those pesky cancer cells to run rampant. We’re going to be hearing of “excess deaths” for many years to come. Does your neighbor’s wife concede that the “vax” is to blame?
“A week after that he was having trouble mowing his lawn, and he admitted to me that he was feeling a little under the weather... Another week later he was dead, supposedly from cancer that had spread to basically everywhere.”
Two weeks from no cancer to a fatal cancer everywhere in his body? That’s not plausible from any cause.
fireman15 wrote: “This is exactly how my neighbor died. He always claimed that he had never been sick a day in his life. His hospital administrator wife insisted that he get jabbed. A week after that he was having trouble mowing his lawn, and he admitted to me that he was feeling a little under the weather... Another week later he was dead, supposedly from cancer that had spread to basically everywhere.”
So, the vaccines caused a cancer that killed him in less than two weeks? Doesn’t work that way.
A friend was a cancer survivor of several years. He was a big vax proponent since he was in an “at risk” group, so he got the shot plus boosters. Not long after being jabbed, his cancer came back with a vengeance, and he died last month. Draw your own conclusions. I have made mine.
You can’t get cancer “everywhere” in a week.