You both need to read up on the stuff Dr. Cole, independent pathologist in Boise Idaho, has published. One of his observations from recent, unexplained deaths, is that incidents of cancer are up 20 times normal. They appear suddenly and lean toward types that occur in females.
I’ve seen it in my own experience with friends: get the clot shots, get cancer, get the third shot, and die before cancer treatment can get started. It’s real and really, really dumb that it’s happening.
“Dr. Cole,”
Not that crap, again.
“is that incidents of cancer are up 20 times normal”
I don’t think he said that.
I am all too willing to believe it is happening, but my thinking is that if this is real, it will be so extensive and so devastating that it will not be possible to keep it covered up.
I do read articles indicating that there is confirmation of odd goings on with sudden deaths and "vaccine" injury, but this embalmer story should be easy to confirm from other embalmers, and i'm not seeing any name other than that guy in Alabama.
From 2017:
Endometrial Cancer Incidence Rising in the US and Worldwide
https://www.cancer.gov/news-events/cancer-currents-blog/2017/endometrial-cancer-incidence-rising
Yes, by all means read up Dr. Cole. The doctor who, in his zeal to “prove” his bogus claims, misdiagnosed patients with cancer who had no cancer. Look what happened to one poor woman because of him:
“Cole diagnosed the patients in the past year — while claiming to see a spike in cancers at his laboratory and attributing that spike to immune damage from the COVID-19 vaccine.
[snip]
Cole sent back a diagnosis of “serous carcinoma,” the complaint said. Serous carcinoma can be a very fast-moving cancer with a high mortality rate.
The patient’s health care provider referred her to a gynecologic cancer specialist, and she was scheduled for surgery. The surgeon removed her reproductive organs, along with lymph nodes and tissue from her abdomen, the complaint said.
That tissue went to a laboratory for examination — where pathologists found no cancer.
“Pathologic evaluation of all the surgical specimens was negative for cancer,” the complaint said.
Because of the discrepancy between Cole’s diagnosis and the apparent lack of cancer, the hospital sent the tissue to Stanford University for review “to ensure a cancer had not been missed,” the complaint said. “The findings at Stanford were also negative for cancer. Both the surgeon and the patient are understandably upset at the misdiagnosis by (Cole).”