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A recent paper describes health data from 8,407,849 citizens of South Korea, comparing those within one year of receiving shots for Covid-19 with a group never receiving shots. There were statistically significant increases in overall cancer risk and for six types of cancer: thyroid, gastric, colorectal, lung, breast, and prostate. Risk of cancer was greater with both mRNA vaccines (thyroid, colorectal, lung, and breast cancer) and cDNA vaccines (thyroid, gastric, colorectal, lung, and prostate cancers). Administration of booster shots was associated with increased risk of three cancers (gastric, pancreatic, and leukemia). [Kim et al. Biomarker Research 13:114, 2025.] Are these data accurately reflecting a real risk from receiving such shots? Is the increased risk of cancer despite the type of vaccine, pointing to something sinister which is not the vaccine technology itself being dangerous?26 views0 answers0 votes
A recent financial editorial from financial guru, Dan Ferris, said the following: “We are one demand spike away from a crisis that will ripple across the country in a matter of days, possibly even hours…Store shelves will empty. Farming, construction, and mining will shut down. Trucks will sit, stranded. And the entire U.S. military – except perhaps for nuclear-powered submarines – will be locked in place, unable to move an inch. It won’t be Wall Street’s fault. It won’t be Washington’s either… or the billionaires everyone loves to hate. This crisis will begin with a single failure: a power outage so major that it will force the new mega-consumers at the heart of the U.S. economy – data centers – to demand huge amounts of energy all at the same time. If the power grid ever fails, data-center servers will rely on backup generators to keep operations running. And those generators will all draw from one fuel source… diesel. Yes, the most advanced technological systems on the planet still use dirty diesel. See, for all the hubbub from environmentalists about the evil of fossil fuels and the bright, green future of renewables, diesel remains the quiet lifeblood of the modern U.S. economy. It moves nearly everything we eat, build, wear, and export. When diesel flows, so does the economy. When it doesn’t, everything stops. I suspect many folks think data-center power is a localized issue that doesn’t apply to them. They’re wrong. It’s a nationwide problem, and our country’s civil engineers will tell you that the aging of our electric grid makes disaster more likely by the day.” This certainly seems like a perfect worsening of things, to have unprecedented power demands that make us dangle by a thread, while all along, tidal power outages are planned to escalate fear while crippling the world economy. Is there a connection here?30 views0 answers0 votes