Florida physician: "I've seen five kidney cancers in young patients. I usually see one kidney cancer every decade of my practice."
Chief of Oncology at a major hospital: "In young people, I'll see maybe one astrocytoma brain cancer a year. I've seen five after the boosters rolled out in the last month."
Another physician: "My 21-year-old son got the booster. Now he has a salivary gland cancer."
A family physician from Ireland: "I have seen the weirdest cancers after the shot rollout."
@VigilantFox
Drs don’t do research. They follow CDC guidance and the pharmaceutical sales shills that wine and dine them.
Look into what med students are taught. It’s not to research and find the root causes of illnesses and diseases. It’s memorizing. If x then y.
They’re not searching for cures - in fact, it can be considered medical malfeasance to use the word “cure” for most diseases.
They follow protocol for treatment (pharma) or surgery (big $$$ maker for practitioners, hospitals and their partners.
Very, very few drs break this norm and actually do their own independent research outside of CDC or other “respectable” medical/scientific authorities.
When I discovered this many years ago, my respect for the profession dropped significantly.
Getting into med school is the hard part. But getting through med school successfully is definitely not rocket science.And at this point, who knows if rocket science is even that big of a deal.