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Have You Been Vaccinated?

Have You Been Vaccinated?

  • Yes!

    Votes: 62 32.3%
  • No!

    Votes: 40 20.8%
  • Soon!

    Votes: 15 7.8%
  • No Way!

    Votes: 61 31.8%
  • I Just Wanna Watch!

    Votes: 14 7.3%

  • Total voters
    192

shiva82

Well-known member
Near the end of the articles I posted above is the article re. the former mma fighter. a local Fairbanks guy who was reported by his friends to have been "as healthy as an ox" at the time of his death.

You might also note the infant(s), and the 19 and 20-year-olds locally who are referenced in the articles, who died of COVID, as well.

Maybe they're just not making youngsters like they used to?

For those who have suffered, the deniers are an insult added to injury. No, really.
how many jabs did you have? and are family members still banned from your house if they do not wear a mask and take shots? you know, when you were bullying folk into taking a shot
 

moose eater

Well-known member
Ok, what about the millions that are dead or suffering from vax injuries?
fringe science reports that I've seen no actual evidence of whatsoever. My whole family of five was vaccinated. We're still all alive with no mortality or physical injuries that we're aware of, and we were first vaxxed almost 4 years ago.

Of all the people know who I once associated with, most were vaccinated, and they're still around, too. So if people are dropping like flies from the vax, then they're some place where I haven't witnessed or heard about it.

I think you need better reading material, with fewer fringe or tabloid-quality resources.

I'm not saying no one has had a negative reaction. I'm saying the histrionics about people dying in droves is total bullshit.

Now listen to the video done by the nurse from Fairbanks Memorial Hospital above. These people have witnessed some TRULY heart-breaking shit, some of which she minimally touches on in her video and interview(s) and have literally been physically assaulted and spat upon for trying to help people, sometimes for a s little as telling a COVID denier they were positive for COVID. FUCKING NUTCASES!

My daughter's a charge nurse RN, and if someone had roughed her up for doing her job, I'd have hunted that motherfucker down and made certain they needed medical attention that they -wouldn't- reject.
 

moose eater

Well-known member
how many jabs did you have? and are family members still banned from your house if they do not wear a mask and take shots? you know, when you were bullying folk into taking a shot
There's absolutely no hope for your denial. What's bullshit is your conspiracy theory nonsense.; Have a nice life. I have no time for brain-dead insulting, ignorant, paranoid idiots.
 

shiva82

Well-known member
promoting the zionist owned jab with one stroke of a hand , and then with the other hand claiming they are genocidal muderers, but for some reason the zionazi jab is safe now? interesting angle you are sticking on
 

Thegreengrower64

Well-known member
Good news, everyone!


Cancer research

Explainer

What are cancer vaccines and have scientists finally found a cure?​

The NHS in England is recruiting for the first large-scale trial of its kind, with hopes high that the personalised jabs could be a gamechanger

Andrew Gregory Health editor in Chicago
Thu 30 May 2024 19.01 EDT

What are cancer vaccines?
Cancer vaccines are a form of immunotherapy. Unlike vaccines that protect from an infection, such as the Covid-19 jab, cancer vaccines treat people who already have the disease. They are designed to help the patient’s immune system recognise and then kill cancer cells – and prevent them from coming back.

How are cancer vaccines made?

The jabs are custom built for each person, typically in just a few weeks. To make them, a sample of a patient’s tumour is removed during surgery, followed by DNA sequencing and in some cases the use of artificial intelligence. The result is a personalised anti-cancer jab specific to that patient’s tumour.

How do they help fight cancer?

The cancer vaccines work by sending an instruction or blueprint to the patient’s cells to produce an antigen or protein that can distinguish cancer cells from normal cells. The jabs stimulate the immune system to act. The immune system makes antibodies that can recognise and attack the harmless versions of the disease. Once the patient’s body has made these antibodies it can recognise the disease if returns.

What types of cancer can they treat?

Scientists are studying many different types of cancer vaccines and how they might work in different forms of cancer. More research is needed to get a full picture of how well the vaccines work and which cancers they could treat. Experts believe they could be effective in a range of cancers, including but not limited to colorectal, lung, bladder, pancreatic and kidney.

Doctors have also begun trialling the world’s first personalised mRNA cancer vaccine for melanoma. Experts hailed its “gamechanging” potential to permanently cure the skin cancer. A phase 2 trial found that the vaccines dramatically reduced the risk of the cancer returning in melanoma patients.

How can people access cancer vaccines?

Research is still at an early stage, so the jabs are mainly available as part of clinical trials. The NHS is launching a scheme that will give thousands of patients in England access to cancer vaccine trials.

What is the Cancer Vaccine Launch Pad?

The NHS scheme in England is the first of its kind worldwide. It aims to recruit thousands of cancer patients, with a matchmaking service putting them into clinical trials of the jabs that could help them.

When will it begin recruiting?

It already has. The first NHS patient to join the Cancer Vaccine Launch Pad is Elliot Pfebve, a 55-year-old lecturer who had no symptoms and was diagnosed with colorectal cancer after a routine health check.

How did doctors create this personalised vaccine?

First, Pfebve had surgery to remove his tumour, followed by chemotherapy. His personalised vaccine was created by analysing his tumour to identify mutations specific to his own cancer. He then received his jab via an infusion at University Hospitals Birmingham NHS foundation trust, one of several sites taking part in a BioNTech colorectal cancer vaccine trial. It was designed with the same mRNA technology used to create the Pfizer/BioNTech Covid vaccine.

How is the patient doing?

The principal investigator for the trial in Birmingham, Dr Victoria Kunene, said it was too early to say if the patient had been cured completely, but said she was “extremely hopeful”. “Based on the limited data we currently have of the in-body response to the vaccine, this could prove to be a significant and positive development for patients, but more data is yet needed and we continue to recruit suitable patients to the trial to establish this further,” she said.

How can I sign up?

The NHS has already enlisted dozens of patients to its Cancer Vaccine Launch Pad and will now accelerate recruitment, with thousands being offered access to cancer vaccine trials each year. Cancer patients can talk to their GP about whether they may be eligible to join the trials.

How significant is the arrival of cancer vaccines?

Vaccines have revolutionised medicine, protecting millions of people from measles and mumps, polio and coronavirus. They have also wiped out smallpox, one of the deadliest diseases in human history. Now experts believe they can form part of the toolbox needed to fight off cancer for good. They will not replace surgery, chemotherapy or radiotherapy any time soon but could play a key role in immunotherapy, the fourth weapon against cancer.

There are many challenges, and making personalised jabs for individual patients takes time, but the hope is that the process could speed up in future. Doctors and scientists have been working on cancer vaccines for decades but they have now reached a point where they are seeing real benefits for patients.
Good news....are you fk'in serious!!
All vaccines do is cause harm.
And after the current ongoing fiasco, you still have faith in big pharma. Wow.
 

buzzmobile

Well-known member
Veteran
Good news, everyone!


Cancer research

Explainer

What are cancer vaccines and have scientists finally found a cure?​

The NHS in England is recruiting for the first large-scale trial of its kind, with hopes high that the personalised jabs could be a gamechanger

Andrew Gregory Health editor in Chicago
Thu 30 May 2024 19.01 EDT

What are cancer vaccines?
Cancer vaccines are a form of immunotherapy. Unlike vaccines that protect from an infection, such as the Covid-19 jab, cancer vaccines treat people who already have the disease. They are designed to help the patient’s immune system recognise and then kill cancer cells – and prevent them from coming back.

How are cancer vaccines made?

The jabs are custom built for each person, typically in just a few weeks. To make them, a sample of a patient’s tumour is removed during surgery, followed by DNA sequencing and in some cases the use of artificial intelligence. The result is a personalised anti-cancer jab specific to that patient’s tumour.

How do they help fight cancer?

The cancer vaccines work by sending an instruction or blueprint to the patient’s cells to produce an antigen or protein that can distinguish cancer cells from normal cells. The jabs stimulate the immune system to act. The immune system makes antibodies that can recognise and attack the harmless versions of the disease. Once the patient’s body has made these antibodies it can recognise the disease if returns.

What types of cancer can they treat?

Scientists are studying many different types of cancer vaccines and how they might work in different forms of cancer. More research is needed to get a full picture of how well the vaccines work and which cancers they could treat. Experts believe they could be effective in a range of cancers, including but not limited to colorectal, lung, bladder, pancreatic and kidney.

Doctors have also begun trialling the world’s first personalised mRNA cancer vaccine for melanoma. Experts hailed its “gamechanging” potential to permanently cure the skin cancer. A phase 2 trial found that the vaccines dramatically reduced the risk of the cancer returning in melanoma patients.

How can people access cancer vaccines?

Research is still at an early stage, so the jabs are mainly available as part of clinical trials. The NHS is launching a scheme that will give thousands of patients in England access to cancer vaccine trials.

What is the Cancer Vaccine Launch Pad?

The NHS scheme in England is the first of its kind worldwide. It aims to recruit thousands of cancer patients, with a matchmaking service putting them into clinical trials of the jabs that could help them.

When will it begin recruiting?

It already has. The first NHS patient to join the Cancer Vaccine Launch Pad is Elliot Pfebve, a 55-year-old lecturer who had no symptoms and was diagnosed with colorectal cancer after a routine health check.

How did doctors create this personalised vaccine?

First, Pfebve had surgery to remove his tumour, followed by chemotherapy. His personalised vaccine was created by analysing his tumour to identify mutations specific to his own cancer. He then received his jab via an infusion at University Hospitals Birmingham NHS foundation trust, one of several sites taking part in a BioNTech colorectal cancer vaccine trial. It was designed with the same mRNA technology used to create the Pfizer/BioNTech Covid vaccine.

How is the patient doing?

The principal investigator for the trial in Birmingham, Dr Victoria Kunene, said it was too early to say if the patient had been cured completely, but said she was “extremely hopeful”. “Based on the limited data we currently have of the in-body response to the vaccine, this could prove to be a significant and positive development for patients, but more data is yet needed and we continue to recruit suitable patients to the trial to establish this further,” she said.

How can I sign up?

The NHS has already enlisted dozens of patients to its Cancer Vaccine Launch Pad and will now accelerate recruitment, with thousands being offered access to cancer vaccine trials each year. Cancer patients can talk to their GP about whether they may be eligible to join the trials.

How significant is the arrival of cancer vaccines?

Vaccines have revolutionised medicine, protecting millions of people from measles and mumps, polio and coronavirus. They have also wiped out smallpox, one of the deadliest diseases in human history. Now experts believe they can form part of the toolbox needed to fight off cancer for good. They will not replace surgery, chemotherapy or radiotherapy any time soon but could play a key role in immunotherapy, the fourth weapon against cancer.

There are many challenges, and making personalised jabs for individual patients takes time, but the hope is that the process could speed up in future. Doctors and scientists have been working on cancer vaccines for decades but they have now reached a point where they are seeing real benefits for patients.
Cancer is not real. It's like Covid but different.
 

GenghisKush

Well-known member
Good news....are you fk'in serious!!
All vaccines do is cause harm.
And after the current ongoing fiasco, you still have faith in big pharma. Wow.
It's good news for my old man who has a leukemia, and almost certainly won't be around in 3 years and might be gone within the next 12 months. Now, he's a miserable abusive old cuss, it's true. And chemotherapy hasn't improved his disposition any. And extending his life is of doubtful benefit to my family, at least so far as mental health and happiness overall are concerned. Even so, we're hopeful.
 

BudToaster

Well-known member
Veteran
There's absolutely no hope for your denial. What's bullshit is your conspiracy theory nonsense.; Have a nice life. I have no time for brain-dead insulting, ignorant, paranoid idiots.
the stench of fear is strong in this one - replace your fear with curiosity and an open mind, and be born again into truth and reason.
 

armedoldhippy

Well-known member
Veteran
There's absolutely no hope for your denial. What's bullshit is your conspiracy theory nonsense.; Have a nice life. I have no time for brain-dead insulting, ignorant, paranoid idiots.
you mean like those quoted below ?
Good news....are you fk'in serious!!
All vaccines do is cause harm.
And after the current ongoing fiasco, you still have faith in big pharma. Wow.
:ROFLMAO:
the stench of fear is strong in this one - replace your fear with curiosity and an open mind, and be born again into truth and reason.
you "might" want to consider taking your own advice...i seriously doubt that will happen however. :rolleyes:
 

BudToaster

Well-known member
Veteran
Some day the piecing together of dissociated knowledge will open up such terrifying vistas of reality, and of our frightful position therein, that we shall either go mad from the revelation or flee from the light into the peace and safety of a new Dark Age.

- H. P. Lovecraft
 

GenghisKush

Well-known member
Some day the piecing together of dissociated knowledge will open up such terrifying vistas of reality, and of our frightful position therein, that we shall either go mad from the revelation or flee from the light into the peace and safety of a new Dark Age.

- H. P. Lovecraft
It is a little too on the nose of you to be quoting perhaps the foremost author of science horror fantasy, don't you think?
 

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