Dr. Harvey Risch of Yale School of Medicine- The Rise in Aggressive Turbo Cancers and Dr. Peter McCollough- Pull All COVID Jabs.

Published: Sept. 19, 2023, 10 a.m.

b"Dr. Harvey Risch of Yale School of Medicine- The Rise in Aggressive 'Turbo Cancers' and Dr. Peter McCollough- Pull All COVID Jabs. \\xa0\\n\\xa0\\n Peter McCollough speaks to European Union Fatal COVID Vaccinations \\n@P_McCulloughMD tells @EmeraldRobinson he backs calls to pull all Covid jabs off the European market \\n Harvey Risch: Rise in Aggressive 'Turbo Cancers'\\u2013And Especially Among Younger People\\n\\xa0\\nDr. Peter McCollough speaks to European Union Fatal COVID Vaccinations \\nPeter A. McCullough, MD, MPH\\u2122\\n@P_McCulloughMD\\n\\xa0\\nThat's #courageousdiscourse! Great journalism! \\n@EmeraldRobinson\\nThe Absolute Truth with @EmeraldRobinson\\n@AbsoluteWithE\\nDr. Peter McCullough spoke in front of European Union to warn members about the fatal Covid jabs. @P_McCulloughMD tells @EmeraldRobinson he backs calls to pull all Covid jabs off the European market and to withdrawal from the corrupt World Health Organization. \\n\\xa0\\nDr. Harvey Risch: Rise in Aggressive 'Turbo Cancers'\\u2013And Especially Among Younger People | ATL:NOW\\nAmerican Thought Leaders\\n\\xa0\\nViews\\xa0135.1K\\xa0\\u2022\\nSeptember-11-2023\\n\\u201cWhat clinicians have been seeing,\\u201d says Dr. Harvey Risch, \\u201cis very strange things: For example, 25-year-olds with colon cancer, who don't have family histories of the disease\\u2014that's basically impossible along the known paradigm for how colon cancer works\\u2014and other long-latency cancers that they're seeing in very young people.\\u201d\\nDr. Risch is Professor Emeritus of Epidemiology in the Department of Epidemiology and Public Health at the Yale School of Public Health and Yale School of Medicine. His research has focused extensively on the causes of cancer as well as prevention and early diagnosis.\\nWe discuss the rise of what are called \\u201cturbo cancers\\u201d and what may be causing them. \\n\\u201cSome of these cancers are so aggressive that between the time that they're first seen and when they come back for treatment after a few weeks, they've grown dramatically compared to what oncologists would have expected for the way cancer normally progresses,\\u201d Dr. Risch says."