Reprinted from the COURAGEOUS DISCOURSE - COVID-19 mRNA Vaccination and Newly Diagnosed Microsatellite Stable and Instable Non-Metastatic Colon Cancer

Pfizer Vaccination Conferred Sixfold Increased Risk

PETER A. MCCULLOUGH, MD, MPH

JUL 15, 2024

By Peter A. McCullough, MD, MPH

I recently was asked about COVID-19 vaccination and colon cancer. Are they related? What is new in the literature?

Akkus et al studied the impact of COVID-19 vaccination more than 3 months before newly diagnosed with a special kind of colon cancer. Microsatellite instability-high (MSI-H) colon cancer is a type of colon cancer where tumor cells are highly unstable due to a high number of genetic mutations. Instability occurs when mismatch repair (MMR) genes, which correct errors during cell division, stop functioning properly. As a result, errors accumulate and tumors become unstable. MSI-H colon cancer cells look and behave abnormally, making it easier for the immune system to recognize them as invaders and with proper immune surveillance, the tumor cells are effectively killed.

Akkus E, Karaoglan B, Akyol C, Ünal AE, Kuzu MA, Savaş B, Utkan G. Types and Rates of COVID-19 Vaccination in Patients With Newly Diagnosed Microsatellite Stable and Instable Non-Metastatic Colon Cancer. Cureus. 2024 Jun 6;16(6):e61780. doi: 10.7759/cureus.61780. PMID: 38975417; PMCID: PMC11227084.

Exposure to the Pfizer mRNA COVID-19 vaccine was associated with a > 6-fold increased risk for this form of cancer. Because the Spike protein is believed to impair tumor surveillance systems, among several cancer-promoting mechanisms, it is plausible that these cancerous cells are allowed to proliferate among the vaccinated where the cancer was not yet detectable at the time of injection.

Courageous Discourse™ with Dr. Peter McCullough & John Leake is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

https://petermcculloughmd.substack.com/p/covid-19-mrna-vaccination-and-newly?publication_id=1119676&post_id=146524024&isFreemail=true&r=16ettj&triedRedirect=true

Reprinted from the GATEWAY PUNDIT - WHAT?! Trump Shooter Appears to Be Featured in 2023 BlackRock Ad (VIDEO)

By Cassandra MacDonald

Investigative reporter Laura Loomer has uncovered a BlackRock ad from 2023 that appears to feature Thomas Matthew Crooks, the 20-year-old shooter who tried assassinating President Donald Trump at his campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, on Saturday evening.

BlackRock has deep ties to Biden, with many former executives and employees being hired to fill his administration.

The BlackRock ad was filmed at Bethel Park High School, which Crooks attended.

Loomer posted additional information about the ad in a subsequent post on X.

In a strange twist, Joe Biden’s longtime advisor, Michael C. Donilon, is the brother of Thomas E. Donilon, the chairman of the BlackRock Investment Institute, the firm’s global think tank.

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Along with shooting Trump, Crooks also fatally shot an attendee of the rally and critically injured two others.

Crooks was shot and killed by a counter sniper just moments after he shot the former president in the ear.

Cassandra MacDonald

You can email Cassandra MacDonald here, and read more of Cassandra MacDonald's articles here.

https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2024/07/what-trump-shooter-was-featured-blackrock-ad-2023/

Reprinted from the COURAGEOUS DISCOURSE - An Assassination Attempt on Donald Trump

Nine shots fired, one bullet grazed Trump's right ear at event in Pennsylvania.

JOHN LEAKE

JUL 13, 2024

Joseph Stalin infamously remarked, "Death solves all problems, no man, no problem."

Since 2016, an array of opponents have tried to get rid of Trump through every conceivable means except killing him. Today at a rally in Pennsylvania, a gunman tried to follow Stalin’s cold logic.

Apparently 9 shots were fired from either the left or the right side, as Trump was looking to his right—presenting his head in profile to the audience directly before him—when a bullet grazed his right ear. It seems likely that at least someone in crowd in the line of fire must have been struck by at least one of the bullets. Indeed, preliminary reports are indicating that one person in the crowd was killed, and the shooter has also purportedly been killed.

Like the recent politically motivated trial in New York, it seems likely that this assassination attempt will galvanize support for Trump. Even people who don’t like him will probably be moved by this gesture of defiance, which certainly required a great deal of mental composure, given that Trump probably had no way of knowing if the shooter had been neutralized at the moment the photograph was taken. Note that the Secret Service agent to his left seems far more anxious than Trump.

The incident reminds me of the attempted assassination of Teddy Roosevelt in 1912. After being struck by a would-be assassin’s bullet, Roosevelt ascertained that it was not a mortal wound, and delivered his speech as planned. As he famously remarked to the crowd with the opening statement: "Friends, I shall ask you to be as quiet as possible. I don't know whether you fully understand that I have just been shot—but it takes more than that to kill a Bull Moose.”

It will be fascinating to find out the identity of the assassin and with whom he has been communicating. As this aggregation of reports assembled by ZeroHedge points out, notable figures have recently used intemperate language indicating that they would not be displeased if Trump were to be assassinated.

https://petermcculloughmd.substack.com/p/an-assassination-attempt-on-donald?publication_id=1119676&post_id=146587520&isFreemail=true&r=16ettj&triedRedirect=true

Reprinted from Steve Kirsch's newsletter - Former CDC Director now admits that the COVID "vaccines" NEVER should have been mandated

That's correct. Now, will anyone who currently works at the FDA and CDC admit that too? Of course not. These agencies are cesspools of corruption. AFAIK, not a single honest person works there.

STEVE KIRSCH

JUL 13, 2024

Take just 40 seconds and listen to the last 40 seconds of this clip. Then repost it.

In the clip, former CDC Director Robert Redfield admits that the CDC deliberately underplayed the harms of the COVID vaccine because they didn’t want to create vaccine hesitancy.

Their biggest mistake: mandates.

Redfield admitted that the vaccines NEVER should have been mandated.

Wow. A scrupulously honest former public health official. That’s a rarity these days.

Where are the apologies?

Where are the apologies from public health officials for blind obedience? Where are the apologies from CEOs for mandating the shots? Where are the apologies from university Presidents for forcing kids to take the shots to attend school?

Thank you Senator Johnson for exposing the corruption

This is an important disclosure.

If you want to say “Thank you” to Senator Johnson, please consider making a donation, no matter how small, to his re-election campaign. It’s important he stays in office.

https://kirschsubstack.com/p/former-cdc-director-admits-that-the?publication_id=548354&post_id=146587220&isFreemail=true&r=16ettj&triedRedirect=true

Reprinted from Substack Reads - The motherhood question, medieval manifesting, and the USA rail pass

Tom Cox selects his top Substack reads

TOM COX

JUL 13, 2024

This week’s Substack Reads is guest edited by

Tom Cox

, who writes

The Villager

on Substack and is the bestselling author ofVillager,Notebook,Ring the Hill,Help the Witch, and21st-Century Yokel. His new book,1983, will be published in August. Tom lives in a small village in the U.K. His writing explores landscape, books, folklore, and phenomena outside the mainstream, and some of his most popular posts to date include “Can You Please Stop Telling Me To Live My Best Life Please,” “Remembering A Very Special Cat,” and “Some Notes About My Dad That I Have Made In My Notebooks.” If you enjoy his selections today, be sure to subscribe to his Substack.

“So many words, so little time.” Since I renewed my childhood love of reading, around 30 years ago, I don’t think a day has gone by when I haven’t had some variation of that thought. Having read so much more now does not help: books inevitably lead to more books. Since I signed up to Substack in the final days of 2022, I’ve added another dimension to the problem, even as someone who is not the biggest fan of screen-based reading. Substack does not relieve my constant feeling of not achieving what I want to as a reader, my constant sense of literary FOMO, despite the fact that I’m reading for most of my waking hours. But also: how utterly brilliant is that? I feel the volume of great writing (no, not “content,” writing) on Substack pushing me forward with my own—not in a competitive way, but in a supportive, community-based, inspiring way. I want to read it all. I know I can’t. If I do have a criterion that helps narrow the choice down, it’s that I like to read people who don’t write like me, people writing about areas outside what is familiar to me, or at least looking at it from different angles to my own. I think the following pieces all come into that category. I hope you’ll find them inspiring or moving or enlightening or funny, just as I did. I feel flattered to have been asked to select them, and, as I have gone about it, I have felt increasingly dizzy: at the knowledge of just how many bright, original thinkers are out there in the world and just what a special, unique gathering place for them this site has become.

Tom Cox

OPINION

Women are supposed to want to be mothers

“It’s a privilege to be able to watch a favourite writer grow, and that’s definitely the case for me where Laura Kennedy is concerned. Back when I was still fearfully going against my better instincts and failing to delete my Twitter account, Laura’s voice felt like pure sanity amongst all the noise and topsoil posturing of social media, and, since breaking out of the constraints of journalism and committing to Substack, her words have only got richer, saner, more reassuring. Her latest piece, which argues against the notion—put forward by a pearl-clutching clickbait journalist—that Taylor Swift is ‘pied-pipering’ women into not having children, is typically carefully considered and calm, yet also reads like it’s been written with a scalpel. After reading Laura, I am always left feeling like I’ve had a really interesting debate where we have agreed on pretty much everything but also where I have been firmly put in my place, which is often a more enlightened, philosophical version of the place I was already sitting.”

Laura Kennedy

in

Peak Notions with Laura Kennedy

It doesn’t seem feasible that women are electing not to have children because they’ve been indoctrinated by a Girlboss culture symbolised by a leotard-clad, sequin-drenched, red-Fenty-lipped Taylor Swift. They’re not so hopped up on feminine hubris and inoffensive music that they think they have forever to biologically procreate, or that settling down and having a family seems suddenly unappealing because a celebrity has glorified going another way.

Continue reading

PHILOSOPHY

Why “manifesting” is far more irrational than using a medieval service magician

“I feel like I’m drowning in information most days, which is why I need Brian Klaas—who, like me, is apparently only interested in everything but, unlike me, has tremendous organisational skills—to order and decode it all. Brian’s latest piece, which contrasts the modern, corporate-driven mania for ‘manifestation’ unfavourably with medieval wizardry and superstition, is a brilliantly argued feast of facts, including why the crystals industry is destroying the ecosystem of an island off the coast of Africa, the origins of the word ‘abracadabra,’ and saucy stories about bread. It has convinced me that my reading of Brian’s new book, Fluke, before 2024 is out is mandatory.”

Brian Klaas

in

The Garden of Forking Paths

The first worry was that one might consume a loaf of bread kneaded not by hand but by buttocks. Bread, a staple of a medieval diet also used in religious rites, could be a vector for an irresistibly magical feminine essence embedded in the dough, particularly if the cunning woman had sat on it and wriggled around in her natural state to prepare the loaf.

Continue reading

TRAVEL

The USA rail pass

“I think this piece, by A.M. Hickman, could be the best piece of travel writing I’ve read on Substack: a sprawling account of the author’s pre-marriage adventures on a $499 Amtrak rail pass through unfairly overlooked ‘flyover America,’ with echoes of Jonathan Raban’s wonderful book Hunting Mister Heartbreak. I’d always imagined my great American adventure, if I ever get around to it, would be undertaken in a 1969 muscle car, but Hickman’s passionate writing—which shows that, even in the modern overdeveloped U.S., the romance and liberation of travel is not dead—has convinced me that train is the way to go.”

A.M. Hickman

in

Hickman's Hinterlands

,recommendedby

Rachel Sager

On the train, I was never alone; I was in a continuous conversation with an eccentric demographic of American travelers—liberated from the paralyzing freedom of choice that accompanies travel by car. On the train, I was simply in transit, one could check on my status as one checks the status of a mailed parcel—no volition was required, and I lounged in the lounge-car with others who shared my track-bound fate. In Terlingua, I spoke to no one—in Presidio, I was a distant stranger. And in Lajitas, the only one I spoke with was the Mayor—who happens to be a goat.

Continue reading

CULTURE

Give us something to believe in

“Maybe it’s partly due to the amount of Substack writers who are U.S.-based, but I’ve found myself far more interested in what’s going on in American politics right now than I was in the U.K.’s recent election. Whatever your feelings are about Joe Biden’s ability to continue as his nation’s leader, there is no arguing with the fact that this is a great piece of writing on the topic by Lauren Hough, which shows a great understanding of why the vast majority of people do or don’t vote for someone. Like everything Lauren writes, it has the undeniable force of a weather system, and also feels like you just wandered into a bar and got cornered into a conversation with a stranger, then realised the stranger was one of the wisest and most articulate people you’d ever met.”

Lauren Hough

in

Badreads

I don’t know much. But I know a few things about people. No one votes alone. They vote if their friends are voting and they vote if it feels like being part of something and they vote if they think their vote will matter, even if only for bragging rights, maybe especially for bragging rights.

I’ve got time to read the article I’m commenting on. And I can afford a subscription. People like the guys I used to work with, the guys at the cable company and the veterans and the bartenders and the cooks and waiters, the people I still call my friends, they still don’t read the article. Why would they. They’re late to their next job or they’ve got a few hours to sleep before their next shift. They just want to scroll through and see something funny so they can forget for a moment that they’ll be working until they die.

Continue reading

COMIC

A woman reading 

“I’m not a woman, I don’t have a deck guy, and I’m not 100% sure I know what one is, but I still related strongly to this series of narrative illustrations by Kelcey Ervick, as someone who finds it hard to allow himself to define reading as work, even though it usually is, and feels especially reluctant to do so around someone doing a more physical and clearly defined task which they are being paid for. I think anyone whose inner world is lit up by reading, and who finds it an escape from the world, will enjoy this newsletter.”

Kelcey Ervick

in

The Habit of Art by Kelcey Ervick

Continue reading

TECHNOLOGY

All hail the cloud

“About seven years ago, I wrote half a short story about a fictional land where religion takes place in the form of members of the public prostrating themselves in front of a giant contraption made of metal and wires, without knowing quite what it was, and showing it what deeply correct and impressive people they’d been: their adventures and relationships and thoughts. This story—an updated version of which appears in my new novel—was my way of talking about something I was seeing on social media every day, but it didn’t include as many great lines as M.E. Rothwell’s piece about a not-dissimilar topic, nor back it up with such well-travelled historical erudition. The number of quotable parts of this excellent piece of writing is overwhelming, and it made me punch the air and say ‘Yes!’ on at least four separate occasions.”

M. E. Rothwell

in

Cosmographia

, recommended by

Christopher Booth

Upon the ramparts of Viségrad Castle, I saw a man taking selfies with his cat, which he’d carried up the hill in a specially-made backpack.

We have become archivists of the self, I thought, curators of a life half-lived. Each countless photograph of a wonder, of dinner, of a view, of our children, of the utter banality of our everyday lives, was not a memento, a way of remembering the things we did, but instead evidence of the poverty of our engagement with the present moment.

Our photographs are not memories; they are advertisements, billboards for a life we are too preoccupied to live.

Continue reading

MEMOIR

Inherited solitude

“I’m about as obsessed with the west side of America as anybody can be without ever having actually visited it, but my main sense of the American West is probably long out of date—much of it comes from films, books, and records created more than half a century ago—so it’s been nice to get an equally strong sense of the American West from a couple of excellent Substack writers recently. I know Anna Schott and Deirdre Lewis have performed on the same bill at spoken-word events in California, and although they’re both very much their own writers, I bracket them together in my thoughts because they both bring you into their world in an effortless and friendly way, and write as well about landscape as they do about people, which is very well indeed. You can see them gaining confidence with every new thing they write, for example Deirdre’s latest piece, which takes me away to a place I yearn to visit during this rainy English summer.”

Deirdre Lewis

in

Snaps

The memories become memories which become memories. But there are a few snaps that always remain, especially the last one. After my grandmother died, my grandfather moved out to the desert full time and lived there until he died too. My cousin found him in a chair, his hands still folded in his lap, listening to the radio. 

Continue reading

LETTER

Clever crows

“I have seen a lot of writers on Substack say that they have found that the way the site works has injected a new regularity into their writing. There is perhaps no lovelier example of this than Kent Peterson’s page. Kent types one page per day on an old manual typewriter at his home in Wisconsin—whether that be his observations about corvids, an encounter with a turtle, or the construction of his early-20th-century home—and then takes a photograph of it and sends it to his readers. Okay, you’re not getting the physical letter itself, but the format brings an extra warmth and intimacy to what is already very warm, intimate writing. It feels like finding an obscure, deeply personal century-old nature journal in a magical dusty bookshop: the kind that always serves as a welcome antidote to much of the drier, cliché-strewn nature writing of today.”

Kent Peterson

in

Kent’s Substack

Continue reading

https://read.substack.com/p/substack-reads-102?publication_id=737237&post_id=146523270&isFreemail=true&r=16ettj&triedRedirect=true

Reprinted from the COURAGEOUS DISCOURSE - Will the World Fall for New Pandemic Marketing?

PETER A. MCCULLOUGH, MD, MPH

JUL 13, 2024

By Peter A. McCullough, MD, MPH

I spent some time with Australian journalist Melinda Richards Live On TNT recently and she raised the issue of “branding exercises” for pandemics, both COVID-19 and now bird flu.

Let’s listen to her perspectives from Australia, a country that irrationally locked down, forced unsafe and ineffective COVID-10 vaccines, and now is seeking a path forward after several years of shame by government leaders, and public health officials.

Now Richards reports there is mass slaughter of healthy chickens because of bird flu “bio-security” measures. These policies will limit good sources of protein and constrain the food supply. Instead, farmers and public health officials should allow natural immunity to H5N1 to develop in animals and humans. Of course, people can be prepared with dilute iodine nasal sprays and gargles and be positioned to see early treatment with multidrug protocols in kits if more serious cases develop. I emphasized we should never vaccinate animals or people in the midst of a widely prevalent viral pandemic. It will backfire and promote the emergence of resistant strains as it did in the SARS-CoV-2 outbreak.

Courageous Discourse™ with Dr. Peter McCullough & John Leake is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

https://petermcculloughmd.substack.com/p/will-the-world-fall-for-new-pandemic?publication_id=1119676&post_id=146369136&isFreemail=true&r=16ettj&triedRedirect=true

Reprinted from ForbiddenNews Substack - Demons of the mRNA Vaxx - Ana Mihalcea, MD, PhD

THEY BUILD A NEURAL NETWORK IN THE BRAIN SO THAT YOUR SIGNAL PROCESSING DOESN'T GO THROUGH YOUR OWN NEURONS, BUT IT GOES THROUGH THIS ARTIFICIAL PLATFORM THAT IS AI-CONTROLLED

FORBIDDEN.NEWS

JUL 11, 2024

In 2023, the Lancet censored and removed a COVID-19 vaccine injury and autopsy paper within 24 hours after 100,000 downloads. The intrepid Dr William Makis, MD now tells us that this paper has just passed peer review and it will be published. It shows that 74% of sudden deaths now occurring are due to the COVID-19 bioweapon.

(Roll video of An Injection of Truth conference with their chart showing how they got a mortality increase among children 3,328% using data from Alberta Health):

"Who can explain or why can we explain the amount of unexplained deaths in Alberta children? And yesterday I had indicated that I made a mistake, that the number of unexplained deaths was not 350%, as we had stated. It's actually 3,328%. And so I apologize for the mistake, but it was a, we couldn't believe it when we did it. And I made a mistake with the decimal point. So it's actually 3,328%."

Francis Boyle, who wrote the law that Congress passed for biological weapons has released an affidavit confirming that the COVID vaccines are "biological weapons of mass destruction", that violate biological weapons laws, weapons and firearms laws.

So, what does this all mean? It means, it's time to get off our asses and to start suing the minions who continue to insist on injecting and mandating to us, according to Dr Ana Mihalcea, who joins Sean at the SGT Report with more absolutely horrifying details about this ongoing biological warfare attack on humanity.

==>> Click on this site to learn the science behind Glutathione Discount Code: FORBIDDEN - for FREE SHIPPING <<==

She suggests that, since Big Pharma is hard to sue, that we could work our way up by suing healthcare workers for Pre-meditated Murder when they inject us with this known bioweapon – and that we should similarly sue any Chemtrail pilots we may happen to find.

What's stopping us? Dr Mihalcea says that sadly, a big component to humanity's inability to stand up to this outrage is due to the media mind control and due to the brain-damaging effects of the vaxx, which was part of the calculus of the bioweapon and is the desired outcome of this Cognitive Warfare.

I'm reminded of an interview by Steve Bannon with Dr Yan Li-Meng, who defected to the US in April 2020 from her position as a virologist at the University of Hong Kong, alleging that SARS-CoV-2 was made by the Chinese military and that they had been especially looking for a virus that could cause brain damage, while noting that about one third of coronavirus patients have been reported to have brain problems.

This is what Dr Mihalcea says she's seeing in her clinical practice:

"I'm seeing it on the brain scan, and I'll show you that, in just a moment. So here again, "Long COVID" is associated with long and severe cognitive slowing. There was another study that showed that up to nine points of IQ are lost by people who are vaxxed!

"So, I just want to tell people: This is an attack on cognition, and this is part of why people aren't waking up fast enough or they're not understanding what we're showing them!"

Dr Mihalcea says functional brain EEG scans are showing her that the hippocampus is being attacked by the bioweapon. She says, "This is why I use electron donors, like methylene blue, like the EDTA, like vitamin C, humic and fulvic acid to regenerate the brain, and I've shown on my Substack how I can functionally age-reverse people's brain by 20, 30 years, but it's very specific, that people see this is for real, and I can pick this up with these functional brain scans."

She continues, "Well, how are they doing this? We've all seen these people who just can no longer process information. They've taken the shots that, you know, whatever evidence you give to them, they cannot rationally really understand it. And what, again has been shown is that the carbon nanotube electrodes and that they are forming superconductors that serve like an artificial axon, like they build a neural network, a parallel processing platform in the brain so that your signal processing doesn't go through your own neurons, but it goes through this artificial platform that is AI-controlled.

"So this is how you create cyborgs, zombies, et cetera, that just follow [instructions] because this technology is bi-directional. It transmits information, but it can also receive information. And I just want to remind people that again, this is a slide from Karen Kingston, that the global patent for the COVID-19 vaccines contained graphene oxide, which is critical.

"This is also what Dr Ian Akyildiz discussed, who from the IEEE says that the mRNA are nothing but bio-nano machines. And this is where the warfare, the Cognitive Warfare comes in. And I wrote about this website, from the US Naval Institute and that discusses really that Cognitive Warfare for the military is of huge interest and that the human dimension to really maneuver; that is their goal.

"So what did they say? They said that the 'battlefields across conflict continuum now reach beyond the physical and cyber domain, and an individual's cognition is now a target.' So you can have cognitive, psychology and information communication technology to enable actors to target individual situational comprehension will with precision. So you can give them information to basically lead them astray, but you can also affect, for example, political matters and views.

"And you can specifically, the explicit targeting of human cognition, how people perceive and interpret information to gain knowledge and understanding is very specific Cognitive Warfare. How do you do it? With these nano electronics. You can completely take over someone's brain.

"This isn't just the US Naval Institute. This is NATO cognitive warfare. (Shows slide about NATO Cognitive Warfare). What are they discussing? 'Cognitive Warfare includes activities conducted in synchronization with other instruments of power to affect attitudes and behaviors by influencing, protecting, or disrupting individual group or population level cognition to gain an advantage over an adversary.' By the way, We the People are the adversary.

"Designed to modify perceptions of reality and whole-of-society manipulation has become a new norm, with human cognition, shaping to be a critical realm of warfare. Cognitive warfare focuses on attacking and degrading rationality, which can lead to exploitation of vulnerabilities and systemic weakening."

The above paragraphs describe to a T what the military has been doing to us.

Dr Mihalcea refers to a divide among her colleagues; those in the "spike protein camp" and those, like her in the "technology camp". She says, "It seems like we are all saying opposite things, but actually, it is both.

"So what's been shown is that the spike protein gene sequence is coding for hydrogel to make amyloid [the plaque that causes Alzheimer's], if the pH is 4, it would make amyloid, which a lot of doctors are saying, you know, that long COVID and the vaxx are affiliated with amyloidosis. But what these researchers have found that at a pH of 7, this stuff produces hydrogel. So this is synthetic biology, that will produce a polymer plastic and it is inside of the sequence. And so we are not really opposite in what we're saying, but it's both."

She continues, "What is important for people to understand that this stuff self-assembles, but that these antidotes that I've discussed in the Moderna patent is the EDTA with the vitamin C. Any polymer requires metals to start self-assembling. And when you pull the metals out – and specifically the EDTA also inhibits the self-proliferation of the nanoparticles. So that's what I've been using, very successfully."

She concludes by saying, "All of the stuff that I'm saying seems horrible, but take heart and fight. We have power...it's time to fight for our lives. As Todd Callender says, 'Either we win and they die or we die and they win.'"

ForbiddenNews Substack is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

https://forbiddennews.substack.com/p/demons-of-the-mrna-vaxx-ana-mihalcea?publication_id=1658626&post_id=146501825&isFreemail=true&r=16ettj&triedRedirect=true