We have a dramatic increase in pancreatic cancer without the slightest idea why. Did something happen? We don’t know. The whole world, the entire cancer research community worldwide, is asking this question. […] The system that allows us to understand cancer is failing. Professor Khayat, co-founder of InCA
If Professor Khayat is consistent, he cannot theoretically exclude that vaccination could be at the origin of this explosion of cancer cases since it is
- extremely recent if we refer to his previous interventions,
- it affects the entire planet – in particular populations who have been forced to inject themselves to maintain a social life or who have aggressively promoted vaccination (influencers in particular), and
- it seems to respond to an unprecedented logic. As would a substance used for the first time in humans, of which we only know part of the composition and whose impact on cancer was not evaluated before its massive deployment.1
Last March, epidemiologist Nicolas Huscher listed 10 ways in which anti-COVID mRNA injections can cause cancer. This list, from a study published in December 2023 in the journal Cureus, can now be extended to 17 items based on (non-exhaustive) more than 100 studies. Turbo Cancers are now at epidemic if not pandemic levels.
In The Cowardice of the ABC – Australia’s National Broadcaster Betrays the Public — Dr Ian Brighthope2 highlights a grotesque act of gaslighting by the ABC’s flagship program Four Corners that has turned its attention to the cancer epidemic sweeping the country. Suddenly, journalists want to ask: “Why are so many people, including the young, getting cancer?” They interview experts. They visit wards. They show grieving families. But they stop short of asking the only question that matters: Could the COVID-19 vaccines be a cause? They ignore the testimony of pathologists, oncologists, and immunologists warning of post-vaccine immune dysfunction. They ignore autopsy findings, registry data, and mechanistic studies linking spike protein and lipid nanoparticles to cancer pathways.


