Looks like we are about to find out

FROM JEFF CHILDERS

The irony continued thick and hot this week in another article, this one in New Zealand’s RNZ News, with the unlikely headline: “Melanoma researcher experimenting on his own brain tumour.” Do not try that at home.

Professor Richard Scolyer, 56, is a prominent cancer doctor and co-director of the Sydney-based Melanoma Institute of Australia. Despite being in terrific health, having access to the best medical technology in the world, and being an expert in cancer treatment and avoidance, a couple months ago in May Dr. Scolyer experienced a sudden and unexpected seizure.

He immediately went in for diagnosis. MRI scans showed he ALREADY had stage four wild-type glioblastoma, which is a brain cancer that is unfortunately usually fatal within six to nine months. Dr. Scolyer told Saturday Morning his cancer was “the worst of the worst, as far as brain cancers go. It’s incurable and the standard treatment hasn’t changed in 18 years.”

Now get this. Dr. Scolyer, a glutton for punishment, has volunteered to test the world’s first mRNA cancer ‘vaccine.’ The word ‘vaccine’ has gotten very fluid these days. Technically his treatment is being called a “personalized neoadjuvant combination immunotherapy.”

How an after-the-fact genetic treatment is now called a “vaccine” is beyond me. One suspects that generous government liability protection for “vaccines” may have something to do with it. Anyway, Dr. Scolyer is big pharma’s latest guinea pig. I suppose he doesn’t have much to lose at this point. Maybe more mRNA is the ticket.

The “personalized” cancer treatment involves making an mRNA shot that creates proteins based on the same tumor that is in Dr. Scolyer’s head, with the idea being to stimulate his immune system into attacking the tumor. “This has excited the brain cancer neuro oncology community and the bio-pharmaceutical industry, so hopefully some clinical trials will start very soon,” Dr. Scolyer explained.

I bet it has excited the bio-pharmaceutical industry.

Pharma has been experimenting with mRNA for cancer treatment for over twenty years without success. In fact, cancer treatment was the original intention for mRNA. Careful observers will recall a lot of hoopla a few years ago about “personalized cancer treatments.” They meant mRNA, we just didn’t know it at the time. But so far, nothing has worked.

We pray that Dr. Scolyer becomes the first success story. If it works, it would be good news for a lot of folks.

? Sadly, it is too late for one of Dr. Scolyer’s colleagues, who died on August 13th from brain cancer, which in her case is euphemistically being referred to as “a long illness.” Dr. Mary-Louise McLaws, 70, was an internationally renowned epidemiologist and professor at the University of New South Wales School of Public Health and Community Medicine. Until recently, that is.

She was also an influential member of the WHO’s Health Emergencies Program Experts Advisory Panel for Infection Prevention and Control Preparedness, Readiness and Response to covid-19 (the “HEPEAPIPCPRRC19”). Throughout the pandemic, McLaws advised the Australian government on lockdowns, face masking, and jab mandates, and was all over Australian media scolding hesitant Ozzies for not jabbing fast enough. She practically chased people around with a giant hypodermic needle.

Anyway, Mary was diagnosed with “brain cancer” in January 2022. I can’t find any article describing the type of brain cancer that killed her. But whatever it was, it came on suddenly and unexpectedly. From the Sydney Morning Herald in June 2022:

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Sadly, Dr. McLaws will not be around to see if all her jab advice will turn out to have been worth it, or whether even more mRNA might have cured her sudden and unexpected brain cancer. Our thoughts and prayers are with her family in this difficult time.

? Royal College fellow, medical pioneer, lifetime science achievement award winner, and Kings College Professor Linda Cardozo, 73, died suddenly and unexpectedly this week. Very suddenly and unexpectedly.

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Dr. Cardozo died while taking a short nap on a British Airways flight from London to Nice, where she’d planned to enjoy a well-deserved holiday with her husband, who was sitting right next to her on the plane. Her kindly husband let Linda sleep until most of the other passengers had left the plane. That’s when he figured out she wasn’t waking up.

Dr. Cardozo was pronounced dead at the scene. At least she died peacefully. Very peacefully.

No cause of death has been released, or ever will be.

By the way, anecdotally, it’s getting harder and harder to find these stories. The search engines, including on Twitter, have become extremely glitchy and unreliable when searching for key words like “died suddenly.” For some reason.

? On Monday, Nelson Mandela’s celebrity grand-daughter, Zoleka Mandela, 43, died after a “brief illness.”

The media reports about Zoleka’s death focus mostly on her 2011 bout with breast cancer, from which she fully recovered thirteen years ago. It took a little digging to find the cancer responsible for her untimely death this week.

I mean, cancers.

Zoleka had metastatic cancers of the hip, liver, lung, pelvis, brain and spinal cord. Basically all of it.

Zoleka’s Instagram account detailed her ongoing recent struggles with her cancers.

“On Monday, September 18th, Zoleka Mandela was admitted into hospital for ongoing treatment for metastatic cancer to the hip, liver, lung, pelvis, brain and spinal cord,” the statement attributed to family spokesperson Zwelabo Mandela read. “Recent scans revealed significant disease progression including fibrosis in the lungs as well as several emboli.”
Zoleka overcame her fears of taking the covid vaccine after her doctor reassured her and used guilt manipulation. I found this in Zoleka’s (formerly) very active Twitter feed:

We’re going to need a new word for this kind of thing. Turbo cancer just doesn’t quite capture the essence. Maybe “exploding turbo cancer?” Share your suggestion in the commen