The Handwriting of Famous Authors
Wonderful post by CLT on X. The handwriting of famous authors. Including this handwriting of George Orwell:
Wonderful post by CLT on X. The handwriting of famous authors. Including this handwriting of George Orwell:
My guiding assumption is that people rationally make decisions based upon the information they digest. Thus, change their informational (media) ecosystem and you will change their beliefs and behavior, yet they will be convinced that they never changed--that they are the same person as always.
And add this. "Your own government created the virus as part of a bio-weapons effort. Your own government doesn't give a shit about your long term health, but only about short term profits for drug makers. And your doctor should have told you that many doctors were getting financial incentives for each patient they convinced to take the vax"
According to Grok, Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong is a South African-born American surgeon, entrepreneur, and philanthropist. He is best known for inventing the cancer drug Abraxane and for his significant investments in healthcare and media. Born on July 29, 1952, in Port Elizabeth, South Africa, he graduated from the University of Witwatersrand with a medical degree and later earned a Master’s degree from the University of British Columbia.
Dr. Soon-Shiong discussed Covid and Cancer with Tucker Carlson. He has deep concerns about the long-term effects of COVID and the mRNA vax.
[Credit to Camus on X for the following transscript]
Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong Links COVID Spike Protein to Rising Cancers, Calls for Urgent Action to Avert One of the Greatest Health Crises in Human HistoryDr. Patrick Soon-Shiong, a renowned physician and biotech innovator, has raised a chilling alarm about what he believes could be one of the greatest health crises in human history. He warns that the spike protein of the COVID-19 virus—whether introduced through natural infection or mRNA vaccines—may persist in the body, driving chronic inflammation and suppressing the immune system in ways that could explain a disturbing rise in aggressive cancers, even among the young.
According to Dr. Soon-Shiong, the mechanism is rooted in well-established science about oncogenic viruses—viruses known to cause cancer, like hepatitis (liver cancer), HPV (cervical cancer), and HIV (Kaposi sarcoma). These viruses share three hallmarks: persistence, inflammation, and the inhibition of p53, a critical tumor-suppressing protein in the body. He argues that the COVID spike protein fits this profile.
It binds to ACE2 receptors, found in blood vessels throughout the body—brain, heart, pancreas, colon—penetrating cells, disrupting mitochondria, and triggering widespread inflammation. This, he says, could explain phenomena like brain fog, sudden heart attacks in the young, and rare cancers in children, such as a 13-year-old dying of pancreatic cancer.
Dr. Soon-Shiong points to emerging evidence: studies from the University of California, San Francisco, published in journals like Nature, confirm the virus can linger for years—three, four, or more—in those with compromised immunity. Worse, research shows it puts natural killer (NK) cells, the body’s cancer-fighting defenders, into an “anergic” state—essentially asleep.
“If the virus persists and suppresses immunity, you’ve got the perfect storm for cancer,” he says. He finds it no coincidence that post-COVID, we’re seeing pancreatic, colon, and other cancers spike in populations that rarely faced them before.
With billions infected and over a billion vaccinated, the scale is staggering—potentially one of the greatest health crises in human history, he warns. “This isn’t just a virus versus man,” he says. “It’s existential.” He ties it to long COVID—15 million Americans suffering memory loss, heart issues, and more—not as psychiatric conditions, but as signs of chronic, often silent inflammation. Unlike past cancer rises linked to toxins, this immunosuppression is global and tied to a single trigger: the spike protein.
Yet, Dr. Soon-Shiong remains hopeful. The solution, he insists, lies in clearing the virus from the body and halting the inflammation. “We have nature’s compounds in us to fight this,” he says. “If we can reactivate immunity and stop the cycle, we can solve it.” Having spent his career tackling deadly diseases, he admits he’s scared—but it’s a fear tempered by determination.
“This could be the largest non-infectious pandemic we’ve ever faced, dwarfing anything in modern memory,” he cautions, urging science to act swiftly to avert what could become one of the greatest health crises humanity has ever known.