Sharp intakes of breath
But wait a second, how does he know it’s not radio waves? Or the speed limit? Or bad vibes? Or over-ripe plums?
Doctor uses Reform conference speech to link king’s cancer to Covid vaccine
The speech by Aseem Malhotra, a British cardiologist who was appointed as a senior adviser to the US health secretary and vaccine sceptic Robert F Kennedy, drew sharp intakes of breath in the Birmingham auditorium where he was handed a prime speaking slot.
After setting out what he said were findings showing that vaccines “created havoc” in the human body, Malhotra said he had been asked to share something by a doctor who[m] he described as one of Britain’s most eminent oncologists.
“He thinks it’s highly likely that the Covid vaccines have been a factor, a significant factor in the cancer of members of the royal family,” said Malhotra, who had previously said: “This isn’t just his opinion many other doctors feel the same way.”
Yes ok but it’s highly irresponsible of them to ignore the vibes aspect.
A spokesperson for Cancer Research UK said: “There is no good evidence of a link between the Covid-19 vaccine and cancer risk. The vaccine is a safe and effective way to protect against the infection and prevent serious symptoms.”
You mean like death? Those serious symptoms?
Updating because I forgot: H/t Mostly Cloudy

How can he be sure it’s not Jewish lasers from space? I think it’s very irresponsible to rule that out prematurely…
You make a very good and serious point.
Funny, I myself would consider death as “creating havoc” in the human body, but maybe that’s just me. How long before this idiot starts making the same claims about the smallpox vaccine, if he hasn’t done so already. How long before the rest of the world has to create a cordon sanitaire against American lunacy and disease?
There’s another story I wrote. Damn, I begin to feel like the things I write come true! Maybe I better stop writing…or start writing about fluffy bunnies and kittens.
One notices that the “eminent oncologist” is not named, nor the other “doctors”.
What about a story about otters, iknklast? They are lovely creatures.
We now have moles in the garden, and bats in the belfry — not my personal belfry, which I shall refrain for good reasons from describing, but really the casement for the outer shutters of my study: we are on the side of a hill, overlooking a valley where the Tama river and other smaller rivers and brooks run, and I sit and watch the bats flying out at dusk, feeling like Count Dracula in my castle. I like having these small animals about us, and am hoping the mole doesn’t try to invade the territory of one of our next-door neighbours, whose garden is a sort of sterile desert and appears to have a hatred of living things.
That sounds very beautiful.
Oh, I wish it were! But we look over the valley of the Tama River and others and there, in the distance, are the boring towers of Tachikawa and other towns; and since we came here, over 40 years ago, the flood-plain below us has been built over with new houses, and almost all the paddy-fields, with their choruses of frogs in spring, have vanished, as have the huge flocks of bats, thousands and thousands of them, that used to come out over the rivers at dusk (this is why I cherish the bats in my belfry). Why people buy houses on the flood-plain, I do not know. One is never far from the mountains in Japan, and when a storm or a typhoon comes, rivers rise with terrifying speed. At the largest shopping centre near us, which is on flat and mildly rising land near the Tama river, there are marks on the electricity poles and lamp-posts which show the extent to which the river might rise in the event of a serious flood: they are well above where the second story begins of the buildings before which they stand.