A video of the Prince and Princess of Wales urging people to have the Covid vaccine has seen a resurgence of views and public commentary in the last few days.
Sitting together on a sofa they smile as they talk people through why they must get vaccinated.
William: “Catherine and I are not medical experts by any means, but if it’s any consolation we can wholeheartedly support, y’know, having vaccinations.”
Kate: “It must be really daunting for those with asthma and underlying health conditions and things like that…”
William: “The media is awash with rumours and misinformation so we have to be a little bit careful who we believe and where we get our information from…”
This video was officially tagged ‘The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge warn Britons against rumours and misinformation about the COVID-19 vaccine’.
The first comments beneath tell a story. ‘LucyBear’ said: “Awesome I was on the fence and when they told me that was all I needed to finally make up my mind. I wish the brother and his boss (wife) could have chimed in too but this will do.”
Similarly, the first comment beneath the official photo of the Princess of Wales having her jab was a lady saying this proved it must be okay, because they would not give this to the Royal Family if there was anything wrong with it.
Having decided not to have the Covid vaccine, I was disappointed that the Royals endorsed it. I was gutted when the late Queen entered the fray and dismayed when William and Catherine did too.
I notice that the latest comments on the Royal vaccination photos and videos are not positive.
So I want to ask one very simple question: if the House of Windsor had not recorded the Prince and Princess of Wales’s vaccinations at that point, or told us about King Charles’s, but only revealed it this week, would people race to get the next booster shot?
This is not about one or two diagnoses of cancer, but potentially millions. What is for certain is that – for whatever reason – King Charles and Princess Catherine are in a growing group of previously healthy people being diagnosed with cancer.
New NHS figures delivered to all MPs this week show increases in serious illness from spring 2021 but only one MP is making a noise about it, and if you want to see real trolling look at what they are doing to Andrew Bridgen online.
Even stranger, the ONS last month changed the way it calculates excess deaths so that a rise became a fall by applying a page full of calculus. Here is the link, because it has to be seen to believed.
If you can’t get anywhere with that, try this very good YouTube tutorial on the ONS’s methodological change.
There are lots of possibilities to explain why two members of one family have cancer at the same time.
Coincidence is often trotted out as the explanation whenever there are lots of people getting sick in the news nowadays. In the past three years, I’ve started worrying about the rate of coincidence, which appears to be out of control.
However, if it is not fate dealing bizarre random blows, perhaps it is something scientific.
If you want to look at some primary source material, search for “vaccine induced cancer” and “vaccine induced T cell suppression” – you’ll probably have to search for it on Rumble and other platforms like that. Professor Angus Dalgleish is the best I’ve come across.
But you can watch any number of leading oncologists and immunologists talking about what they are convinced is happening.
Many of these will have spiteful little ‘Fact Checks’ on some of them saying, effectively, “This evidence isn’t really evidence. Nothing to see here. Conclusion: fake news!”
The message I took away from watching these expert talks is that T cells are how our bodies keep potential cancers at bay all the time, so they never bother us. When you deplete T cells by forcing the immune system to concentrate on something else repeatedly, you are diverting all that effort.
You can use the same channels to listen to Peter McCullough, the renowned cardiologist, talking about the rise in heart problems in the same time period.
Following his decision to speak out, he has had an addendum put on his Wikipedia page so that alongside a lifetime of incredible achievements he is accused of “advancing anti-vaccination messaging”. Are we living in a police state?
Another brave person is the medical lecturer John Campbell, whose masterful presentation on the Pfizer documents on YouTube means there is no excuse for not understanding the implications of the research forced out of Pfizer and the FDA: 1,223 dead in Pfizer’s own sample study or “post marketing experience” in a three month period (December 2020 to end of February 2021), plus 42,086 adverse events reported in the U.S., the U.K. and across the world, and a list of suspected side-effects so long you cannot fit them on the screen in one go, even in very small print, which you will see if you watch the video in the last link. Maybe that’s why it didn’t make the news.
I’ve written for years in the Spectator, to its credit, about my personal decision not to have the Covid vaccine, then about watching what happened to people who did have it, including my own mother, who had menstrual bleeding aged 80 after her third shot, BPPV (extreme vertigo) after the fourth, along with bleeding from her knee joints, then vascular dementia, now a very rare tumour in her neck called a Hypoglossal Schwannoma, a cranial base neoplasm arising from the so-called Schwann cells of the 12th cranial nerve. When you look at those NHS figures, the neoplasms shoot off the chart in 2021-4.
My partner’s father has a heart condition, diagnosed this year.
Oh well, they’re old, is what the pro-vaxxers will say: “Fact check: there is no such thing as a hyperglossy schwaddywaddy. Fake news!” There, I’ve done it for them.
But with the revelations about the Royal Family’s health, the coincidences are getting rather awkward. The surge in sudden illness comes into sharp focus when you are looking at one family in the public eye and it becomes impossible to ignore.
In the small village in western Ireland where I live, it’s the same deal: there are so few people living here that when some of those people die during a three year period it is very noticeable.
The funeral home is so busy currently that a few weeks ago at mass the priest appealed for volunteers to say prayers over the bodies. Locals seem instinctively to suspect the vaccine. At any rate, no one I speak to will get boosted this year. And Ireland started out as 90% vaccinated.
Is this the reason Pfizer redacted the sample number of people monitored in its own study during the rollout? The 1,223 deaths were lost by insinuating it could be part of a massive group, with that percentage dying naturally anyway.
But if you have a small visible sample of vaccinated people, well, no one can redact that.
There are several factors making a sudden outbreak of serious illness in the Royal Family hard to process.
They are all very well looked after. They did not suffer any form of healthcare interruption during lockdown. The reason trotted out so often to explain the spike in cancer diagnoses since the pandemic is that people couldn’t get access to specialists and treatment. But that doesn’t work with the King and the Princess of Wales.
The princess has always been a picture of health, very sporty and so on. The King has those long-living Windsor genes. His father and mother lived into their 90s.
So the risk of them both getting cancer in the same year would have to be quite slim, you would think. Could there be something causing it in their environment?
We can rule out hardship, deprivation, bad diet and food poverty. Also smoking, boozing and drug use is no good as a smokescreen, as it is with Liam Gallagher’s recent revelation about his auto-immune condition. So what are we left with?
I read the other day the sad, sad story of a sportsman dying of pancreatic cancer and below a comment by a reader saying it had to be his tattoos. Really? Is this what we’re down to?
With the Royals, you can’t say that, obviously. It’s not Liam Gallagher making out he must have buggered himself with cigarettes and alcohol. It’s Kate. Slim, sporty, sensible Kate.
The Telegraph last week wrote about a “mysterious new epidemic of abdominal cancers in younger people”. The report goes back to 1993-2019 figures, showing the increase started back then. However, it adds: “Models based on global data predict that the number of early-onset cancer cases will increase by around 30% between 2019 and 2030, a markedly faster increase than the previous 30 years.”
If you want to, you can read so much proof about rates of illness and deaths soaring specifically since spring 2021 that I doubt you could get through all the material unless you spent every hour of every day reading it for weeks.
Pro-vaxxers are ignoring the science. The Fact Checkers, who are really Fact Wreckers, target all the honest articles and attempt to destroy their credibility by saying “there is no proof of this”, even when the article under review contains the proof.
This is gas-lighting, pure and simple. Blame the messenger (not the messenger RNA). Stop the debate. Well, I’m not going to apologise for asking questions like so many media figures.
Why has the normally above averagely healthy Royal Family been stricken by the same surge of sudden illness afflicting the whole country? Does it have anything to do with the experimental jabs we were urged, including by them, to take three years ago? Will we ever be allowed to find out?
Melissa Kite is a columnist for the Spectator.
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