Anonymous ID: 13501f Feb. 4, 2019, 11:51 a.m. No.5027686   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7732 >>7795

I wonder if his and Beau's heads are frozen somewhere? (pic related)

 

2-3/1000,000 die of this cancer. What are the odds for both of them within the same cabalist circle?

 

Some anon may want to attempt correlation of this with known No Name timelines:

 

"According to the National Brain Tumor Society, the five-year survival rate for those afflicted with glioblastoma is a mere 5.6%. In fact, the majority of glioblastoma patients only survive 12 to 15 months post-diagnosis."

 

Also polio is a disease scheduled for eradication by vaccination. If a genetically modified form of the virus is a cure for this cancer, what does it all mean?

 

Publisher is a scientific reagents/diagnostics company, Hardy Diagnostics.

Newsletter is by subscription email.

Anonymous ID: 13501f Feb. 4, 2019, 12:07 p.m. No.5027845   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>5027753

Let's see

According to the US Census Bureau's population clock, the estimated 2018 United States population (February 2018) is 327.16 million

 

327,160,000 = 3271.6 x 100,000

2-3/100,000 pop = 6543.2 - 9814.8 individuals affected / year

Majority die within 12-15 months post-diagnosis

(majority number) Would be higher than 190-258K deaths per year but your figure is close

Good job

Anonymous ID: 13501f Feb. 4, 2019, 12:13 p.m. No.5027925   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>5027795

What year(s) if you know?

Before of after No Name would have been vaccinated which would have bee probably with the Salk or Sabine vaccines (mid-50s - early 60s)

At first the vaccine virus was grown in cells taken from minced monkey kidneys. The vaccines were then safety-tested on rhesus monkeys, young mice, guinea pigs and rabbits, before being used on people.

 

"Since the 1990s immortal cell-lines have replaced rhesus monkey kidney cells and a genetically modified strain of mouse that is susceptible to polio is now used to replace monkeys in safety testing."

http://www.understandinganimalresearch.org.uk/news/video-of-the-week/sixty-years-of-the-polio-miracle-vaccine/