Night Cap: What Could Have Spiked Colorectal Cancer in Young People Starting in 2021?

All sorts of strange comorbidity trends started spiking around 2021 that the Public Health Industrial Complex, despite all the confidence they expressed about their response to COVID, can’t seem to explain. I’m not sure what the problem is precisely.

Two of the most critical things we were all in together back then were the deliberately engineered virus that escaped from the Fauci-funded lab in Wuhan, China, and the engineered cure for that virus. Both were man-made disasters, so there is no need to call Scooby and the gang away from the Malt Shop. If it started in or around 2021, we know the cause. No, it wasn’t the unnecessary inhalation of microfibers from medical masks. It was the chemicals in those floor dots that leaked through people’s shoes into their bloodstream.

Silly.

Or was it the election of Joe Biden?

Colorectal cancer cases have tripled in teens—and jumped by 500% in kids. That’s the headline from Fortune, and everyone is baffled.

First came public pleas for millennials and Gen Zers to be aware of the signs  of colon cancer, which has seen such a rise in young adults that it’s now the No. 1 cause of cancer deaths in men under 50 and No. 2 in women under 50.

This week, that plea expanded to adolescents, with news that colorectal cancer rates among kids between 10 and 14 and teens from 15 to 19 have risen by 500% and 333% percent, respectively, over two decades.

Are any NIH, CDC, FDA, or NIAID members invested in Cologaurd, that at-home colon cancer test kit? Those commercials were ubiquitous during the Pandemic. Did they know something we didn’t? And yes, I expect to see texts, emails, and ads propagate across my digital footprint for even thinking about it.

So what’s the thinking on the cause (since no one is going to publicly point the finger at the mRNA injections they bullied, pressured, intimidated, or mandated everyone get (including kids who were at zero risk from COID)?

 The leading hypothesis, he adds, is that, as humans, “We have done something to change our microbiome… I tell patients it’s like our own soil inside of us, with the bacteria that live in our GI tracts … which is like a rainforest that needs diversity to be healthy.” Marshall suspects that we’ve done something to fundamentally change our “bacterial mix,” whether from exposure to chemicals and “forever microplastics” or “not playing outside,” and sees a possible connection and “interesting parallel” to the rise in peanut allergies.

Wow, this guy wants to keep his license to practice, but does he get that one of the things “we’ve done” in the past few decades is exponentially increasing the number of injections kids are expected to uptake to attend the K-12 indoctrination camps? It used to be maybe half a dozen. I think it’s over two dozen these days. That’s something we did. I know it’s probably blue-lighted exposure from PCs, TVs, and smartphones or bullying on social media that spiked food allergies and spectrum disorders, but those are both good for Big Pharma, so, well – you know.

Weighty Issues

I’m sure the fatification of kids hasn’t helped. Still, body positivity is a comorbidity, and you have to pass a lot of something through a gut to earn that sort of respect from people who, given the liberty, would correctly refer to you as a fat bastard. If you were overweight, young, and herded into one of those pop-up health clinic paddocks at the local High School to do your part, that also makes you (or your parents) gullible.

That means they’ll likely buy into the preferred narrative on why children, beginning in 2021, suddenly had an inexplicable spike in colon cancer that, before 2020, was rare in patients under the age of fifty.

Colon cancer and a growing list of similar ailments that are debilitating, handicapping, or terminal.

I’m sure kids need to get outside more, but wasn’t that also frowned upon by experts during COVID?

 

Author

  • Steve MacDonald

    Steve is a long-time New Hampshire resident, award-winning blogger, and a member of the Board of Directors of The 603 Alliance. He is the owner of Grok Media LLC and the Managing Editor, Executive Editor, assistant editor, Editor, content curator, complaint department, Op-ed editor, gatekeeper (most likely to miss typos because he has no editor), and contributor at GraniteGrok.com. Steve is also a former board member of the Republican Liberty Caucus of New Hampshire, The Republican Volunteer Coalition, has worked for or with many state and local campaigns and grassroots groups, and is a past contributor to the Franklin Center for Public Policy.

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