(WATCH) Dr. McKernan


Mainstream scientists say it’s not true— but a small and growing body of studies points to a potential Covid vaccine link to cancer. One of the lead researchers on the topic is Kevin McKernan, known for his work on the Human Genome Project. He says the problem may arise from unexpected genetic material—DNA—discovered in Covid vaccines and in patients’ bodies long after the shots.

The following is a transcript of a report from “Full Measure with Sharyl Attkisson.”
Watch the video by clicking the link at the end of the page.

Sharyl: So DNA is an information storage system.

Dr. McKernan: Yes.

Sharyl:And it also is an application that can tell things to happen in your body.

Dr. McKernan: Yes. So it can instruct your cells to make certain proteins. Uh, it can instruct your cells to grow uncontrollably. Uh, oftentimes cancers are a genetic aberration that occurs a mutation of some sort. So you, you don’t want to be bombarding your genome with random mutations. Uh, and that’s our fear of what could be going on with these vaccines. That the moment you start, including DNA in these vaccines, particularly DNA, that has sequences that instruct it to go to the nucleus and make a change, you’re running the risk of the vaccines causing cancer.

Sharyl: The RNA vaccines, the RNA part of it, was supposed to give a temporary instruction to your body.

Dr. McKernan: Yes.

Sharyl: And it’s not doing that.

Dr. McKernan: And they told you to last, what, 48 hours? Right. And, and now the papers that have come out are showing detection out to 60 days from the Rogen paper. We have the Krausen paper showing it out in 30 days. And the heart tissue, we, people are finding it in placenta, people are finding it in breast milk. People are finding it in plasma 28 days later. So there’s this persistence problem that no one seems to understand or predict. They, so

Sharyl: Something is staying in your body that is continuing, presumably to give instructions, making

Dr. McKernan: Far beyond

Sharyl: Protein, far beyond what we thought. Protein

Dr. McKernan: Yes.

Sharyl: Makes spike protein.

Dr. McKernan: Right.

Sharyl: So what should people be concerned about with what you found? If someone’s had covid vaccines, what, what would be their concern?

Dr. McKernan: Um, I would keep an eye on, um, if any of your family members come down with an unexplained cancer, get a pathologist involved to get a slide or a sample so that, um, the people who are studying this can begin to look for whether there’s vaccine sequence in there. So we have a person who had four Pfizer vaccines. Um, so, uh, and then a year after that came down with a colon cancer. And they were three biopsies taken, two before death, and one after the person died of this diagnosis within 30 days. Um, those samples were then, we used a tool called PCR to look for the Pfizer’s vaccine sequence. Uh, and then resorted to a process known as voluminous sequencing has sequence the tissue to see if there’s any Pfizer sequence in there. And, and there is, um, and shockingly there’s a lot of it. And that was not expected. And the only way that happens is if it got into the cells and amplified, uh, and started replicating.

Sharyl: Does it imply that it caused the cancer or just the fact that it was present in the cancer is concerning?

Dr. McKernan: Yes. That that’s, it’s a good, it’s a good question. We, we, we can’t nail causality from the data we have, but it, it is certainly a concern when you see, uh, a sequence like that. So there are mechanisms where this could, could be playing a role in cancer. So the reason we’d like to get this message out is that I think too many of these tumor biopsies are getting thrown away and the evidence is disappearing. Uh, and it’s important for folks going through that process to try to retain the biopsies if they can, so that we can go back and see if this is in fact the case.

Sharyl: And what are you all cumulatively learning or expect to learn in the coming year or two about all of this?

Dr. McKernan: Well, we wanna understand how long does this stuff last in patients because this DNA was not consented to, we didn’t expect it. So now there’s a new question of how long does it last? We’ve already seen papers come out showing that they can detect nucleic acid in placenta. And there was vaccine, uh, nucleic acid in those, those, these mothers, unfortunately, I believe were forced vaccinated for the birthing center. So we don’t really know how long it lasts in the placenta. And if it’s in placenta, it’s probably getting into the newborn. So there’s a, there’s an ongoing question in the whole field of where is this vaccine going? How long is it lasting? What is its contribution to disease? And we have to track the molecules of DNA and RNA to sort that out.

Sharyl: Are you surprised if the government isn’t doing this kind of tracking? ‘Cause it would seem a natural thing that they’d wanna have to answer?

Dr. McKernan: Well, that would be, that would, that would be a normal consideration. But in the peak of the pandemic, there was an enormous amount of revenue coming in to our government agencies, which leads me to believe they were not motivated to look for hydroxychloroquine or ivermectin or alternative tools that might treat coronavirus. They wanted the vaccine to be the only solution because that’s what lined their pockets.

Sharyl (on cam): Many establishment scientific authorities acknowledge the DNA discovered in Covid vaccinesbut say the amounts are too low to pose a risk.

Watch video here.

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1 thought on “(WATCH) Dr. McKernan”

  1. James Webb, DO (retired pathologist)

    We need this and other Covid-19 virus and vaccine questions to be investigated. We deserve to know what what and is going on.

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