Here's a hot take that I'm not saying must be true, but is interesting.
So, as we know, people have had success treating cancer using anti-parasitic medicines like Ivermectin and Fembendazole. Weird right? So what if parasites are somehow involved in cancer? Assuming they are involved this could literally be opening up a can of worms with these new "cancer vaccines".
If they make a "cancer vaccine", it will likely target symptoms of the problem, and not the parasite. It would be targeting our bodies' defense mechanism to the parasite since this is creating the tumor. End result, the tumor is gone, but it unleashes a parasite takeover of the human body (demons unleashed in physical form). Would these parasites act like those which can control the host and impact human behavior? It's not unprecedented in the animal kingdom for a parasite to impact the host's mind. Would they make people more susceptible to evil influence?
Maybe it is merely a coincidence that these drugs can fight cancer and parasites. It is possible they work through some other mechanisms that just so happens to also impact cancer. But what if I'm on to something...
My theory is that ivermectin's mechanism of action affects both parasites and cancer.
from wikipedia: "The drug binds to glutamate-gated chloride channels common to invertebrate nerve and muscle cells.[68] The binding pushes the channels open, which increases the flow of chloride ions and hyper-polarizes the cell membranes,[59] paralyzing and killing the invertebrate.[68]"
Wikipedia mentions an increase flow of chloride ions, but perhaps it also increases the flow of zinc ions into the cell membrane. This is how ivermectin face-fucks the corona virus when taken with zinc.
Another anti-parasitic drug, fenbendazole is also believed to have anti-cancer properties.
"by binding to tubulin, a protein that is part of the microtubules in the cells of parasites. This binding disrupts the microtubules' formation and function, leading to the parasites' inability to absorb nutrients, resulting in their eventual death. This mode of action makes fenbendazole effective against both adult and larval stages of many parasitic worms.[1][2]"
I'm not a doctor or bio-chemist so take all that with a large grain of salt.