𝟠 𝕋𝕦𝕣𝕓𝕠 β„‚π•’π•Ÿπ•”π•–π•£ 𝔻𝕠𝕔π•₯𝕠𝕣𝕀 π•‚π•šπ•π•π•–π•• π•šπ•Ÿ β„™π•π•’π•Ÿπ•– ℂ𝕣𝕒𝕀𝕙 π•Žπ•–π•£π•– π•‹π•£π•’π•§π•–π•π•šπ•Ÿπ•˜ π•₯𝕠 π•Žπ•’π•£π•Ÿ β„™π•¦π•“π•π•šπ•” 𝕒𝕓𝕠𝕦π•₯ β€˜π”Ήπ• π•žπ•“π•€π•™π•–π•π•β€™ π”»π•šπ•€π•”π• π•§π•–π•£π•ͺ

Eight out of the 68 people who died board the plane that mysteriously dropped out of the sky in Brazil last week were turbo cancer doctors who were traveling to a major vaccine conference to warn the public about a β€œbombshell” discovery they had just made.

The doctors were reportedly aboard the ATR-72 turboprop plane that crashed in a residential area near Sao Paulo, Brazil, on Friday.

They were cancer doctors en route to SBTMO 2024, a cancer and vaccine conference.

They have been investigating the global surge in turbo cancers in the run-up to the plane crash.

𝔸𝕝𝕖𝕣π•₯β„‚π•™π•’π•Ÿπ•Ÿπ•–π•

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