stock here: 1300 women in USA with brain tumors sue Pfizer for a birthcontrol injection.
I did do the Shingles injections, during COVID, but before the mRNA was foisted onto the public. But I think that is it. I had super high Anti-COVID anti-bodies so I was considering giving blood to help other people…and then I thought, do I really want them putting any needles into my arm on a fairly regular basis?
Killing Babies or Brain Tumors? Seems like we are being given less good choices. Old high school buddy is hopping on a plane today. Tonight, we’ll go out for some tap beer and then it’s fire pit season, with some 12 year old Rum, the leaves are starting to fall in earnest.
Tomorrow we to the funeral of our high school classmate, who was happy go lucky, and lauded on Facebook as a great man. He definitely would “take one for the team” and so he took the injections to protect others. He got a turbo brain cancer a year ago, they operated, but they didn’t get all of it, or his immune system was so damaged that it couldn’t fight off even a minor attack. Now he is DEAD!

The substack is only for paid members, or apparently if you get the substack app on your phone, you might be able to view it for free. No go. I have far too many apps on my phone as it is. A-Eye was able to flesh out that this story is true, although titled as click bait overblown.
Even so A-Eye seems almost like a cancer apologist….”it’s not all brain tumors, just one type”
There is some evidence connecting the contraceptive injection Depo‑Provera (manufactured by Pfizer Inc. (or previously its predecessor companies) to an increased risk of brain tumours — but not the exact claim in the article you shared, and not with the full extent as described. Here’s a summary of the facts and caveats:
✅ What we do know
- A 2024 study published in the The BMJ found that women who used progestogen-only injectable contraceptives (including Depo-Provera) for more than one year had a significantly higher risk of meningioma (a type of brain tumour) compared to non-users. King Law+3ABC+3The Times of India+3
- There is ongoing litigation in the U.S. (and elsewhere) in which Pfizer is a defendant, alleging that Depo-Provera’s label did not adequately warn about the risk of brain tumours (meningiomas) following prolonged use. Drugwatch.com+2Morris James LLP+2
⚠️ What the article claims vs what evidence supports
The article you shared states: “Pfizer’s Birth Control Injection Triggers Surge in Brain Tumors” — and implies a strong causal link, a “surge” of brain tumours and that the injection is a birth-control injection by Pfizer.
- While Depo-Provera is a birth-control injection and is linked to tumour risk, the evidence is largely about meningiomas (generally benign but serious) and with longer-term use, not a general “surge” or broad brain-tumour epidemic.
- The claim “triggers surge in brain tumors” is exaggerated compared to the scientific findings, which report increased risk (for a specific tumour type, under certain conditions) rather than a confirmed “surge” for all brain tumours.
- The article’s headline mentions “brain tumors” broadly — but the litigation and study evidence refer specifically to meningiomas.
- The article may mischaracterize or oversimplify the link. It may also fail to clarify that the association requires “long-term use” and is still under scientific and legal scrutiny (not conclusively settled for all use cases).
🔍 Additional context / things to check
- The meningioma risk appears tied to duration of use: e.g., more than a year of the injection. ABC+1
- The tumour type is generally meningioma (rather than all brain-tumours) — meningiomas are tumours of the meninges (the layers surrounding the brain) and are often slow-growing. Some are benign.
- Regulatory action: Some jurisdictions (e.g., EU, Australia) have updated warnings; U.S. label change has been resisted or declined by the FDA so far. Drugwatch.com+2Lawsuit Update Center+2
- The legal claims are still active. There is no publicly known mass settlement yet (as of date) that confirms the link as indisputable for all users.
- The article you provided appears to be from a site called “COVID Intel – by William Makis (McGill Medicine)”. This raises additional caution as it may not be peer-reviewed scientific literature but rather commentary or a paid subscription piece (the screenshot indicates “Paid”).
- It is always good to verify whether the article provides its own sources (study citations) or whether it is making claims without rigorous backing.
🧮 My verdict
The article isn’t entirely false — there is backing that Depo-Provera (Pfizer’s injection) has an association with increased risk of a specific brain-tumour type (meningioma) with long-term use. However, the article’s wording (“Triggers Surge in Brain Tumors”) is over-broad and sensational relative to the scientific evidence. It could mislead a reader into believing a broad, immediate causal link for all brain tumours and for typical use, which is not supported by the available scientific literature.
If you like, I can check peer-reviewed studies (not legal-advertising sites) to pull out the exact risk numbers, how strong the evidence is, and whether this applies to short-term users, different formulations, etc. Would you like that?
Recent litigation news on Depo‑Provera and brain tumour risk

Pfizer sued in US over contraceptive that women say caused brain tumours