Marjorie Taylor Greene criticized COVID-19 restrictions saying 'not a single school has closed because of cancer'

Marjorie Taylor Greene has been mocked for saying that not a single school has closed because of cancer.

More than 600,000 people in the US die from cancer each year. The country has never stopped. There have been no school closings. Over 600,000 people of all ages and races will die from cancer every year.

December 4, 2021 is Marjorie Taylor Greene's birthday.

More than one million people have died of cancer in the US since the tracking began.

The congresswoman made a comparison that implied that cancer is contagious, and several celebrity users mocked her for it.

December 4, 2021.

George Takei is on December 4, 2021.

Zaack Hunt is on December 4, 2021.

"Cancer isn't a disease that can be spread," Ken said.

George Takei wrote that he should tell him that he's really stupid.

I had cancer. How many people did I pass it to? Zero. "Because cancer isn't infectious."

The Georgia congresswoman is an outspoken critic of the measures, which she has compared to the Holocaust in the past.

She claimed that COVID-19 restrictions, which include masks and vaccines, do not stop the spread of the virus and are a form of government control.

She supports the use of ivermectin, an anti-parasitic drug, as a treatment for the virus.

The drug can be toxic to humans if taken in large amounts, so the FDA has warned Americans against taking it.
The government should focus on addressing obese and older people, as claimed by Greene.

She wrote that the response to #COVID19 should be working towards ending Obesity, promote covid treatments that are proven to work, and stop the politically driven mass hysteria.

Her claims are at odds with research that shows that vaccines are effective in reducing the spread of COVID-19 cases.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says that unvaccinated people are twice as likely to be hospitalized with the virus than people who have been given the vaccine.
Last week, she told Newsweek that she did not have a vaccine.