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posted ago by Grindelwald ago by Grindelwald +1865 / -2

Since the pharmaceutical industry is immune from liability I asked my doctor if he gives me the vaccine can I sue him under his medical malpractice insurance for $1 million if anything goes wrong.

He advised me it’s best I not take the vaccine

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AJoeDD 1 point ago +1 / -0

Thanks for the info.

About the immune cells presenting it, I think naturally they are involved and respond to it, but did not see anything indicating they'll be the ones infected with the vaccine to produce the spike. I haven't been able to dig up actual studies or data that indicates what cells will take the vaccine and make the antigen. Which is a stunning thing. I would expect this to have been studied. I can't even find information about the carrier for the antigenic encoding sequence after searching. One link said it was taken up by the cells at the injection site, indicating it is random and non-specific. https://medicalxpress.com/news/2021-01-covid-vaccine-critical.html

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preferredfault 1 point ago +1 / -0

This is the only place I've found something that indicates how the gene mod works:

https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/vaccines/different-vaccines/mrna.html

"COVID-19 mRNA vaccines are given in the upper arm muscle. Once the instructions (mRNA) are inside the immune cells, the cells use them to make the protein piece".

The question is....is it only immune cells that are affected....and they say it triggers an immune response, but they try to dance around what an immune response entails: The immune cells attacking whatever cells they're targeting. So how much internal damage is this doing? If it's passing the blood brain barrier and potentially getting into brain cells....that could potentially trigger an immune response against brain cells. Depending on where in the body the spike protein presents itself, it could potentially lead to things like nerve damage, brain damage, etc. And that would explain the bells palsy side effect, if enough damage was done to specific areas, even if randomly.

"To keep the mRNA from disintegrating when it enters the body, the COVID-19 vaccines use fat bubbles to shuttle the mRNA to certain cells."

I'm not sure how it would be discriminate enough to only affect immune cells, especially since it is just fat bubbles. Seems to me that as soon as these "fat bubbles" come into contact with any cells lipid layer, it would effectively be absorbed into the cell where the mRNA can do its work. So unless there's another component to the "vaccine" like nano robots, I don't see how it would be able to target only immune cells.

And none of this gets around the problem with the spike protein itself. They say it's harmless, yet as we've seen in those links about the BBB issue with COVID, it's not really harmless since it's on record as compromising the BBB, which means it can also compromise the same processes that take place in other cells such as organs, nerves, etc.

On top of that, it's not like one cell will be given just one piece of code. So what happens when a single cell, even if just an immune cell, is given many copies of the code to make the spike protein? It seems like eventually it would have to shed/flake off that protein, which effectively means you would end up with spike protein free floating through the body, that can end up anywhere, on any cell....cells that the immune system will then target.