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
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
Apparently we're supposed to believe that it genetically modifies your cells to present COVID protein spikes on the surface, and do it only once. But even then that's a problem, because the COVID protein spikes themselves are physically harmful to epithelial cells and damage the blood brain barrier. These protein spikes are what effectively allows COVID to pass the blood brain barrier, and the "vaccine" is a gene mod that literally makes your cells produce those harmful protein spikes. So these protein spikes are not just harmless identification markers for the immune system, they're actually part of the harmful element of COVID.
What this means is there can be a wide range of long term illness effects brought about by the "vaccine". From auto immune issues to a compromised blood brain barrier that allows things through that shouldn't be, which can lead to a plethora of neurological issues.
5, 10, 20 years from now people may have a name for these illnesses: Fauci Syndrome.
In fact, this may actually be the true biological warfare intent of the virus. Create a virus where the thing you use to identify it, is the thing that will cause the most long lasting harm, so that when your enemy tries to vaccinate against it, they are effectively trojan horsing themselves. The long term side effects could effectively cripple the populace.
Just curious, where did you get that the spikes encoded by RNA vaccines become integrated into the external membrane of host cells? I've just read that they encode the spike, but not where they go (such that some are excreted and detected in plasma and then detected everywhere, I assumed).
Also never heard that this was related to passing the blood brain barrier. If true, whether the artificial spikes get attached to something else in the blood and allow improper BBB penetration is important. But going on the past comment that you said they will be on the extracellular surface of cells, it does not seem likely that entire cells would migrate into the brain. My understanding is the spike allows binding to cellular membranes and entry by endocytosis. In general, that is something we should study more before allowing in a vaccine. Might be many things that could go wrong if it gets mixed up with the wrong proteins at the wrong place, but I'm unsure what about the BBB is a particular risk.
That's kind of the problem, we don't know exactly how these spike proteins are being presented. From what I've read, it's immune system cells that are made to present the spike protein, and obviously these cells are able to move throughout the body. Either way, the spike protein itself is a problem, whether it's regular cells excreting it or immune cells presenting it. Especially since epithelial tissue is found all over, not just at the blood brain barrier.
Just a few random articles on the spike protein and BBB connection.
https://www.templehealth.org/about/news/sars-cov-2-spike-proteins-disrupt-the-blood-brain-barrier-potentially-raising-risk-of-neurological-damage-in-covid-19-patients
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41593-020-00771-8 https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/10/201029141941.htm
And I think a lot of the side effects we've seen with the "vaccine" make a lot of sense when you consider the spike protein and epithelial tissue interaction. We've also had cases where people were given more doses than prescribed, and they immediately had severe reactions just from the extra dose, so clearly, the extra dose causes extra spike protein generation, which then becomes enough for the spike protein problem to be seen in full force.
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