I've seen a lot of worry about the vaccine causing some prion disease. Do these fears have any basis in biology? Is there evidence to support these fears? Lets look at it a little bit.
The article put forth that discussed this makes several errors. It incorrectly states that the SARS-cov-2 vaccine has been shown to write to DNA. This is 100% false. The experiment cited begins with the premise that because people who have had Covid are later getting diagnosed with covid again (by the fraudulent PCR test!!!). They conjecture this is because the virus (not the vaccine) is being written to the DNA. The fact that the PCR test is shown to be completely fubar is not part of their discussion. This by itself is a huge red flag, but lets dig deeper.
The paper goes on to show that under lab conditions, when you take away the safeguards that exist in cells in vivo, inducing mitosis while under viral load, and introducing exogenous tools to make it happen (induced expression of HIV and LINE-1 Reverse Transcriptase) that the virus can write to DNA. Well of course it can, you just made it do it. It then showed that they got a positive result by only doing the first (induced mitosis while under viral load). But this is still the removal of a safeguard that is in place in vivo, and their positive results signal was so low as to be ridiculous. That doesn't mean it didn't happen, but if it did it was such a small occurrence as to have insufficient statistically meaningful results.
Then the other paper they are making the connection with to "prove" their overall theory of "causes neurodegenerative disease" is only showing a sequence similarity with another protein that can misfold, which can eventually lead to neurodegenerative diseases after the long term accumulation of these proteins. There are several problems with that paper as well, or at least with the conclusions that are being drawn from it:
- This theory ALSO requires the vaccine mRNA to write to DNA on a large scale. There is literally zero evidence to support such a claim, and biologically it makes zero sense
- it requires the same misfolding in the SARS spike protein as in the proteins that cause ALS etc. The problem here is two fold:
- The folding of proteins into their tertiary structure is a process that is dependent on OTHER parts of the protein. Just because there is a sequence similarity in one part, doesn't mean when it goes to fold up the forces of other domains will cause the same effect in the final structure. In fact, such a thing is very unlikely. More important, there has been no evidence to support such an idea. This was a THEORY put forth by someone who saw a sequence similarity.
- The spike proteins are TRANSMEMBRANE proteins, not cytosolic proteins. Transmembrane proteins are translated (created) directly into the membrane. This precludes them accumulating in the cytosol to cause the problems associated with these other diseases.
- The cell has an entire system put into place to take care of misfolded proteins. These misfoldings happen all the time. Pretty much all the time they are taken care of. The disease states from misfolded proteins are from the accumulation of such proteins, not in them existing in the first place. In these cases the misfoldings happen faster than the mechanisms in place can take care of them. There is not even a theoretical way that such accumulation can happen faster than their removal in the case of the vaccine mRNA.
- This effect would have to be taking place ON A LARGE SCALE, INSIDE THE BRAIN. This is incredibly unlikely, to the point of being absurd. There is no biological basis for such an effect to be happening in multiple, localized neurons. Even a single one of these lipid nanoparticles being transcytosed through the BBB is unlikely (though not impossible). This whole brain infection thing just adds several more biological improbabilities (virtual impossibilities in some cases) to the theory.
In order to show that the spike protein ACTUALLY misfolds in a similar manner, it would require doing ACTUAL experiments. Is it something worth looking into? Maybe, I guess, meh, but the paper did NOT show anything of the sort that is being claimed.
So both papers did not really say what the article writer is saying they said. The article both made mistakes (big enough to make the entire argument fall apart), AND false extrapolations (each of which also makes the entire argument fall apart).
This conjecture has no biological basis. That doesn't mean that biology can't be surprising. Biology is surprising more often than not. But without actual evidence of a problem, indulging in such fantasies to the point of being afraid of them is discrediting legitimate concerns. These ideas might be put forth in earnest, or they could be nefarious. Either way indulging in fantasies without evidence has a harmful effect on everyone.
I've looked at the two proteins and their sequences. Upon inspection the spike protein just doesn't have enough similarity to be a problem I don't think. They are actually quite different, even though they are in the same family of proteins. In general, same family rarely has the same immune response unless they are very closely related. These are not. Anti bodies are just too specific. This is not imo a legitimate fear.
Having said that, I think its legitimate enough that it should be tested. But after looking at them both, this concern is very low on my priority list.
I hope you don't mind me replying to so many of your comments.
I am concerned about the fertility issue for two reasons:
There seem to be cases of changed menstruation and there seem to be cases of miscarriage both occurring after vaccination. I don't have figures for them. Both of these reduce fertility and if they are caused by the "vaccines" then the effect is occurring whether or not it involves antibodies to Syncytin 1 or Syncytin 2
Reduced fertility has seemed to be the goal of some vaccine programs in the past, Notably in Kenya and India involving the hormone HCG added to the injection. The UN, Bill Gates and the pharma industry have form for doing this and state it as their intention in tangential ways (Like Bill Gates talking about wanting to reduce population by vaccines in his TED talk).
I worry a lot about the fertility aspect, I think it's a main aim, it's just working out how and when they intend to go about it.
I have seen anecdotal evidence of this, and it seems to be fairly common, though I will wait for further evidence to say anything about this.
The study found here matches the published information on average rate of miscarriages found here (and other places).
The study suggested there was no discernable evidence of increased problems with pregnancy from the mother taking the vaccine. I haven't seen any other evidence to support the idea that the vaccine is causing pregnancy problems.
Agreed. Vaccine technology was highjacked long ago by the Cabal I think for nefarious purposes. That doesn't mean all instances of vaccines, or vaccine technologies are necessarily bad. I think the first vaccine probably saved many millions of people for example. But they have added some bad shit, they have used it for the wrong reasons, and it may be that many vaccines do more harm than good even if they are doing exactly what they are supposed to be doing, by weakening our innate immune system.
Its a legitimate concern for vaccines in general, as well as the plans of the cabal. I have not seen legitimate concerns for the coronavirus vaccines however. The jury is still out on some of the concerns, but there has been no evidence presented that doesn't have flaws in assumptions of biology or incorrect thinking on what the technology can do. Even still, an eye should be kept on it. The menstrual issues may provide some light.
Thanks Slyver,
Oh I have legitimate concerns because fertility damage may be done by the time we detect it, and it's on the cabal's bucket list.
I think what you mean is that you don't see the exact mechanism by which it can happen and you don't see incontrovertible data that fertility damage has occurred due to the "vaccines".
I'm not going to cancel my concerns on that basis but your analysis sharpens my thinking and makes me feel more hopeful
Yes.
I haven't seen any GOOD data that supports the claim at all. Incontrovertible is a whole other level of evidence.
I strongly encourage not taking my word for anything. It is nothing more than an informed opinion and/or presentation of evidence to support it. Questions are always welcome. It enhances my arguments and sometimes makes me reconsider them. I learn in the process of answering questions.