So, for a while, I was convinced that this changes your DNA. Then I learned exactly how our cells work. There is a key component to this that I think I overlooked which led me to believe - falsely- that this changes your DNA.
I still will never get the vaccine and believe that it's harmful. But something I was missing was that I was thinking of its processes backward. MRNA goes into a cell and then in some way attaches to your DNA or ribosomes encode it into DNA or something. And then your cells start making this protein. This is wrong. Typically, the membrane where your DNA is; pushes out MRNA, and that DATA is transcoded into a protein. mRNA is not moving to DNA, DNA is moving to MRNA and then to protein. MRNA is injected, enters the cell and a ribosome creates the spike protein over and over till the MRNA is broken down. It really doesn't touch your DNA, the reason this works is that it bypasses your DNA creating mRNA for the ribosomes and just gives the ribosomes the mRNA.
That said, something they don't tell you is that they shoot this into your muscle. Your muscle tissue creates spike protein on its surface, your body then destroys your muscle tissue with the spike protein. No Thanks.
DNA (in nucleus) is converted to RNA (outside nucleus) - transcription
RNA (outside nucleus) is converted to protein (outside nucleus).
However, there are “retroviruses” that use “reverse transcriptases” that can convert RNA TO DNA, whiich means RNA could enter the nucleus.
If COVID is a retrovirus which is looking like it might be, injecting mRNA could potentially enter the nucleus & cause DNA damage.
That would explain why people are testing positive after the vaccine.
The mRNA has entered the nucleus, incorporated itself into the person’s genome (DNA) & is now self replicating (creating spike protein).
DNA damage could cause serious problems (most likely cancer).
Oh cool! I need to look into retroviruses and how they are classified.
Thanks for the info. Even if it isn't, I wonder if the floating mRNA could be converted to DNA by a separate retrovirus. I would assume people test positive if the test is looking for the spike protein? I'm not sure what the test is looking for.
So, for a while, I was convinced that this changes your DNA. Then I learned exactly how our cells work. There is a key component to this that I think I overlooked which led me to believe - falsely- that this changes your DNA.
I still will never get the vaccine and believe that it's harmful. But something I was missing was that I was thinking of its processes backward. MRNA goes into a cell and then in some way attaches to your DNA or ribosomes encode it into DNA or something. And then your cells start making this protein. This is wrong. Typically, the membrane where your DNA is; pushes out MRNA, and that DATA is transcoded into a protein. mRNA is not moving to DNA, DNA is moving to MRNA and then to protein. MRNA is injected, enters the cell and a ribosome creates the spike protein over and over till the MRNA is broken down. It really doesn't touch your DNA, the reason this works is that it bypasses your DNA creating mRNA for the ribosomes and just gives the ribosomes the mRNA.
That said, something they don't tell you is that they shoot this into your muscle. Your muscle tissue creates spike protein on its surface, your body then destroys your muscle tissue with the spike protein. No Thanks.
Só, you’re kind of right.
DNA (in nucleus) is converted to RNA (outside nucleus) - transcription
RNA (outside nucleus) is converted to protein (outside nucleus).
However, there are “retroviruses” that use “reverse transcriptases” that can convert RNA TO DNA, whiich means RNA could enter the nucleus.
If COVID is a retrovirus which is looking like it might be, injecting mRNA could potentially enter the nucleus & cause DNA damage.
That would explain why people are testing positive after the vaccine. The mRNA has entered the nucleus, incorporated itself into the person’s genome (DNA) & is now self replicating (creating spike protein).
DNA damage could cause serious problems (most likely cancer).
Let me know if you have any more questions.
Oh cool! I need to look into retroviruses and how they are classified. Thanks for the info. Even if it isn't, I wonder if the floating mRNA could be converted to DNA by a separate retrovirus. I would assume people test positive if the test is looking for the spike protein? I'm not sure what the test is looking for.