"Malone said the side effects from his first shot were nothing remarkable, but after his second, he started complaining of high blood pressure, saying he'd been given a "bad batch," and raising unfounded concerns that the usual protocols weren't being followed at the Food and Drug Administration......"
And the article goes on to say a "one size fits all vaccine" isn't a good thing, and Malone and Fauci both agree:
"It's true that vaccination isn't one-size-fits-all. Different immune systems will react differently to vaccines and likely benefit from different COVID-19-vaccine regimens in the future, an immunological truth that everyone from Dr. Anthony Fauci to Malone agrees on."
And there is a link to this article, where he states:
"Malone says he's not against all vaccines. He says he's just concerned that the proper, usual precautions haven't been taken with the mRNA vaccines for COVID-19...."
This leaves the door wide open for future injections, and Precision Medicine gene editing....because a one-size-fits-all injection didn't work, so they will try to lure you into something that is customized for your genetics. But will you then be owned by the corporation that edited your genetics/DNA? Are you giving away your rights to your own body?
This article explains more:
"Precision Medicine and the GMO-Transhuman"
"Are these GMO-transhumans now owned by a corporation? Vox reported in their article, “Can GMOs be patented?”: “Yes. In 1980, the US Supreme Court ruled in Diamond v. Chakrabarty that genetically altered life can be patented.”
Heidi Heil
Writes Heidi Heil's Newsletter
10 hr ago
·
edited 10 hr ago
Malone admitted to knowing about reverse transcriptase decades ago, before his discovery of luciferase. link below to video. See 27 minutes in or read my notes and time stamps below where he talks about his career
Malone said:
16 min science is about money and power, notoriety
17:30 He wanted to get into gene therapy using retroviruses. His scores were off the charts so he could chose whatever place he wanted to work.
Appro. 20 min Went to Salk and was told by Ted Freidman gene therapy was a dead field.
23 min 1987-89 He was steeped in vaccine tech and influenza and AIDS vaccinology, learned a lot.
27 min learned about Reverse transcriptase which turns RNA into DNA. (*anotherwords he knew the potential of RNA to reverse transcribe.) He went to work for top gene therapy and reverse transcriptase retroviral research Inder (?spelling) and gene expression. This was his interest
Approx 30 min ... learned how to package a retroviral vector that will yield infectious particles. He built a system to test methods of delivering RNA into cells.
Started working with luciferase firefly protein use as reporter gene and testing of it.
33 min luciferase was my core delivering mRNA into cells. The cell would produce the protein
34:30 at Salk with Nobel laureates doing vaccine research using March of dimes money.
36 min working with circular piece of dna with rna sequences which transcribe RNAs.
scaled it up to yield lots of MRNA which hadnt been done before but it didn't yield virus particles.
38:40 Tony came to me one day (Anthony Fauci) with a paper that hadnt even come out yet on positively charged lipids and negative polynucleotides and they would spontaneously assemble. This new tech caused spontaneous assembly mixed with other lipids that fuse with cell membranes and stick to surface of cells, causing DNA transfection in the nucleus of cells.
41:20 Filed patents at Salk using RNA as a drug
Things came together I was able to deliver RNA into every cell I tested
This led to testing and a PNAS paper that people still use as a basic construct.
At this time another mentor was working on retroviral genes in mice. It worked for 3 weeks then stopped.
Approx 45 minutes Malone theorized the mice were building immunity to this foreign gene.
47 minutes This made retroviral gene therapy perfect for vaccine use ...
In this article, it's stated that Malone attributed his injection side effect to a "bad batch".
https://www.businessinsider.com/dr-robert-malone-mrna-scientist-vaccine-skeptic-2022-2
"Malone said the side effects from his first shot were nothing remarkable, but after his second, he started complaining of high blood pressure, saying he'd been given a "bad batch," and raising unfounded concerns that the usual protocols weren't being followed at the Food and Drug Administration......"
And the article goes on to say a "one size fits all vaccine" isn't a good thing, and Malone and Fauci both agree:
"It's true that vaccination isn't one-size-fits-all. Different immune systems will react differently to vaccines and likely benefit from different COVID-19-vaccine regimens in the future, an immunological truth that everyone from Dr. Anthony Fauci to Malone agrees on."
And there is a link to this article, where he states:
"Malone says he's not against all vaccines. He says he's just concerned that the proper, usual precautions haven't been taken with the mRNA vaccines for COVID-19...."
https://www.businessinsider.com/experts-fact-check-vaccine-claims-by-robert-malone-rogan-podcast-2022-2
--
This leaves the door wide open for future injections, and Precision Medicine gene editing....because a one-size-fits-all injection didn't work, so they will try to lure you into something that is customized for your genetics. But will you then be owned by the corporation that edited your genetics/DNA? Are you giving away your rights to your own body?
This article explains more:
"Precision Medicine and the GMO-Transhuman"
"Are these GMO-transhumans now owned by a corporation? Vox reported in their article, “Can GMOs be patented?”: “Yes. In 1980, the US Supreme Court ruled in Diamond v. Chakrabarty that genetically altered life can be patented.”
https://truthcomestolight.com/precision-medicine-and-the-gmo-transhuman/
Heidi Heil Writes Heidi Heil's Newsletter 10 hr ago · edited 10 hr ago Malone admitted to knowing about reverse transcriptase decades ago, before his discovery of luciferase. link below to video. See 27 minutes in or read my notes and time stamps below where he talks about his career
Malone said:
16 min science is about money and power, notoriety
17:30 He wanted to get into gene therapy using retroviruses. His scores were off the charts so he could chose whatever place he wanted to work.
Appro. 20 min Went to Salk and was told by Ted Freidman gene therapy was a dead field.
23 min 1987-89 He was steeped in vaccine tech and influenza and AIDS vaccinology, learned a lot.
27 min learned about Reverse transcriptase which turns RNA into DNA. (*anotherwords he knew the potential of RNA to reverse transcribe.) He went to work for top gene therapy and reverse transcriptase retroviral research Inder (?spelling) and gene expression. This was his interest
Approx 30 min ... learned how to package a retroviral vector that will yield infectious particles. He built a system to test methods of delivering RNA into cells.
Started working with luciferase firefly protein use as reporter gene and testing of it.
33 min luciferase was my core delivering mRNA into cells. The cell would produce the protein
34:30 at Salk with Nobel laureates doing vaccine research using March of dimes money.
36 min working with circular piece of dna with rna sequences which transcribe RNAs.
scaled it up to yield lots of MRNA which hadnt been done before but it didn't yield virus particles.
38:40 Tony came to me one day (Anthony Fauci) with a paper that hadnt even come out yet on positively charged lipids and negative polynucleotides and they would spontaneously assemble. This new tech caused spontaneous assembly mixed with other lipids that fuse with cell membranes and stick to surface of cells, causing DNA transfection in the nucleus of cells.
41:20 Filed patents at Salk using RNA as a drug
Things came together I was able to deliver RNA into every cell I tested
This led to testing and a PNAS paper that people still use as a basic construct.
At this time another mentor was working on retroviral genes in mice. It worked for 3 weeks then stopped.
Approx 45 minutes Malone theorized the mice were building immunity to this foreign gene.
47 minutes This made retroviral gene therapy perfect for vaccine use ...
https://youtu.be/nYkUePQMfkE