It is true that there is no evidence that RNA “vaccinations” will alter your DNA because there is simply no evidence. They are entirely experimental. However, as someone with a degree in biochemistry, assuming RNA shots do anything at all, I see nothing in principle stopping them being spliced into DNA by reverse transcriptase, which appears to be ubiquitous as a cellular repair mechanism, however common or rare that event might be.Contrarian Expatriate wrote: ↑November 17th, 2020, 5:53 pmThere is no evidence of mRNA shots altering one's DNA in any way.
There is also the autoimmune issue. If your own cells are producing foreign proteins, there is going to be some kind of immune response to this to kill those cells, How significant will this be? We don’t know. And there is no way of knowing how many of these proteins will be produced by a given person. Perhaps in someone with particular genetics, the immune response will be so great as to produce permanent damage or death. Then there is the case of when these proteins appear on the surface of a cell and the immune system identifies them as foreign. In that case the antigens generated may not only react to the viral proteins, but also to the surrounding cell surface, so over time the body may identify parts of itself as a problem and attack itself, and this may take years to happen, and you wouldn’t necessarily know why it happened.
You are risking all this to ward off a virus that is clearly the common freaking cold. And that is even assuming that everything is on the level and the people offering you this experimental injection want to help you and have no nefarious purposes in mind, which this whole scamdemic should have convinced you is not the case. I think CE and I could agree on the statement that whether you voluntarily take this injection or not you’re right, but please be informed.