I think the mRNA decomposes in the cells after a time.
You Die
The mRNA is destroyed in the process of its decoding by the cell...
Death.
There is so much info at this site page you might spend the day figuring it all out.
https://www.theautomaticearth.com/2021/09/spartacus/
mRNA is very fragile and why storing is difficult. It breaks down in the body. It does not direct the body to make more mRNA. Just to make spike proteins.
I concur with #10.
The question amounts to asking, “Can mRNA can do what DNA does?” The answer is of course, “No.”
How long is the spike protein in me?
Is the spike protein by itself harmful?
These are different questions.
Yes, but ..... there is always a but.
2017 Apr 27
“Preclinical and Clinical Demonstration of Immunogenicity by mRNA Vaccines against H10N8 and H7N9 Influenza Viruses”
“To evaluate the safety and immunogenicity of H10 mRNA in humans, a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, dose-escalating phase 1 trial is ongoing (Clinical Trials Identifier NCT03076385).”
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5475249/
I went to the clinical trials website and no results were posted despite the study ending in 2018.
The clinical trials study was done by Moderna.
Good morning,
So, I checked my SarsCov AntiB levels in August and then a couple of days ago. My last vax dose was in January. The abs went from 1552 to 1740 (same lab).
Has anyone seen it trending up like this? Curious.
Nucleocapsid ab negative— Trudy Seivwright MD (@SeivwrightTrudy) September 27, 2021
Good morning,
So, I checked my SarsCov AntiB levels in August and then a couple of days ago. My last vax dose was in January. The abs went from 1552 to 1740 (same lab).
Has anyone seen it trending up like this? Curious.
Nucleocapsid ab negative— Trudy Seivwright MD (@SeivwrightTrudy) September 27, 2021
The mRNA is given a special coating to slow its destruction.
There are two types of mRNA vaccines according to an article I read, one for short-term protein destruction and another for long-term protein production.
I assume we get the short-term type.
The mRNA breaks down after a few weeks (assuming the cells haven't already been destroyed by your immune system). Most of the spike proteins stick to the outsides of the cells that produce them.
Some will get loose and stick to other cells. This problem is worse if the mRNA injection gets into a blood vessel and the mRNA gets distributed to other places in the body besides the muscle tissue where the vaccine is supposed to go.
The adenovirus based vaccines like J&J are much worse for overproduction of spike protein because the modified adenovirus can make cells continuously overproduce spike proteins.
If I were under thirty I'd hesitate to get the vaccines unless I had some other health issue as the risk to me seems as great or greater from vaccine side effects than the vaccine.
If you're one of the tiny percentage of the population peculiarly vulnerable to the spike proteins from either the virus or the vaccines, then it's been nice to know you.
This is the question. I read that the Mrna developed for vax had to be modified to allow it to last longer before it deteriorated and disappeared.
Your DNA is now making spike protein, reprogrammed by the Messenger RNA, cause a boost in antibodies. Sad part is your tcell count is lower due to covax possibility making u vulnerable to cancers ♋ and other viruses. Get your tcells tested— Stacey (@StaceyTrylove) September 27, 2021
Theoretically the Death of the reprogrammed cell. Human cell lifespan is seven to nine years.
It’s all theory that the mRNA get destroyed in 3 weeks. Has anyone verified this? Billions of us are guinea pigs in this medical experiment.
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No. There’s no research. They never tried to find out what happens long term.
Some cells die within a matter of days or hours. I don’t know if the mRNA dies with it or is released to travel the body.
Some cells last years (e.g., brain cells) and the ‘vaccine’ was weaponized to cross the blood/brain barrier (ehm..WHY?).
There is some research that suggests the mRNA can ‘upload’ itself onto a section of DNA, at which point the DNA could then produce the spike proteins.
If anyone knows, they aren’t willing to tell the public. The official story is just that, a ‘happy story’.
This is a worthwhile read:
https://www.nebraskamed.com/COVID/where-mrna-vaccines-and-spike-proteins-go
“The cells make copies of the spike protein and the mRNA is quickly degraded (within a few days). The cell breaks the mRNA up into small harmless pieces.”
That said, although humans don't reverse transcribe RNA to DNA, as do some viruses, the human genome does contain remnants of ancient viral genes. These long interspersed nuclear elements can facilitate reverse transcription, so it is potentially possible for the spike protein mRNA to be reverse transcribed into DNA encoding the spike protein, and for this DNA to be incorporated into the human genome.