If a virus gets into the cell and starts replicating then I'm pretty sure that cell is toast - it's either going to kill itself or be killed by the immune system - it's not going to just stop after making a few copies.
If the DNA changes trigger apoptosis, they'll do it immediately. Cell death before a single replication.
If they trigger the immune system, which is fairly likely, the results are much worse. The immune system taking out cells is a much more violent process than a cell simply ceasing to be alive and getting recycled. Not only that, but the cell may have the chance to replicate several times before the immune system realizes what's up, which means much more widespread damage. We'd better hope the cells kill themselves.
The spike itself is harmless. What's harmful is that protein triggering a scorched earth response from your immune system, which not only damages the cells that produce said protein, but the cells around it too. Collateral damage.
There are about a hundred ways this could be very bad, but it's too early to say for sure. My guess is we're going to be seeing a lot of "mysterious" cases of lupus-like diseases that arise due to an immune response to cells that have viral DNA in them. Expect a lot of diagnoses of lupus over the next five years as scientists and doctors pretend to have no idea what's going on, followed by a metric assload of lawsuits once the evidence becomes impossible to deny.
The spike protein is dangerous because it triggers an immune response. That's literally what it's intended to do, at least in the context of the "vaccine".
There's no evidence to suggest there's anything inherently toxic about it, although that's such a vague term it's difficult to address. It's all runaway immune responses. All vaccine-related side effects have the hallmarks of immune disorders. So if you count induced immunological disorder as "toxic", then yes, you're correct.
If the DNA changes trigger apoptosis, they'll do it immediately. Cell death before a single replication.
If they trigger the immune system, which is fairly likely, the results are much worse. The immune system taking out cells is a much more violent process than a cell simply ceasing to be alive and getting recycled. Not only that, but the cell may have the chance to replicate several times before the immune system realizes what's up, which means much more widespread damage. We'd better hope the cells kill themselves.
The spike itself is harmless. What's harmful is that protein triggering a scorched earth response from your immune system, which not only damages the cells that produce said protein, but the cells around it too. Collateral damage.
There are about a hundred ways this could be very bad, but it's too early to say for sure. My guess is we're going to be seeing a lot of "mysterious" cases of lupus-like diseases that arise due to an immune response to cells that have viral DNA in them. Expect a lot of diagnoses of lupus over the next five years as scientists and doctors pretend to have no idea what's going on, followed by a metric assload of lawsuits once the evidence becomes impossible to deny.
The spike protein is toxic. It's the active danger from covid. The rest of the virus is harmless.
The spike protein is dangerous because it triggers an immune response. That's literally what it's intended to do, at least in the context of the "vaccine".
There's no evidence to suggest there's anything inherently toxic about it, although that's such a vague term it's difficult to address. It's all runaway immune responses. All vaccine-related side effects have the hallmarks of immune disorders. So if you count induced immunological disorder as "toxic", then yes, you're correct.