The injections only inject CRISPR to create the spike protein.
They weren't tested by Pfizer to prevent transmission because there was no mechanism to prevent transmission in the injection. The best study I ever saw was that injecting people with the spike protein would allow the body to be able to partially fight off more of the virus without having to deal with the effects of the spike protein at the same time: reducing viral load by 30% if you were infected by the correct strain. New strains emerge all the time, and generally the injections were never going to last more than 3 months.
They knew this from the beginning.
Why? Because I knew this from the beginning, because I read their studies.
Uh, what? They no doubt used CRISPR in development but they didn't "inject CRISPR" into people.
The part about no mechanism is because the nose and throat are essentially a separate immune system and so injected vaccines won't prevent a head cold.
Recently vaccinated people still with temporary immunity to internal covid infection would go around with a sniffly nose or sore throat spreading covid.
It's just mRNA inside a lipid shell. Lipid shell makes contact with the cell membrane and merges like two soap bubbles.
The main CRISPR protein Cas9 is huge at 3x larger than average protein. They didn't jam it into a bubble along with instructions when all they needed was the mRNA.
The mRNA is all you need, it's purpose in the cell is to make proteins. What they did do is use methylated Uradine which limits the cell's normal process of destroying mRNA after it's used so cell keeps making lots and lots of spikes instead of just one or a few copies.
The injections only inject CRISPR to create the spike protein.
They weren't tested by Pfizer to prevent transmission because there was no mechanism to prevent transmission in the injection. The best study I ever saw was that injecting people with the spike protein would allow the body to be able to partially fight off more of the virus without having to deal with the effects of the spike protein at the same time: reducing viral load by 30% if you were infected by the correct strain. New strains emerge all the time, and generally the injections were never going to last more than 3 months.
They knew this from the beginning.
Why? Because I knew this from the beginning, because I read their studies.
Uh, what? They no doubt used CRISPR in development but they didn't "inject CRISPR" into people.
The part about no mechanism is because the nose and throat are essentially a separate immune system and so injected vaccines won't prevent a head cold.
Recently vaccinated people still with temporary immunity to internal covid infection would go around with a sniffly nose or sore throat spreading covid.
That's not as I understand it. What do you understand the injection to be?
It's just mRNA inside a lipid shell. Lipid shell makes contact with the cell membrane and merges like two soap bubbles.
The main CRISPR protein Cas9 is huge at 3x larger than average protein. They didn't jam it into a bubble along with instructions when all they needed was the mRNA.
The mRNA is all you need, it's purpose in the cell is to make proteins. What they did do is use methylated Uradine which limits the cell's normal process of destroying mRNA after it's used so cell keeps making lots and lots of spikes instead of just one or a few copies.
Oooohkay I see my confusion here. The mRNA itself is what was manufacturing the spike proteins, correct?