| | | I have a hypothesis (unproven, more like a speculation, really)
It is based on evidence that there is an enzyme, Reverse Transcriptase, present in our cells.
It goes like this — after a person is injected with a mRNA vaccine, some of it will get busy synthesizing the viral spike protein - which, in turn, shows up on the surface of the cell, gets identified by our immune system as a foreign antigen - and starts to produce antibodies.
At the same time, some of the mRNA may get transcribed into DNA (because this is what that enzyme does).
The new DNA uses cellular mechanisms to copy itself as mRNA, which — see step one — will produce more of the viral spike protein, etc.
In effect, the DNA is acting as a reservoir for creation of more mRNA and more of the viral spike protein.
Instead of the vaccination being a “one shot deal” — we get a continuous, ongoing process - an ongoing cycle of creating the viral spike protein - and of antibodies which will be hunting and neutralizing it (while destroying cells which show (express) that protein on their surface.
Assuming this is what happens - does this process ever stop? Every time? That, we don’t know.
This would explain some of the “chronic” cases, the long periods of symptoms and inflammatory processes.
If the newly synthesized spike protein gets picked in the nasopharynx by the Covid test swab - that would explain cases of persistently positive tests.
Again - I’m not an immunologist, and this is a hypothetical speculation - which, however, could explain many things if proven. |
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