Post
Topic
Board Politics & Society
Re: Do you trust the co-vid19 vaccine ?
by
tvbcof
on 25/03/2021, 01:58:06 UTC

According to what I read on the World Health Organization site the AstraZeneca was temporarily suspended in some part of the EU countries, not all and if AstraZeneca show some side effect then the Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine could also do the same since it also relies on adenovirus. Does anyone if the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines which were authorized by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, if have side effects?

That's probably not a particularly valid way to assess risk associations.  Adenovirus is a common way to 'vector' new designer DNA into a cell nucleus in order to re-program the infected cells.  More important would be what the designer DNA payload happens to be rather than the strain of innoculous transfer virus.

Just as an item of interest...

One of the big problems they have with adenovirus vectors is that the normal human immune system resists a 2nd infection of the same adenovirus because that's how it works.  This means that boosters are a problem.  It also means that a 2nd totally different vaccine using the same adenovirus carrier won't work well.  Compounding this, someone may just have a stronger or weaker than average immune system which modulates the amount of designer genetic payload which infects the normal cells of the body.

The Russian 'Sputnik' vaccine is an adenovirus vectored designer DNA 'platform' as well.  Their 'secret sauce' to try to overcome the aforementioned 2nd infection problem was to use a different adenovirus variety for the booster.

The use of natural viruses to vector DNA doesn't have to use adenovirus.  One of Merck's efforts (via purchase of a smaller company) was attempting to use measles virus for this duty.  Merck exited the race with the statement that the safest way to get immunity for SARS-cov-2 was just to get covid-19 since the vaccine is so risky and the virulence of 'covid-19' is on part with the seasonal flu.  I couldn't agree more and have been saying it for a year now.

The 'way forward' for ongoing re-programming of the cellular machinery of 'the hive' lies with more advanced 'vector' techniques which don't use natural viruses.  Inovio is trying to use a lab technique using high voltage electrical currents, but that fell off the radar screen fairly early on.  For this first scamdemic wave.  Likely it will be back, or they'll move on to 'implantable platforms' right away.