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mRNA, the promised miracle and the Covid Experiment

submitted by Kung_Flu to anything 1 yearJun 12, 2024 10:18:33 ago (+8/-0)     (anything)

mRNA has been an exciting topic for decades. Scientists have been tinkering with it trying to make it work in humans for a long time. The potential is limitless. If mRNA can be mastered, then we could usher in a whole new era of medicine. It is very easy to design mRNA. Ugur Sahin, the founder of BioNTech, bragged that he designed the covid jab in a single day. Archive

mRNA could be used to do nearly anything. Vaccines for the common cold. Self-produced insulin for diabetics. Cure lactose intolerance.. Cure the faggot disease AIDS. Modify troons to produce their own castration pills. The possibilities are endless.

So where are these miracle cures? We have a product that has been out for over 4 years now. If the covid jab is so safe and effective, we should be seeing an explosion in mRNA products. Where are they? Next time someone tells you they're getting their jab, remind them that they haven't used this miracle technology to cure aids.


9 comments block


[ - ] nephileon 2 points 1 yearJun 12, 2024 19:58:50 ago (+2/-0)

targeted genetic cures have been a pipedream since the human genome project and probably before.

The massive finance interests in medicine are still people trying to get a return on the massive investment that the promises of the human genome project failed to give.

The mRNA gambit is basically the same lie being thrown out a second time to add another layer to the ponzi scheme

[ - ] Kung_Flu [op] 0 points 1 yearJun 13, 2024 07:20:19 ago (+0/-0)

Targeted genetic cures can work but it's a specialized treatment. Not something fit for mass production like a drug. So yes the return on investment is a pipe dream. mRNA can be mass produced like a drug, and it has been. Up until 2020 it's only worked in single cell cultures where if the mRNA kills 99% of the batch it's no big deal, the remaining 1% can take over. In humans it's still only affecting some individual cells but the danger of those cells going haywire presents a much bigger risk.

mRNA really does have the potential to be a miracle technology, but the elites needed a lot of human test subjects to accelerate development.

[ - ] nephileon 0 points 1 yearJun 13, 2024 19:51:45 ago (+0/-0)

nah i don't buy it. I think you may be drinking some coolaid here. There's a lot of hubris in people doing this research that think they can get something functional out of this.

[ - ] Kung_Flu [op] 0 points 1 yearJun 13, 2024 20:54:16 ago (+0/-0)

We already use GMO yeast to make insulin.

[ - ] nephileon 0 points 1 yearJun 14, 2024 08:44:13 ago (+0/-0)

thats multiple orders of magnitude less complex than fixing an individual person's genome with an injection.

[ - ] observation1 1 point 1 yearJun 12, 2024 11:02:36 ago (+1/-0)

Graphene oxide (mini razor blades) injection

[ - ] SumerBreeze 1 point 1 yearJun 12, 2024 10:27:12 ago (+1/-0)

It’s not a miracle cure, it is like mending a fence with a shotgun blast and pouring a bucket of hot glue/yard waste mix.

It’s more likely to further devolve humankind than has already happened in the past 100,000 years.

[ - ] Kung_Flu [op] 2 points 1 yearJun 12, 2024 10:35:04 ago (+2/-0)

Grats, you fell for the clickbait title. Now read the rest.

[ - ] SumerBreeze 1 point 1 yearJun 12, 2024 11:32:19 ago (+1/-0)

I skipped the last paragraph, my bad.