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Scientists from two major Swedish universities recently released a worrisome paper that used a series of complex scientific techniques to look for the full-length coronavirus spike protein (the one the mRNA and DNA/AAV vaccines cause your body to produce) inside the nucleus of our cells.
As you probably know, the spike protein is the mechanism that the SARS–CoV–2 (coronavirus) uses to attach itself to the cell. Once it is attached, the virus can then infect it with its genetic code and replicate its code using the cell’s ability to produce copies. In other words, SARS–CoV–2 enters the host cells and spreads infections. The body’s defenses are immediately alerted and they are trying to fight off the virus.
But this process takes time to produce a defense as the virus continues to spread to even more cells. That’s where the vaccine comes in. The vaccine produces its own spike protein infects the also enters into the cell but does not replicate in the same way. The vaccine-generated spike protein stimulates the body’s immune system to produce antibodies to fight the virus.
All of the COVID-19 vaccines currently approved by the FDA are designed to instruct human cells to make harmless spike proteins — that mimick a viral protein that’s used by the SARS-CoV-2 virus to enter cells. When the immune system recognizes the spike proteins, which aren’t normally there, they start generating antibodies and building an immune response against them. The process, in turn, prepares the body against future infection.