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[–] 10 pts

They’re using magnetic fields to direct the drug inside the body.

[–] 1 pt

This explains both the EMF reader spiking on vaxxed people and the magnets sticking to the vax site.

[–] 0 pt (edited )

This explains both the EMF reader spiking on vaxxed people and the magnets sticking to the vax site.

no it doesn't, that's tinfoil bullshit

notajew is correct though, that's how a nanoparticle is moved around. Such an ability would be pointless in this application though. Think about it, the virus doesn't sit in your arm so there is no reason for a vaccine to sit there either.

[–] 9 pts (edited )

It details a mechanism of delivering DNA into a cell. Cells have cell walls (a lipid bilayer) and if you want to put DNA inside the cell you have to get it through the cell wall without damaging it and without damaging the cell wall.

A cell can pull things inside of it through a process called endocytosis. Its an infold of the wall that pinches off inside the cell, and is the opposite of exocytosis. There is a image depiction of it

In this paper they are getting the cell to perform endocytosis on DNA that they want to put inside the cell. That DNA could have a variety of functions, basically whatever they want.

Normally once something is pulled into the cell through endocytosis, that thing is still surrounded by the bubble formed from the cell wall, as you can see in the illustration. That is called an endosome (edited to say that endosomes are very similar to vesicles, which is what it is called in that illustration). Normally the contents of endosomes/vesicles FIRST get digested and THEN studied by the cell so it knows its environment. If you left the DNA in that endosome it would be digested. However, they want it to get outside the endosome without digesting or damaging the DNA....so they are putting the superparamagnetic nanoparticles with the DNA, and once it is in the endosome in the cell, they are using magnetic waves to basically rip the iron particles through the endosome wall, effectively bursting it and releasing the DNA into the cytoplasm of the cell (like a mini shotgun blast ripping through drywall).

Once the DNA is in the cytoplasm unharmed, it has escaped digestion and it is then called a plasmid. A plasmid is DNA that is separate from chromosomal DNA, but can be processed like chromosomal DNA is. Its like piggyback DNA. It is usually found in bacteria.

[–] 0 pt

Brilliant explanation thank you. So is there any danger to the vaccine doing this in your opinion?

[–] 2 pts

i would think (with no direct experience) that you would need apply the magnetic field soon after the injection, otherwise i would think all the endosomes would get digested and their contents destroyed. But I have no direct experience with this sort of research. Since the current vaccine doesn't have a magnetic field step it probably isn't happening. For the current vaccine--at least mRNA usually eventually degrades, while DNA can hang around in a cell for a lot longer. That's not to say what the current vaccine does isn't concerning, because a lot of things can be affected long term without involving DNA

[–] 0 pt

and i say usually eventually because thats normal cellular mRNA. But they know what kind of enzymes usually degrade mRNA so i have no doubt if you wanted to... you could protect it from those enzymes by adding or altering some of the domains that the enzymes recognize, and make the mRNA persist in the cytoplasm for longer than usual--if you wanted to.

[–] 0 pt

hey i read today and it made me think of you, I thought you might like it.

[–] 0 pt

Cool, thank you. Ive got it open in my browser and I’ll take a look tomorrow.

[–] 0 pt

there are so many unexplored potential dangers it boggles the mind. there is nothing definitive you can point to which is why they say nothing has been proven.

[–] -1 pt

So they’re putting alien eggs into our cells. Great.

[–] 1 pt

i guess eggs in a plasmid sense yes

[–] 1 pt

I would love an explanation from someone with knowledge of it. Maybe could help

[–] 0 pt

I think the other posters with a much more relevant background have covered this, but thanks.

Interestingly the same idea can be used as a covid test, bind spike proteins to a nanoparticle and monitor what they do in a magnetic field. If the particles have bound to the virus they start moving differently. It sounds much more accurate than the finger in the wind tests we have now

[–] 1 pt

They're using magnetic fields and tiny bits of iron to get the DNA inside cells.

[–] 1 pt

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3520014/#:~:text=Under%20an%20increased%20magnetic%20force,field%20results%20in%20tumour%20protection.

They've been researching this for almost two decades, magnetic properties make the vaccine more effective since essentially once you get jabbed you have that first rush to build immunity before the stuff stops working. If you don't build enough of a first response then the vaccine might not be effective and you'll still get the disease.

There are kids who get the shot for mumps and chicken pox but still end up with them, albeit a milder form.

[–] 0 pt

kikes are redefining what it means to be a vaccine and by extension are including a gene altering delivery system into what is a vaccine.

[–] 0 pt

I don't know, but think iron oxide for a moment. What happens when you step on a rusty nail? You get iron oxide in your body. What else? You need a tetanus booster. Why, because iron oxide could give you tetanus.

[–] 1 pt

Actually tetanus doesn't live on iron oxide at all. It only lives on organic material.

[–] 0 pt

But why rusty nails? I mean I've always been advised about tetanus because of rusty nails. Not the thorns I regularly remove, but the damn nails!

[–] 2 pts

Same here. Always rusty nails!

[–] 2 pts

Because rusty nails are usually accompanied by decaying wood, grass, moss, bugs, etc.

[–] 1 pt

It's because rusty nails are usually found on old wood and if the nail penetrates then the tetanus on the wood has a way to enter the body.

[–] 1 pt

You get iron oxide in your body

if you didn't have iron oxide in your body you would suffocate.

haemoglobin is the metalloprotein that carries oxygen around your body, it uses iron to carry oxygen around the body (real explanation vastly more complicated, but it's close enough)

That's also why both blood and rusty nails are red, iron oxide is red.

[–] 1 pt

I never even thought about that! Thanks.

[–] 0 pt

Oh boy.

[–] 0 pt

I'm no expert. But I did read Iron oxide. And I have stepped on many rusty nails. And I have had to get booster shots for tetanus because of it. If indeed they are putting that in there, it would have to be considered a risk factor in my book.

[–] 1 pt

Tetanus has absolutely nothing to do with rust.