WelcomeUser Guide
ToSPrivacyCanary
DonateBugsLicense

©2025 Poal.co

828

There is currently NO OVERSIGHT whatsoever on what gene sequences can be used in mRNA "vaccines" that are soon to be injected into America's food supply.

For those who don't know, in a normal cell the DNA instructions for making a protein are transcribed into a molecule called messenger RNA (mRNA) in the nucleus of the cell. The mRNA molecule then travels out of the nucleus and binds to a ribosome. The ribosome 'reads' the sequence of mRNA codons then tRNA (transfer RNA) brings the corresponding amino acids to the ribosome. The ribosome assembles a chain of amino acids, following the instructions encoded in the mRNA molecule. This chain then folds into a protein.

Much like a virus, an mRNA drug hijacks this process, forcing the cell to produce a protein based on the drugs mRNA. Virtually any protein could be synthesized in this way, including proteins not normally found in that organism. As the existence of fatal familial insomnia (and other hereditary prion diseases) proves that prions or prion causing proteins can be encoded in DNA, prions or prion causing proteins must be synthesized by mRNA.

The "black box" workings of mRNA drugs seems well designed to resist any independent scrutiny. Even without some intentional plan to kill off the population, mRNA drugs relieve the pharmaceutical industry of any financial incentive for safety beyond the absurdly short length of the studies needed for government approval.

TL;DR: mRNA meat is NOT safe.

There is currently NO OVERSIGHT whatsoever on what gene sequences can be used in mRNA "vaccines" that are soon to be injected into America's food supply. For those who don't know, in a normal cell the DNA instructions for making a protein are transcribed into a molecule called messenger RNA (mRNA) in the nucleus of the cell. The mRNA molecule then travels out of the nucleus and binds to a ribosome. The ribosome 'reads' the sequence of mRNA codons then tRNA (transfer RNA) brings the corresponding amino acids to the ribosome. The ribosome assembles a chain of amino acids, following the instructions encoded in the mRNA molecule. This chain then folds into a protein. Much like a virus, an mRNA drug hijacks this process, forcing the cell to produce a protein based on the drugs mRNA. Virtually any protein could be synthesized in this way, including proteins not normally found in that organism. As the existence of fatal familial insomnia (and other hereditary prion diseases) proves that prions or prion causing proteins can be encoded in DNA, prions or prion causing proteins must be synthesized by mRNA. The "black box" workings of mRNA drugs seems well designed to resist any independent scrutiny. Even without some intentional plan to kill off the population, mRNA drugs relieve the pharmaceutical industry of any financial incentive for safety beyond the absurdly short length of the studies needed for government approval. TL;DR: mRNA meat is NOT safe.

(post is archived)

[–] 0 pt

Thought I read someone say mRNA wouldn't survive the cooking process, but I know jack about this stuff. Hope they're right

[–] 0 pt

That is true. It also wouldn't survive stomach acid so putting in mRNA drugs in the meat is not an effective way to trick people into getting covid jabbed, as some people are claiming.

That's why I'm talking about this in the first place, people are making the wrong argument against mRNA drugs in livestock. It's going to get easily debunked and then people will forget about the real threat.

Same thing happened to an extent with the covid mRNA shots already. Idiots rambling about microchips in the shots and distracting people from the reasons that getting mRNA jabbed is much worse than getting microchipped.

I fear it will be worse in this case, as mass extermination by prions probably sounds even more "tinfoil hat". Even though it is scientifically sound.

[–] 1 pt

But does cooking meat already infected with a prion-like disease make that meat safe ??

[–] 0 pt

Nope. Prions can be destroyed by heat but not at temperatures that would leave anything edible behind.

[–] 1 pt

So it's a red herring angle