Prion-like Diseases, Dementia and Contagion from COVID Injections Implicate mRNA Technology

The COVID mRNA shots have been found to cause dementia and are transmissible via prions, which are proteins that can fold in multiple structurally distinct ways and are capable of causing disease similar to viral infections. Prions can propagate by transmitting their misfolded protein state to normal variants of the same protein, and are known to cause various neurodegenerative diseases in animals and humans, such as Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) in humans, bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) in cattle, and chronic wasting disease in deer and elk. These diseases are characterized by long incubation periods, brain damage, the formation of holes in the brain giving it a sponge-like appearance, and failure to induce an inflammatory response.

The replacing of uracil with synthetic methylpseudouridine in the COVID shots can cause frameshifting, a glitch in the decoding, thereby triggering the production of off-target aberrant proteins. The antibodies that develop as a result may, in turn, trigger off-target immune reactions. According to the authors, off-target cellular immune responses occur in 25% to 30% of people who have received the COVID shot. Dr. Kevin McCairn, a British neuroscientist, stated that this frameshifting phenomenon has also been linked to harmful prion production. He further claimed that prions may in fact be the primary molecule that is being "shed" by COVID jab recipients, and if those prions are due to frameshifting, that could be very bad news indeed, considering their implication in dementia.

The largest study to date on the side effects of the COVID jabs was published in the journal Vaccine in February 12, 2024, and it confirms what many alternative news sources have been saying all along, namely that the mRNA jabs are the most dangerous medical products to ever hit the market. The study evaluated the risk of "adverse events of special interest" (AESI) following COVID-19 vaccination. Data from 10 sites in eight countries were included, encompassing more than 99 million jabbed individuals. The analysis revealed several concerning side effects, including increased risks of myocarditis, pericarditis, blood clots in the brain, and various neurological conditions.

Additionally, effectiveness and safety were exaggerated in clinical trials and observational studies. In a guest post on Dr. Robert Malone's Substack, Raphael Lataster, Ph.D., writes that claims made about COVID-19 vaccines' effectiveness and safety were exaggerated in the clinical trials and observational studies, which significantly impacts risk-benefit analyses. Lataster's four papers in the Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice reveal that case-counting window bias affected effectiveness estimates. The "fully vaccinated" must go through the process of being "partially vaccinated," and the unvaccinated do not get such a "grace period," thus there is a clear bias at play.

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