https://rosettasister.files.wordpress.com/2020/12/screen-shot-2020-12-03-at-8.53.44-am.png
Before 2020, only 12 mRNA vaccines ever made it to human trials. None were approved I’m waiting 4 #Baylor College vaccine https://www.motherjones.com/coronavirus-updates/2020/11/these-researchers-have-developed-an-inexpensive-low-tech-covid-vaccine/ @MotherJones Moderna COVID-19 vaccine is $35 a dose. This lab in Texas is developing a $1 alternative.
Pfizer, BioNTech AND Moderna
Both vaccines utilize a novel technology that harnesses the RNA
messenger, snippets of genetic code that exist in the body that can be
used to tell the immune system to produce antibodies that attack the
virus itself.
This is where the Baylor College vaccine is different from the others. It utilizes recombinant protein technology, which is typical in vaccine development but uncommon among the leading COVID-19 candidates. Technically, this means that a recombinant protein vaccine inserts an antigen—a small amount of a foreign toxin or bits of the pathogen itself—to spark an immune response. Some recombinant protein vaccines are common, like the Hepatitis B vaccine. “Advantages of recombinant protein technologies are that there are many approved vaccines using these kind of technologies,” Goodman explains. “There is large scale manufacturing capability in the world that could be brought to bear for it.”
There are other vaccines in the works that also use the same recombinant protein technology, most notably from China’s Clover Biopharmaceuticals and Sanofi, which is based in France.
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Renowned scientist tells Laura Ingraham the COVID-19 vaccine is ‘downright dangerous’ and will send you ‘to your doom’
[I haven’t the faintest, but would depend which vaccine, right?]
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https://childrenshealthdefense.org/kennedy-news-views/
[Please keep your hands off my genetic code!]
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