Remember when the Centers for Disease Control told you the mRNA in Covid vaccines didn’t last long in your cells?
Remember when fact-checkers at Reuters told you the coronavirus spike protein the vaccines make you produce isn’t dangerous?
About that.
The CDC has now quietly removed its promise that your body “breaks down and gets rid of the mRNA soon after it is finished” with initially making spike protein.
(Original CDC language on the Wayback Machine here; current CDC position, as of July 15, here)
Meanwhile, scientists keep piling up evidence that the spike protein remains in the body for months, at least, and is far from benign.
The most recent finding comes from Japanese physicians reporting on a 64-year-old who developed persistent and painful skin lesions days after receiving the Pfizer/BioNTech mRNA vaccine.
The doctors found the patient had varicella-zoster virus, which causes chickenpox. They treated him with 1 gram daily of valacyclovir, commonly used against herpes viruses, but found it only marginally effective. Raising the dosage to 3 grams a day ultimately defeated the lesions.
The physicians then decided that they should examine the lesions for evidence of spike protein, because the patient had become sick so soon after being vaccinated.
In taking this step, they deviated wildly from standard American medical procedure, which is to deny that mRNA shots can possibly cause any side effect.
And when the Japanese physicians looked for spike protein in the lesions… they found it ...
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