Grugore wrote:
You're going to take an experimental drug that rewrites your DNA and has already killed thousands of perfectly healthy people? I thought you were smarter than that? Do you even know what's in it?
Such BS!
The vaccines have not killed thousands of people, total garbage! Try this on for size instead, up to the end of February some 60 million Americans had received at least one shot and 966 had died between getting the shot and 45 days later. This was deaths from all causes including car accidents, heart attacks and everything else in between. Some of them likely were from the vaccines, but many were not, and certainly not thousands. But lets compare that death rate with the death rate for someone getting covid and it doesn't even compare as Covid has already killed 550,000 people here in the us.
https://www.newsweek.com/covid-vaccine-deaths-cause-pfizer-moderna-fact-check-966-died-1574447None of the Covid vaccines has the ability to change your DNA, nor does it even interact with your DNA. So maybe you should really look stuff up instead of lying about it, or try looking stuff up somewhere that will give you the truth. I've had both shots of Pfizer and I'm happy as hell. You do what you want, but stop spreading garbage that actually could cause people to believe you, not get vaccinated, and get the virus and die!
https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/vaccines/facts.html#:~:text=No.%20COVID%2D19,DNA%20in%20any%20way.
Will a COVID-19 vaccine alter my DNA?
illustration of DNA strand
No. COVID-19 vaccines do not change or interact with your DNA in any way.
There are currently two types of COVID-19 vaccines that have been authorized for use in the United States: messenger RNA (mRNA) vaccines and viral vector vaccines.
The Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines are mRNA vaccines, which teach our cells how to make a protein that triggers an immune response. The mRNA from a COVID-19 vaccine never enters the nucleus of the cell, which is where our DNA is kept. This means the mRNA cannot affect or interact with our DNA in any way. Instead, COVID-19 mRNA vaccines work with the body’s natural defenses to safely develop immunity to disease. Learn more about how COVID-19 mRNA vaccines work.
Johnson & Johnson’s Janssen COVID-19 vaccine is a viral vector vaccine. Viral vector vaccines use a modified version of a different, harmless virus (the vector) to deliver important instructions to our cells to start building protection. The instructions are delivered in the form of genetic material. This material does not integrate into a person’s DNA. These instructions tell the cell to produce a harmless piece of virus that causes COVID-19. This is a spike protein and is only found on the surface of the virus that causes COVID-19. This triggers our immune system to recognize the virus that causes COVID-19 and to begin producing antibodies and activating other immune cells to fight off what it thinks is an infection. Learn more about how viral vector vaccines work.
At the end of the process, our bodies have learned how to protect against future infection from COVID-19. That immune response and the antibodies that our bodies make protect us from getting infected if the real virus enters our bodies.