TYRELL: The facts of life. I'll be blunt. To make an alteration in the evolvement of an organic life system, at least by men, makers or not, is fatal. A coding sequence can't be revised once it's established.
BATTY: Why?
TYRELL: Because by the second day of incubation any cells that have undergone reversion mutation give rise to revertant colonies -- like rats leaving a sinking ship. The ship sinks.
BATTY: What about E.M.S. recombination?
TYRELL: We've already tried it -- ethyl methane sulfonate is an alkylating agent and a potent mutagen -- it created a virus so lethal the subject was destroyed before we left the table.
BATTY: Then a repressor protein that blocks the operating cells.
TYRELL: Wouldn't obstruct replication, but it does give rise to an error in replication so that the newly formed DNA strand carries a mutation and you've got a virus again... but all this is academic... you are made as well as we could make you.
BATTY: But not to last?
TYRELL: The light that burns twice as bright burns half as long. And you have burned so very, very brightly, Roy.
From what movie is that exchange?
That dialogue was right before Roy gouged Tyrell’s eyes out. Food for thought.
The antigen is the Spike Protein is no more dangerous than the protein from a ham sandwich. It is my conjecture, that if ham protein were put in a lipid nanoparticle; which is designed to attach to a type of immune cell called an antigen-presenting cell, you would generate a immune response whenever you ate ham.
I admit, my full understanding is really limited due to the restrictions of trade secrecy. The formula for the MessingerRNA lipid nanoparticle is so secret and its nature so guarded, many researchers do not fully understand how it works. And, because of that you have people exploiting people’s lack of knowledge for their own purposes. I think that puts Dr. Robert Malone in that category.
The antigen is the Spike Protein is no more dangerous than the protein from a ham sandwich. It is my conjecture, that if ham protein were put in a lipid nanoparticle; which is designed to attach to a type of immune cell called an antigen-presenting cell, you would generate a immune response whenever you ate ham.
I admit, my full understanding is really limited due to the restrictions of trade secrecy. mRNA has a very short half-life; this facilitates their elimination from the body after doing their work. The formula for the MessingerRNA lipid nanoparticle is so secret and its nature so guarded, many researchers do not fully understand how it works. And, because of that you have people exploiting people’s lack of knowledge for their own purposes. I think that puts Dr. Robert Malone in that category.