If forced, it would be J&J as it doesn’t have the mNRA.
“...it doesn’t have the mNRA.”
It does, it delivers it in a different way.
“If forced, it would be J&J as it doesn’t have the mNRA.“
J&J instead uses DNA instructions to make your cells produce mRNA instructions to make your cells produce spike proteins.
This is not an improvement. In fact, it’s probably even riskier.
The correct answer is: they can’t force you. They can make it expensive to refuse, but they can’t force you.
Oh yes it most certainly does.
What is the difference between how the Johnson & Johnson vaccine works and how the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines work?
The ultimate difference is the way the instructions are delivered. The Moderna and Pfizer vaccines use mRNA technology, and the Johnson & Johnson vaccine uses the more traditional virus-based technology.
mRNA is essentially a little piece of code that the vaccine delivers to your cells. The code serves as an instruction manual for your immune system, teaching it to recognize the virus that causes COVID-19 and attack it, should it encounter the real thing.
Instead of using mRNA, the Johnson & Johnson vaccine uses a disabled adenovirus to deliver the instructions. This adenovirus is in no way related to the coronavirus. It is a completely different virus. Although it can deliver the instructions on how to defeat the coronavirus, it can’t replicate in your body and will not give you a viral infection.
https://www.vcuhealth.org/news/covid-19/johnson-and-johnson-vaccine-how-is-it-different
J&J has mRNA.