One thing I do not think anybody has addressed is the period of time after vaccination that the blood clots are a possibility.
Is it only shortly after getting the shot? A few days? A couple of weeks? Months? Years?
Or is it permanent? In other words, you will have an increased risk of clotting that you have to live with the rest of your life?
Here’s a chart (h/t ransomnote) showing the deaths after the shots; longest time is 28 days.
Not sure of the timeframe for clots though.
https://freerepublic.com/focus/chat/3957038/posts?page=185#185
Excellent and thoughtful questions.
Dr. Bhakdi says bad reactions could be "any of the above".
https://www.bitchute.com/video/eF19tBfalCqL/
If it’s caused by the spike protein, they are no longer produced by the cell once the mRNA has dissipates, so the window of time for the vaccine itself to be cause would be a short window of time.
This is only a theory, but J&J and AZ vaccines are probably more likely to cause clotting as the concentration of spike proteins are probably higher as there is more spike protein produced as more and more mRNA is produced with those vaccines. The initial mRNA dissipates, but the DNA remains in the nucleus and continues to produce more of the mRNA until the cell dies, meaning there will be a cluster of cells with a lot more spike protein on them vs. the Moderna and Pfizer vaccines. That is probably why J&J is only one dose vs. two doses as the former produces more mRNA and spike protein than the latter in which the mRNA is gone and therefore the instructions to produce more spike proteins also disappears with it. But the chances of clotting being a possibility can’t be zero with Moderna or Pfizer if the spike protein is the culprit - even though the chances may be considerably less due to a lower concentration of the spike proteins.
What’s bizarre about some of the arguments is that some argue that it is better to get the virus than get vaccines with mRNA to make the spike proteins, even though, obviously, if you get a COVID19 infection, you will get many, many times mRNA in your body with the instructions to make the spike proteins (indeed, the whole virus) - that’s how a virus reproduces - by using the cells of its host. We continue to have people who have no clue what a virus is and how it infects you making bold statements / opinions about a topic for which they lack even basic knowledge and don’t even try to learn.
mRNA is usually broken down fairly quickly by human cells. The moderna sequence uses modified nucleosides that resist the breakdown. These sequences are more durable than regular mRNA. How much???