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FALSE | Anti-COVID-19 vaccines may contain self-assembling nanotechnology bodies – true • The truth in politics

Facebook user translated and interpreted in a post excerpts from a article published on the website slaynews.com, where he mentions that a study “explosive” that would have found groups that assemble themselves in the bodies of people vaccinated against COVID-19.

According to the website, the study was conducted by Dr. Young Mi Lee and Professor Daniel Broudy from Okinawa Christian University, Japan. They reportedly found artificial bodies of various forms in the COVID-19 vaccines and said that these vaccines cause cellular toxicity. That study was published in July in International Journal of Immunization Theory, Practice and Research.

The medium of study publication is of questionable quality. Although it claims to be a genuine publication, “peer-reviewed with a focus on the development, distribution and research of vaccines and their components”, International Journal of Immunization Theory, Practice and Research Yes, reallya platform that promotes research and disinformation activities of poor quality, with links to authors and organizations that base their work on conspiracy theories and other narratives, at the expense of rigorous science and academic integrity. At the same time, even the publication’s editor-in-chief he is an expert in linguistics, without any medical competence.

Another red flag relates to the ability of the two researchers to analyze such complex scientific topics as nanotechnology and vaccines. As mentioned in the Facebook post from which I started, doctor Dr. Young Mi Lee he is an obstetrician. Obstetrics is a branch of medicine that deals with pregnancy, childbirth and the postpartum period. About Professor Daniel Broudy I found it was important in linguistics, psychology, and communication theory, not medicine at all. Therefore, it seems that the knowledge of the two on vaccines and nanotechnology is not there, which raises serious doubts about the validity of the results and conclusions presented in their study.

The summary of the paper indicates that there is a special type of nanotechnology in vaccines against COVID-19. Nanotechnology it refers to the manipulation and control of matter on a very small scale, at the nanometer level (a nanometer is one billionth of a meter). We reviewed the study methodology, which reveals that the researchers looked under the microscope at the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines, which are based on mRNA technology, as well as the AstraZeneca and Novavax vaccines, which using different technologies. As a control, they used the flu vaccine Vaxigrip Tetra and saline. They observed the vaccines both directly, at different times, and their interaction with blood and sperm samples taken from people who had been vaccinated against COVID-19, using samples collected from a person unvaccinated as control.

The results show the development of structures with unusual geometric shapes in vaccines, especially those using mRNA, ie Pfizer and Moderna. The tests also involved putting vaccine droplets in contact with blood and sperm samples, and the study says that the four vaccines tested have obvious toxic effects on living cells, with different concerns depending on the brand of vaccine.

Some vaccines against COVID-19 import of mRNA (or messenger RNA), which is a type of genetic material that contains the instructions needed to make proteins. Nanotechnology in mRNA vaccines is not just about size LIPIDalso known as fat, which covers the mRNA in the vaccine so that it is not destroyed by the body and can send the necessary instructions to the body of the vaccinated person to create a protective mechanism against it ‘virus.

The scientific community has repeatedly denied that robots, computers, or any other material that uses nanotechnology in vaccines against COVID-19, confirmed by fact-checkers (here, here or here) and there is no evidence to support such claims.

Therefore, the claim in the study of the two researchers that there is a “type of nanotechnology” in vaccines, other than lipid nanoparticles used for mRNA delivery, is unfounded and has no scientific support.

Another claim present in both the post, the article and the study is that the artificial structures seen in the vaccines are similar to the clots found by those embalming the bodies of people who have been vaccinated against COVID-19. And this statement has already been REPRESENTATIONespecially since morticians are only responsible for preserving the bodies of dead people against natural decomposition, not taking blood samples, let alone examining them.

The website slaynews.com is also one hot spot for disinformation, proven time and time again (here, here or here) the fact that he spread false statements, such as that the World Economic Forum was going to use artificial intelligence to write a new bible and create new religions, or that no child in the Amish religious group was tested with cancer, diabetes or autism.

So we are dealing with a cycle of misinformation, from the published investigation, to the quote on slaynews.com, and then the quote and translation from the Facebook post.

2024-10-15 09:16:00
#FALSE #AntiCOVID19 #vaccines #selfassembling #nanotechnology #bodies #true #truth #politics

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