DWQA Questions › Tag: mRNA spike proteinFilter:AllOpenResolvedClosedUnansweredSort byViewsAnswersVotesDr. Al Sears cited what he calls “a landmark study conducted by scientists at the Cleveland Clinic.” The researchers discovered that recipients of more than one dose of a Covid vaccine are more likely to contract the virus. According to the study, the more vaccine doses received, the greater the risk: 1.5 times higher for those with two doses; 1.95 times higher for those with three doses; and 2.5 times higher for those with more than three doses. Despite these findings, the CDC continues to recommend Covid vaccines for virtually everyone age 6 months and older. The Cleveland researchers concluded that while the vaccines offer some short-term protection, they also likely increase the risk of future infection. The problem appears to be that taking multiple vaccine doses leads to “antibody-dependent enhancement.” In other words, the immune system’s response becomes skewed towards older virus strains, making it less effective against newer strains. In past channelings, you have defended the Covid-19 vax as necessary to prevent deaths overall during the pandemic, despite the risk of side effects. How would you answer these new criticisms of those advising against further vaccination? What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 2 months ago • Coronavirus COVID-1964 views0 answers0 votesA recent study released as a preprint by S. Zhang and W. El-Deiry showed that SARS-CoV-2 spike protein inhibits tumor suppressor gene p53. The media is promoting the speculation this may explain a rise in cancer starting a year after the beginning of the pandemic, when vaccines based on mRNA spike protein production in the body became available. Is this a significant downside of the vaccines?ClosedNicola asked 6 months ago • Coronavirus COVID-19112 views0 answers0 votes