Of course I did; not problematic and causing some damage are different measures. For instance, I wonder how much this is related to various side effects people are having? To be clear, there’s no...
Of course I did; not problematic and causing some damage are different measures. For instance, I wonder how much this is related to various side effects people are having? To be clear, there’s no reason not to get the vaccine unless your doctor advises against it due to known medical conditions. I’m just wondering what’s caused by what.
The side effects are all immune response. Fever, body chills, fatigue - all classic immune responses. That's your immune system activating systems trying to fend off what they think is a foreign...
The side effects are all immune response. Fever, body chills, fatigue - all classic immune responses. That's your immune system activating systems trying to fend off what they think is a foreign invader. Same with the arm soreness. When you get those with a cold, it's not the virus fucking shit up in your body, it's your body fucking shit up in your body.
I don't think there are any symptoms that are not classic examples of immune responses - it's why it feels like a cold. The rare blood clotting issues with the adenovirus vaccines is the closest I can think of.
Question was asked before on Reddit. Consensus is that any vaccine proteins produced or contained in a vaccine are on a much smaller scale than an actual COVID infection. Either way it turns out...
Question was asked before on Reddit. Consensus is that any vaccine proteins produced or contained in a vaccine are on a much smaller scale than an actual COVID infection.
Either way it turns out that engineering vaccines to attack the proteins was a smart move.
This news about the spike protein is quite interesting, I wonder if the vaccines cause localized damage?
Of course I did; not problematic and causing some damage are different measures. For instance, I wonder how much this is related to various side effects people are having? To be clear, there’s no reason not to get the vaccine unless your doctor advises against it due to known medical conditions. I’m just wondering what’s caused by what.
The side effects are all immune response. Fever, body chills, fatigue - all classic immune responses. That's your immune system activating systems trying to fend off what they think is a foreign invader. Same with the arm soreness. When you get those with a cold, it's not the virus fucking shit up in your body, it's your body fucking shit up in your body.
I don't think there are any symptoms that are not classic examples of immune responses - it's why it feels like a cold. The rare blood clotting issues with the adenovirus vaccines is the closest I can think of.
Question was asked before on Reddit. Consensus is that any vaccine proteins produced or contained in a vaccine are on a much smaller scale than an actual COVID infection.
Either way it turns out that engineering vaccines to attack the proteins was a smart move.