This is a salient point: the mRNA method of inoculation is radically different from conventional "vaccines" as invented by Sabin and Salk (peace be upon them).
The traditional vaccines rely on a large industrial supply of chicken eggs or other precursors, even human stem cells. The manufacturers of traditional vaccines need to culture trillions of colonies of virulent strains, and store those viruses colonies long enough to weaken/kill them and then assemble a vaccine with the remnants. Sorry, I meant "contain them with biohazard safety facilities and protocols" which are euphemistically known as "labs".
I found essentially no moral objection to mRNA inoculations, unless you consider that the fungible funds we pay are going to the same pharmaceutical virus factories that manufacture and store influenza, polio, pertussis, tetanus, and other dangerous organisms. It would be really cool if we, as a civilization, could move past that stage, or at least enact treaties and disarmament protocols for the nations which are stockpiling them. But somehow, the general public doesn't see it that way.
RupertSalt|18 days ago
The traditional vaccines rely on a large industrial supply of chicken eggs or other precursors, even human stem cells. The manufacturers of traditional vaccines need to culture trillions of colonies of virulent strains, and store those viruses colonies long enough to weaken/kill them and then assemble a vaccine with the remnants. Sorry, I meant "contain them with biohazard safety facilities and protocols" which are euphemistically known as "labs".
I found essentially no moral objection to mRNA inoculations, unless you consider that the fungible funds we pay are going to the same pharmaceutical virus factories that manufacture and store influenza, polio, pertussis, tetanus, and other dangerous organisms. It would be really cool if we, as a civilization, could move past that stage, or at least enact treaties and disarmament protocols for the nations which are stockpiling them. But somehow, the general public doesn't see it that way.