Dr. Jessica Rose: "There are weird kind of eerie parallels between this (COVID shot) and HIV

3 months ago
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Dr. Jessica Rose: "There are weird kind of eerie parallels between this (COVID vaccine) and HIV because really the problem with HIV is getting it out of the latent infection phase. "

"So for people who don't know. Can I just share with the audience HIV is what they believe causes AIDS? So it's bad for two reasons, because this virus latches on to cells that have these receptors called CD4 receptors. And these are our T helper cells, which are kind of like the generals of our immune system. And they command other cells that are very important, including B cells that produce antibodies to respond."

"So it likes those cells, it destroys them, copies really fast, reproduces really fast. And it also carries with it its own reverse transcriptase and integrase, which means that it can reverse to its DNA state, get into the nucleus of the cell and integrate its genetic material by itself into our genome, which effectively, you know, makes that cell permanently infected with HIV."

"So the problem is finding those latently infected cells in somebody who's, you know, they're... They don't look like they're symptomatic, for example, and purging that material somehow. And we haven't figured out how to do this after so many years."

"So it's, I was thinking about it. It's like, okay, this problem with purging the spike, like if we have stable integration happening, for example, like what do we do there? Because it's kind of the same thought problem if when you start getting into it and... I'm not saying that autophagy wouldn't work."

"That's when you're starving your cells because we don't actually know exactly what happens with the cells. Apparently they purge toxins and doodoos and it resets a lot of stuff. But I mean, that might work. I can't see it hurting. But yeah, it's like we're band-aid solutioning. All I guess a GP can do at this point is first identify. that person is suffering this injury because of the injection and to try and deal with the symptoms."

"But like, yeah, it's a big problem that we're facing. It's like, what do we actually do with people who are still suffering or who have, you know, gotten a shot two years ago and just got into a raging stage for lymphoma or something like that? I mean, yeah, it's about... I guess it's about treating symptoms for now, but it's like how is there a solution, a bigger solution?"

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