During my reasearch into how SARS2 mRNA vaccines operate, a very
odd notion occurred to me: Can zinc ions interfere with
vaccines?
It's an important question for Carol and me. At the advice of
our doctor, we've been taking zinc supplements and an OTC
supplement called quercetin now for well over a year. We'd been
taking it for months before we got the Pfizer vacc.
(If you've not read up on mRNA vaccines yet,
this short explanation for laypeople is the
best I've seen so far.)
The Pfizer vacc is the first of its kind. Vaccination is the
process of familiarizing our immune systems with a specific
pathogen. This is generally done by injecting weakened or
fragmentary pathogens into the patient. The immune system reacts to
those weakened or fragmentary pathogens and develops enough
familiarity with them to attack the little devils on sight.
Making large quantities of a whole or partial pathogen is a slow
business. Because time was of the essence, Pfizer used a new
mechanism called mRNA, which literally creates a sort of crude
virus using RNA sequences. This RNA virus enters human cells in the
patient and begins manufacturing parts of the target pathogen. In
the case of SARS2, it's the spike proteins. Our immune systems then
recognize the spike proteins as enemy action, and kill anything
having that specific spike protein.
I twitched a little when I figured this out. We're infecting
ourselves with a virus that makes virus parts in our own cells,
thus avoiding the delay of having to generate gazillions of doses
in vitro. It's an elegant solution, sure, and we were able
to get it on the street in record time. There are a lot of
fistfights going on right now over the issue of serious side
effects. I'll leave that discussion to others. The issue here is
fundamentally different from that of side effects.
Carol and I had plenty of zinc ions in our systems when we were
vaccinated. The quercetin (taken daily) is a zinc ionophore. It
"escorts" zinc ions into a cell. Zinc really doesn't like
virus replication, and stops it cold. This is how some clinicians
have been treating COVID-19: by giving patients zinc and a zinc
ionophore as soon as symptoms appear.
My question is simple: Can zinc + a zinc ionophore block the
mRNA vaccine's spike protein replication process?
Don't say, "Of course not!" I doubt that question has even come
up yet, given the media's mad-dog attack job done on a certain zinc
ionophore called HCQ. We don't know. If you've seen
somebody take up this question elsewhere, send me a link. I've
begun to wonder if the shots we were given actually took, and if
they did, to what extent. We reacted to the shots, which is a good
sign. That doesn't mean the generated immune response wasn't weak,
brief, or both.
The issue isn't whether the vaccines work. The issue is whether
we were in fact fully vaccinated at all. And y'know, about things
like that I'd really like to be sure.