@Dr Linda. “Then they use more chemicals to break up the double-stranded e-coli DNA into smaller, single-stranded RNA parts.”
What chemicals? (the boiling frog meakly asks). And how do they purify away those chemicals before injection? Did they just call them ‘generally accepted as safe.’ Or perhaps part of the proprietary mix. Or they we…
@Dr Linda. “Then they use more chemicals to break up the double-stranded e-coli DNA into smaller, single-stranded RNA parts.”
What chemicals? (the boiling frog meakly asks). And how do they purify away those chemicals before injection? Did they just call them ‘generally accepted as safe.’ Or perhaps part of the proprietary mix. Or they were just trace elements not worthy of reporting? I'm also alarmed/relieved that a scientist (Bhakdi) echoed one of my earlier concerns - how exposed and reactive DNA is during cell division. In the presence of all these other proteins = RISK, the unknown-unknown variety.
@Dr Linda. “Then they use more chemicals to break up the double-stranded e-coli DNA into smaller, single-stranded RNA parts.”
What chemicals? (the boiling frog meakly asks). And how do they purify away those chemicals before injection? Did they just call them ‘generally accepted as safe.’ Or perhaps part of the proprietary mix. Or they were just trace elements not worthy of reporting? I'm also alarmed/relieved that a scientist (Bhakdi) echoed one of my earlier concerns - how exposed and reactive DNA is during cell division. In the presence of all these other proteins = RISK, the unknown-unknown variety.