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I'm absolutely terrified of the MRNA treatments, I figure at best they're useless and at worst they're going to lead to lots of long-term issues due to the studies with MRNA in the past decade that never saw it pass trial phases. However I live near a city, and have two jobs, and I can't stay at home or avoid the risk of getting Covid19 or, more likely, the Indian variant.

People at my work that have gotten Pfizer have still gotten sick, yet everyone around me has been brainwashed by the media into thinking Pfizer is the most effective. Now the US is going to halt FDA emergency approval for possible other forms of vaccines, and I'm legitimately worried that there won't be any true vaccines or alternatives in the near future to the MRNAs (I feel like the production issues were actually corporate warfare bullshit)

If the MRNAs were harmful, more people would by dying than is being reported. I've also had one of my work buddies studying med tell me that the MRNA is no longer even in your body after a few months, and that it's impossible for it to lead to long-term damage because of that. At the same time, I read today from a non-peer-reviewed German study that the clotting issues with the J&J/AZ are due to it injecting itself into the nucleus of the cell, and that the MRNA doesn't do this, instead only getting into the liquid around the cell. That doesn't seem completely accurate, is it?

I've studied different types of vaccines in the past few months, and I can't help but shake the feeling that what's really happening is a market push for a new type of drug that's essentially just super tylenol for viruses (since it doesn't prevent spread 100%, and can still lead to hospitalization for others).

I genuinely want to know, as someone obese (trying to lose) with high triglycerides in his 30s, if i have to start taking yearly MRNA shots, what the actual fuck are the risks of taking these things every year for the rest of our lives?