- Joined
- Aug 28, 2019
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I wonder what's gonna happen if it is, would countries be able to sue for damages to their economies and the loss of life? I know that happens in war, but idk if it applies in this case since it's so unprecedented. I'd imagine if that were the case, China would have to pony up unless they wanna fight a war against the whole world.The lab leak theory is gaining major traction. Gotta love how it was considered crackpot tier only a few weeks ago.
If it can be proven the geopolitical fallout will be next level.
I dunno, I'm not a medfag, just an autist who likes to read about infectious diseases. Side effects tend to be worse if you've already had COVID, so I imagine for most people it's simply the body mounting an intense immune response. As for the more serious side effects, it looks like the issue is not about antibodies or immunity per se, but the spike protein causing cellular damage.
Here's the paper that claims to have solved why the adenovirus vector vaccines cause blood clots. TL;DR the spike protein.
It was found that the treatment of cultured primary human pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells (SMCs) or human pulmonary artery endothelial cells with the recombinant SARS-CoV-2 spike protein S1 subunit is sufficient to promote cell signaling without the rest of the viral components [21]. Furthermore, our analysis of the postmortem lung tissues of patients who died of COVID-19 has determined that these patients exhibited pulmonary vascular wall thickening, a hallmark of pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) [21]. Based on these results, we proposed that the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein (without the rest of the viral components) triggers cell signaling events that may promote pulmonary vascular remodeling and PAH as well as possibly other cardiovascular complications [21,22].
In our cell culture experiments, two recombinant SARS-CoV-2 spike proteins, both of which contain the RBD, were studied [21]. The full-length S1 subunit protein contains most of the S1 subunit (Val16–Gln690), while the RBD S1 subunit protein only contains the RBD region (Arg319–Phe541), as shown in Figure 1. Cultured primary human pulmonary artery SMCs and human pulmonary artery endothelial cells were treated with these proteins for 10 min. We found, using the phospho-specific MEK antibody, that the recombinant full-length S1 subunit of SARS-CoV-2 alone at a concentration as low as 130 pM activated MEK, the activator of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) and a well-known signal transduction mechanism for cell growth [23]. By contrast, such activation of cell signaling by the spike protein did not occur in rat pulmonary artery SMCs [21].
While ACE2 is now well known as a ‘receptor’ to which the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein binds on human host cells in order to facilitate the membrane fusion and gain viral entry, the usual physiological function of ACE2 is not to serve as a membrane receptor to transduce intracellular signals. ACE2 is a type I integral membrane protein that functions as a carboxypeptidase, cleaving angiotensin II to angiotensin (1–7) and regulating blood pressure [24,25] (Figure 2). However, ten years ago, Chen et al. [26] reported the intriguing findings showing that ACE2 acts as a membrane receptor for cell signal transduction in response to the spike protein of SARS-CoV (now also known as SARS-CoV-1, the virus that caused the SARS outbreak in 2002–2004) in the human lung alveolar epithelial cell line, A549. The spike protein of SARS-CoV-1 is 76–78% identical to that of SARS-CoV-2 [27]. In their study, it was shown that the binding of the full-length spike protein to ACE2 triggered the casein kinase II-dependent activation of activator protein-1 (AP-1) transcription factor and subsequent gene transcriptional events [26]. Their finding on SARS-CoV-1 [26] and ours on SARS-CoV-2 [21] indicate that the spike protein remarkably functionally converts ACE2 (that is normally a peptidase enzyme) into a membrane receptor for cell signaling that uses the spike protein as a ligand for its activation (Figure 2).
There is a sense of community with taking communion, likely it had not occurred to him because it feels integral without being integral. Easy to have blindspots to possibilities in such a case.Good news on my end: my church's council voted unanimously to end all coof restrictions. No more social distancing, traditional communion at the altar, fellowship after church, the whole nine yards. I would have gone farther and banned masks altogether, but although they're not required (and haven't been for a couple weeks), they said "use your own judgment" on those. Pastor is still doing a separate communion after church for anyone worshiping remotely, though I dunno how many people are still coming in for that; I wouldn't be surprised if that ended eventually due to lack of participation. He even mentioned at church tonight that he's giving his blessing to remote worshipers to take communion at home if they so choose; theologically, it's a traditional Lutheran belief that you really don't need a pastor to bless the elements for you, so he's okay with it in these circumstances. Dunno why he didn't think about this a year ago, but oh well.
I'm noticing fewer people with masks on as I go out and about, and more stores are taking down their "masks required" signage. Some are replacing them with a "masks encouraged" sign, but others are just dropping them entirely. I no longer feel like I'm sticking out like a sore thumb, which was really fucking annoying when I was the only one acting normally. Things are just about back to normal again.
Thank God I don't live in a blue state.
It is fun watching the disease lose its power and the left see its window for absolute control narrow and narrow and narrow.Incidence around here is in freefall, and the gym is finally open even for those without letters of indulgence proving our purity.
Now it's the Branch Covidians crying about the numbers being fake and everyone being lied to, and how the lifting of restrictions is going to kill us all by autumn.
Well yeah, of course this will come back in autumn. No amount of permanent lockdown will prevent that, you absolute pillocks.
holy shit Sam Hyde!from /pol
Saskatoon Police Service needs *you* to fill out this form to identify anti-maskers
Saskatoon Police Service
saskatoonpolice.ca
have some free time, maybe you can help
The lab leak theory is gaining major traction. Gotta love how it was considered crackpot tier only a few weeks ago.
If it can be proven the geopolitical fallout will be next level.
I hope it's sterilized now.
hoping for their trademark "Wolf Warrior diplomacy" to kick in!Maybe China will strike the US back by revealing incriminating dirt they got on them and have been using as leverage to have their way?
It's surprisingly easy to mentally condition the masses to think a certain way if you scare them enough. They don't get called "sheep" for nothing *tips fedora*.What really pisses me off these days is that even when I just say that I'm slightly miffed that I don't really see a good reason to get vaccinated personally, I still get treated like some sort of anti-vaxxer even when I make it clear that I will get vaccinated at some point. I'm just not happy with the explanations given, but for convenience I will get the jab unless super hardcore long term effects appear to the public before I'm on the list.
But no, compliance is not enough. You have to want it. Remember in 1984 when O'Brian is torturing Winston, and Winston tries to say whatever O'Brian wants to hear, but it doesn't work because superficial compliance isn't good enough?
That's what ordinary people have turned into.
What a difference a day makes