I was commenting somewhere earlier, and called the mRNA treatments “effectively biological nanobots”. I think that is reasonably fair. If people want to object to the term “gene therapy”, fine. Not all genes are affected, at least as far as we know.
But the GOAL is to send in little devices that enter healthy cells and turn them into unhealthy cells that look to your immune system like intruders, to that your immune system can learn to fight them.
And it seems clear that the natural immune response, as most of us would have assumed, is VASTLY more protective than the vaccines.
The plus side may be that this conversion therapy, from healthy to spiky, only happens briefly. But if so–and we should all devoutly hope this is the case–that means that the treatment needs to repeated at regular intervals.
As I have been arguing for something like a year now, the simplest long term solution is for all healthy people to contract this illness, in conditions of nutritional immunosufficiency, fight it off, and most likely receive in the bargain T Cell immunity that might last as long as the rest of their lives. This is cheaper, easier, and safer. It was and remains the prohibitively most intelligent solution.
Bodies are complex systems. The largest and best supercomputers cannot predict outcomes even in aggregate, because the inputs necessarily are imperfect. They are best guesses. There remains a LOT we don’t know about the human body.
I continue to believe all this is stupid for most of us. I continue to wonder how all this is even possible.