Vaccines designed to spread like a virus on the way whether we like it or not

Mathanzua

JF-Expert Member
Jan 4, 2017
15,848
20,697
Self disseminating or self spreading vaccines are on their way, whether we want or like it. These will also be vaccines which spreads from person to person.The demons are marching forward no matter how devastating the implications will be.

We are talking here about vaccines which once administered to one person, will spread to those around you by contact etc. This means only a small number will be vaccinated,and these will spread the vaccine to others. Pretty cheap isn't it.But do you understand the implications?The implications are huge.

Self-disseminating, self-spreading vaccines are on their way, whether you want or like it; the demons are marching forward no the matter devastating implications; VACCINE spreads person to person

This will be a vaccine that spreads immunity by passing itself on like a virus.
Researchers did investigate the potential for self spreading, needleless inoculations in the wake of Covid pandemic.Whether the Covid vaccines are self spreading is any ones guess,but they might well be.


The vaccine that spreads immunity by passing itself on like a virus

As self spreading vaccine technology progresses, dialogue on its risks should follow.

As self-spreading vaccine technology moves forward, dialogue on its risks should follow - Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists

Scientists in Scotland recently showed the quest for self spreading vaccines. These they showed could be inoculations that could move through animal populations like a disease, but instead of causing illness, spread immunity.

In a new article, a University of Glasgow researcher Megan Griffiths and her colleagues identified a herpes virus that might be turned into a vehicle known as a "viral vector" to spread a rabies vaccine among South American vampire bats. The Herpes Virus Griffiths highlighted,could potentially help researchers overcome a big hurdle for self-spreading vaccine development: Pre-existing immunity to a viral vector used for a vaccine, induced by previous infection with the virus or a related strain, may block the vaccine from spreading. Griffiths’s team studied a Herpes virus that can infect bats even if they were previously infected by related strains and therefore could still be an effective viral vector.

It’s a development that Scott Nuismer, a biologist and leading figures in self-spreading vaccine research, said “moved them closer to the point where these challenges” in deploying a vaccine can be solved.

But self-spreading vaccine technology is inherently risky.

Once let loose, the vaccine could recombine with human pathogens. Also, it could help malicious actors create viruses capable of causing pandemics.

Despite these risks, self-spreading vaccine research appears to be moving forward and gathering momentum.

Behind the scenes, however, a promising trend is emerging: biosecurity experts and other scientists in the field are grappling with each other’s ideas and potentially paving the way for discussions that could offer a roadmap for mitigating risks from emerging biotechnologies.
 
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