Compound Adverse Effects of COVID-19 mRNA Vaccination and Coronavirus Infection: A Convergence of Extensive Spike Protein Harms to the Human Body
Abstract
The coronavirus disease of 2019 (COVID-19) has the potential to cause or promote a number of health problems in both the short and long terms. It is often claimed that the COVID-19 messenger RNA (mRNA) vaccinations can reduce the severity of COVID-19 and its sequelae. We counter this claim with evidence and moreover hypothesize that the mRNA vaccinations are triggering mechanisms that result in an amplification of COVID-19 morbidity along with the “post-acute sequelae of COVID-19” or PASC. Since 2021, the coronavirus infections were often superimposed on a preexisting mRNA vaccine-induced milieu of toxic spike protein, inflammatory lipid nanoparticles, and residual process-related DNA impurities. Spike proteins resulting from both the mRNA vaccination and the natural SARS-CoV-2 infection have been shown to persist for extended periods, raising parallel concerns regarding potential implications for long-term safety with this vaccination. Many, if not most, of the morbidity and mortality events attributed to COVID-19 in extensively-vaccinated populations in 2022-2023 were due to the long-term background persistence of spike protein and other vaccine-associated components resulting from previous COVID-19 mRNA vaccinations. Although close temporal associations with laboratory-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 often engendered the assumption of viral causation, the morbidity and mortality events are plausibly attributed to a combination of mass vaccination and coronavirus infections. The overlapping spike-related toxicities and immunological effects of mRNA vaccinations and coronavirus infections have resulted in pronounced immune dysregulation and inflammatory cascades that likely account for near-synchronous waves of COVID-19 and all-cause mortality. We present research suggesting a potential for coronavirus infection-induced amplification of adverse events (AEs) associated with the COVID-19 mRNA vaccinations, including a diverse range of cardiovascular, hematological, autoimmune, and neurological conditions that frequently overlap with PASC. In this paper, we coin the phrase “Hybrid Harms Hypothesis”, which calls for re-examining the unique immunopathological dynamics of coronavirus infection in COVID-19 mRNA-vaccinated individuals and their implications for public health strategies.
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