I hope you can join me for a livestream today on YouTube at 2 pm EST. I will be discussing COVID shots and if they make you make spike proteins, and if they actually contain mRNA. We will be breaking this all down and looking at the science. See you then!
I got lost on how to prove antibodies are specific or not (32 min). First experiment 1. Inject toxic substance to produce tissue damage. To a sample of the tissue damage, add (claimed to be) "specific" antibody. 2. inject a different toxic substance that has no spike protein in it producing similar amount of tissue damage. To the tissue damage sample, add same (claimed to be) "specific" antibody. If 1 binds but 2 doesn't, it proves the antibody is specific. If both 1 & 2 bind, the antibody is not specific. #1 has spike protein and #2 doesn't? Second experiment is use same toxic substance with claimed spike protein (or mrna) in both 1 & 2 but change the test antibody, one that is claimed to be "specific" and one that is not. In either experiment, if there is binding in both 1 & 2, it proves it is not a specific antibody. Can you isolate one antibody for adding to the samples? Can you make a toxic substance with spike protein and one without? Is there such a thing as a spike protein or mrna? Can you even do these experiments? I am confused.