Anonymous ID: 9b5e6c Nov. 13, 2021, 8:03 a.m. No.14990525   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0679 >>0829

Vaxxes hinder natural Immunity

 

>Malaria: New knowledge about naturally acquired immunity may improve vaccines

by University of Copenhagen NOVEMBER 12, 2021

 

Colorized electron micrograph showing malaria parasite (right, blue) attaching to a human red blood cell. The inset shows a detail of the attachment point at higher magnification.

Each year, about half a million children in Africa die from malaria. Infection with the malaria parasite is such a widespread and deadly disease that scientists all over the globe are working to understand it better in order to be able to fight it. Now, researchers from the University of Copenhagen have come a significant step closer, as they have found an important difference between naturally acquired immunity and immunity following vaccination.

 

"The antibodies which the body produces when you have been infected with malaria look different from those produced by the body when you have been vaccinated. And that probably means that our immune system has a more efficient response when we have been naturally infected than when we are vaccinated against malaria," says Lars Hviid, Professor at the Department of Immunology and Microbiology.

 

The immune system can trigger various mechanisms in order to defend the body. The usual defense against infections with parasites, viruses and bacteria consists of so-called macrophages. "When we are exposed to an attack from the outside, the immune system can produce antibodies that attach to the foreign body that needs to be fought. They are then recognized by some small cells called macrophages, which are attracted to the antibody and eat the bacterium or virus. This is basically how immunity to most infectious diseases works," explains Lars Hviid.

 

But, now, researchers have discovered that immunity to malaria seems to work differently. Here, the body's immune system uses some other types of cells to fight an infection with the malaria parasite. "We have found that the antibodies look different, depending on whether you have been vaccinated or infected. And that means that the body launches some other defense mechanism, as instead, it uses what we call natural killer cells," says Lars Hviid.

 

More in common with cancer. Natural killer cells are usually known to researchers as one of the body's best weapons to fight cancer cells. But, now, it seems that the defense against malaria has features in common with the immune system against cancer. "In popular terms, you could say that the immune system has a more tailored defense against malaria than against other typical infections. Maybe we have evolved in this way because it is such a contagious and deadly disease—that is difficult to guess," says Lars Hviid.

 

The researchers made the findings by comparing blood samples from Ghanaian people who had been infected with malaria with blood samples from people who participated in Phase 1 clinical trials of an experimental malaria vaccine. He explains that the new knowledge may be used to develop new and improved malaria vaccines.

 

"Our study points to a new strategy for developing even better malaria vaccines in the future. Because, now, we know how the body mobilizes the defense with natural killer cells, and we can imitate that with vaccines," he says. He looks forward to being able to test—together with other researchers—whether a future malaria vaccine will be able to utilize natural killer cells instead of the macrophages that the current vaccines use.

https://medicalxpress.com/news/2021-11-malaria-knowledge-naturally-immunity-vaccines.html

 

TL;DR

>vaxxes impair / destroy the effectiveness of natural immunity

>discovery of new"Natural Killer Cells"that are a part of the bodies immune system

>know that everything that effectively treats malaria also is an effective treatment against covid and parasites

>for more info on the final red pill and deparasiting see 8kun.top/wagmi

Anonymous ID: 9b5e6c Nov. 13, 2021, 8:14 a.m. No.14990613   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>14989489lbBlack Americans Sue U.S. Farms for Replacing Them with Foreign Workers: ‘It’s Like Being Robbed of Your Heritage’

 

Hopefully this sheds light on the fact that the system encourages farmers to use illegals as slave labor. The fact that this is still going on today is absolutely atrocious. No citizenship, no work permit means no insurance, no inspections, no accountability for what happens to people who take these jobs our of desperation. Or what some of those illegals do after they are in the country.

Anonymous ID: 9b5e6c Nov. 13, 2021, 8:24 a.m. No.14990692   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>14990531

I am sorry to hear about your situation anon. I pray God guides and protects you through this trial. As well, this might be a good opportunity to pick up and leave to a non-mandate state. Even if it means starting out small somehow (taking care of the elderly, handicapped, vulnerable) somewhere. Also Trust in Jesus in everything, I am astonished at how many miracles he is working in this anons life, and how he guided my life prior to this whole mess so I would be ok.

Anonymous ID: 9b5e6c Nov. 13, 2021, 8:40 a.m. No.14990778   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0807 >>0829

>for the keks

Motel owner announced vaccine mandate. Then most of his staff quitabridged version

Nov 13, 2021

 

“Now this is great. Just discovered this,” says Joseph Franklyn McElroy, chuckling, as he tries to get the hardwood floors inside this cozy little motel room to sparkle. “This is a Swiffer that steams at the same time it cleans. It’s my favorite thing.” The steam mop with the purple handle is actually a Shark-branded product, not a Swiffer. It’s tough, though, to fault McElroy for misidentifying this tool of the housekeeping trade. While he has become as proficient at turning over rooms at the Meadowlark Motel over the past couple months as any current cleaning staffer, changing linens and sanitizing toilets was never meant to be the New York City chief executive’s bailiwick.

 

Until he decided, in August, that he wanted to bring his young twins to the place that served as his childhood home, and the place he now owns — a place where he’s trying to create memorable tourism experiences for people passing through this tiny mountain town 35 miles west of Asheville. Joseph Franklyn McElroy stands in front of the Meadowlark Motel on Oct. 8, 2021 in Maggie Valley, N.C. The only obstacle? Almost none of the people working for him at the 34-room motel had been vaccinated.

 

“I wanted to bring my 3-year-old children down to experience some of the things that I had experienced at the motel,” the Maggie Valley native says. “We have a huge back (area) for recreation, a pavilion, fire pits and a fishing stream … and you get lots of animals there, so they could see things they don’t see in New York. But bringing them down to an environment where a lot of unvaccinated people would be around regularly just seemed problematic.”

 

After giving it some thought and seeking advice from others, in August, McElroy announced the types of rule that a growing number of U.S. employers both large and small are instituting amid the Covid-19 pandemic: He announced a vaccine mandate for managers, and a mask mandate for all other employees. It didn’t go over well. He says that four room attendants, three front desk employees, an assistant manager and an assistant maintenance worker all quit in response, leaving just a manager, a laundry room employee and a maintenance worker. “I mean, they left that day,” McElroy says, “and we had a full weekend coming up, among many full weekends coming.

 

The day most of them quit “For a long time, I was a terrible troll online,” McElroy says, as he sits on the back deck of the Meadowlark’s main building. “A liberal troll. To some extent, I occasionally still can spout off in a negative way. But I’m trying to be a better man that doesn’t do that. ’Cause at the end of the day, that only makes people more entrenched in their confirmation bias.”

 

The name Trump eventually comes up, and it’s clear he doesn’t like the former president. >100% pure kek

 

Which is a rather uncommon point of view here in Haywood County, where two-thirds of the voters who went to the polls last year cast their vote for Donald Trump. McElroy didn’t see the vaccine issue or the mask issue as political, though. He saw it, at least in some small way, as a means to a personal end. Starting in May, as the pandemic seemed to be receding, he returned to making regular trips down from New York — where he works as chief executive of Manhattan marketing firm Galileo Tech Media — to oversee repairs and renovations at the motel.

 

Eventually, he was coming down enough that he wanted to bring his family, too, so he could get done what he wanted to get done in Maggie Valley while also spending time with them. But he worried about doing so because his son and daughter were too young to get the shots. He would feel better about them staying in the two-bedroom apartment he keeps in the center of the motel, he thought, if at the very least his employees wore masks at all times, and even better, if they were fully vaccinated. So on Aug. 13, he instituted the mandates. And his entire front-desk staff and all his cleaning crew members left.

 

With no tricks up his sleeve that would magically solve his sudden problem, he called his younger sister, who was in town visiting with their widowed 80-year-old father. “Joe said, ‘Can you come down and watch the front office for a little bit?’” Cindy Mong recalls. “I came down and I said, ‘What do you want me to do?’ He said, ‘Well, I got rooms to clean. I’m by myself.’ I said, ‘Um, OK. What am I doing sitting at the front desk?’ He said, ‘You know how to clean rooms?’ I’m like, ‘Joe, duh. I cleaned rooms from the time I was in sixth grade through high school, and then I’m a mom, and so yes, I know how to clean rooms.’

 

“I said, ‘Why don’t we just close the front office, put a note saying call us, and let’s get these rooms clean?’” I wasn't going to be defeated by this

“It was really do or die,” McElroy says. “Close the place, which was heading into the peak of the season, and lose all that revenue, and not do it. Or just decide to do it. And in some ways, I’m a real stubborn bastard. “I felt it as a personal attack in a way, and I wasn’t gonna succumb to it. … I wasn’t gonna be defeated by this.”

 

So for several weeks — even after his sister headed back home to Florida — he raced around the property with a cart full of linens and supplies from room to room, sometimes cleaning more than a dozen a day. When someone called the front desk, it would get forwarded to his cellphone and he’d take a reservation while taking out a bag of bathroom trash. If he saw a vehicle pull into a space outside the lobby, he’d race up to check them in. Oh, and he was still trying to run his New York-based company and its staff of 15 employees, remotely. As well as interviewing new job candidates — vaccinated job candidates (or at least people willing to wear masks for their whole shift) — who could spell him.

 

A new appreciation for a dirty job “I’m analyzing it almost like an app,” McElroy says, referring to how his mind was working while he cleaned. “I’m sitting there analyzing the functions and processes of cleaning — which I’ve been doing so long in my business career. … I long ago got rid of the revulsion factor that a lot of people can’t get over. I’m divorced from that. It just becomes a mental analytical problem. “Because the first few days I was dead, man. I was killing myself, and my legs and everything else (were sore).”

 

In short order, however, he figured out how to minimize his physical exertion while maximizing cleanliness. And with a newfound appreciation for manual labor along with a nudge from Plott, he was able to make the job more enticing to would-be applicants. “He goes, ‘You know, this is kind of revelatory for me,’” Plott says, recalling a conversation he had with McElroy late in the summer. “He said, ‘It’s like, wow, there’s an art to this, and I think maybe we’ve been taking people for granted. Maybe this minimum wage that everybody talks about needs to be raised.’ I said, ‘Yeah, I think the only way you’re gonna be able to combat this is just say, Look, we’re gonna pay the highest wages anywhere, but you’re gonna have to go along with some of the things we need to do, too.’

 

“He said, ‘I like that idea.’” McElroy kept the vaccine and mask mandates in place. But he raised the hourly wage for room attendants to $14 an hour. That’s double what it had been. Soon afterward, he hired a woman to clean after she went to get vaccinated — specifically so she could work at the Meadowlark.

 

https://www.detroitnews.com/story/news/nation/2021/11/13/motel-owner-announced-vaccine-mandate-then-most-his-staff-quit/8603822002/