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Structures found in mRNA injection samples are neither “nanobots” nor contaminants; they are lipid nanostructures

Structures found in mRNA injection samples are neither “nanobots” nor contaminants; they are lipid nanostructures

In response to a paper published some months earlier interpreting microstructures found in samples of covid injections as “nano-robots,” chemistry professor Dr. Anne Ulrich, who has seen a lot of these structures during her research over 20 years, explained that they were structures and crystals formed by self-assembling lipids. 

Simple biophysical principles form the seemingly unusual structures. “[It’s] what amphiphiles do all the time, there’s nothing special about it,” she said.

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Over the years, Dr. Ana Maria Mihalcea and Dr. David Nixon have done a lot of work documenting self-assembly nanotechnology in various injections including those marketed as covid vaccines.  They are not the only ones investigating the unusual microstructures in mRNA injections.  In July 2024, Young Mi Lee and Daniel Broudy published a paper in the International Journal of Vaccine Theory, Practice, and Research which reported these conspicuous microscopic objects as “nano-robots.”

Dr. Anne Ulrich gives a completely different perspective on what these objects are.   Responding to Lee and Broudy’s paper, Dr. Ulrich published an article in the same journal in September.

Dr, Ulrich, a biochemistry professor at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, has been working for 20 years on lipid bilayers and bio membranes.  She has seen a lot of lipid structures and the shapes they can make.

The “conspicuous microscopic objects in mRNA vaccines” interpreted as “nano-robots” is a misconception, she wrote. “Because the wide range of  different shapes can be readily explained in terms of self-assembling lipids (including cholesterol), as are used for transfection.”  She continued:

Joining Doctors for Covid Ethics in October, Dr. Ulrich discussed her article.

“Lipids are amphiphilic molecules,” she explained.  “Amphiphiles are known to self-assemble in many different sizes and shapes.”

The term “amphiphilic” comes from the Greek words “amphi,” meaning “both,” and “philos,” meaning “loving.” This refers to the property of a molecule having both hydrophilic (water-loving) and lipophilic (fat-loving) parts. “But this could [not only fats but] also be peptides, polymers or any other amphiphilic components,” Dr, Ulrich said.

“Lipid molecules will assemble spontaneously into bilayers … when they are suspended in water.  And these bilayers make up what we call a cellular membrane,” she said.

She explained that pure lipids will close themselves up to form a hollow sphere shape but lipid mixtures or lipids with short chains can form other shapes such as long ribbons, which can grow in length and width and can stack into multilayers.  A Lipid ribbon will begin to coil or twist if it consists of chiral molecules. If a ribbon begins to twist it will give rise to a spiral or helix.  If the ribbon of the spiral grows in width, it can eventually close up into a tube. 

Chiral means they are optically active and typically have at least one asymmetric carbon atom. Many biomolecules, such as amino acids, sugars, and nucleotides are chiral.

There is a range of morphological changes that are driven by simple biophysical principles.  “That’s what amphiphiles do all the time, there’s nothing special about it,” Dr. Ulrich said.  “It may be called nano assembly because these are nanoscopic structures but it’s nothing that is programmed, nothing to worry about.”

She explained the many conditions and factors – for example, temperature, light, agitation and electromagnetic irradiation – that can cause morphological changes to the lipid nanoparticles and how this may have affected the shapes Lee and Broudy saw under the microscope.  “It’s not unexpected that microscopic structures emerge [after the various treatments Lee and Broudy subjected their samples to],” Dr. Ulrich said.

She concluded her presentation with her assessment of the risks of the mRNA “vaccines, which she refers to as modRNA.  modRNA simply refers to modified RNA, a type of synthetic messenger RNA (“mRNA”):

1. Have nanobots been injected into people? No.

2. Have people and their offspring been genetically modified? Technically speaking, yes; transiently by modRNA and possibly long-term by the residual DNA found by Kevin McKernan (see PlasmidGate and Plasmid DNA on The Exposé).

3. Do the modRNA injections have dangerous adverse effects? Yes. Mainly due to the genetically active components, irrespective of the protein, because any foreign protein being expressed by a cell will activate the immune system (self-to-self attack).

4. Can the lipid nanoparticles elicit dangerous adverse effects? It is known that ionisable cationic lipids cause inflammation but it is dose-dependent.  It is also known that these lipids can cause an autoimmune response, allergies and anaphylactic shock.

5. Are there any other contaminants in the “vaccines”?  Yes.  A week before her presentation to Doctors for Covid Ethics, a paper had been published showing that 62 different elements had been detected in vaccine samples from across the world.  In Dr. Ulrich’s opinion, using this highly sensitive detection method, most substances used as treatments will be found to have these contaminants.

6. Are the lipid nanostructures dangerous? Dr. Ulrich argues that they will most likely not be present in fresh injectables unless they have been inappropriately stored or erroneously diluted with something other than saline solution. “Even if a sample has been badly stored, I think the risk is pretty low,” she said.  Dr. Ulrich mentioned the lipid crystals the late Professor Arne Burkhardt found in tissue samples and believes these were due to poor metabolism rather than directly from the contents of the covid injections.

You can watch Dr. Ulrich’s presentation to Doctors for Covid Ethics below.

If you are unable to watch the video above on Rumble, you can watch it on BitChute HERE.

Sasha Latypova has also been arguing for some time that there are no nanobots in the covid injections. The following is a list of her relevant articles:

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