AJ laughed. “Hey, I heard these mRNA vaccines alter your DNA. Maybe we’ll all become like the X-Men. Get superpowers!”
“Sorry to disappoint you,” said Stefanie, “but there isn’t any real evidence it’ll interact with your genetic code. It doesn’t penetrate the cell nucleus.”
“How do you know so much?” asked Léo.
“I was on a Zoom meeting last night with Professor Denis Rancourt. He’s a physicist in Ottawa.”
“You have Zoom meetings with physicists?”
“Well,” she conceded, “there were hundreds of us. It was with Vaccine Choice Canada.”
“Never heard of it,” grumbled Raj. “Anyway, what’s a physicist know about viruses?”
“So, this professor,” I interrupted, “what’s he saying about the COVID shots?”
“He’s saying there are a lot of dangers with mRNA vaccines that we have not even begun to understand,” she replied, pulling back her toasting chunk of rye to check its crispness. “Horrible things can happen. And if you want proof, just look at all the dead ferrets from earlier mRNA experiments.”
“Ah,” said Raj, “it’s still safer than getting the wild virus itself.”
“Tell Tiffany Dover that.”
“Who?”
PS And on the theme of Vaccine Choice Canada Zoom events: If you haven't seen it yet, you can still watch the book launch for Much Ado About Corona (which Vaccine Choice Canada hosted back in March).