"We Penetrate the Cabinets"               
The Fourth Industrial Revolution & the Digitization of Humanity 
Media & Medical Professionals Statements & Declarations 
The vaccine has nothing at all to do with modifying your DNA. It is a very commonly asked question. Understandable because they hear the words messenger RNA, but it has nothing at all to do with your own DNA. “I encourage you to sign up to receive the vaccine so you can join us in being proud to be protected from COVID-19”.
There are a lot of myths and claims floating around when it comes to the COVID-19 vaccine. Just so people know that when the messenger RNA in the vaccine is injected into your muscle cell, all it is doing is telling the muscle cell to produce that protein to allow your body to produce an antibody response. The messenger RNA does not enter the nucleus where your DNA is housed, and it is not possible for the messenger RNA to alter your DNA or integrate into your DNA in any way. Now, this has been reiterated by the CBC and scientists across social media that the vaccine does not interfere or interact with a person's DNA.
Many fear that mRNA vaccines can manipulate human DNA. This is not true. Another advantage of mRNA vaccines over traditional ones is that they're more effective and have fewer side effects in clinical trials and the roll out so far. mRNA vaccines will be in preventing COVID-19 infections against various strains of the mutating virus, what we do know is that they do not change our DNA. As for that protein, it does not linger in our body, it's not going to be passed off to your off spring. So when it comes to the claim that the COVID-19 vaccines alter a person's DNA, It's not true. It's important to know that the mRNA from the vaccine never enters the cell's nucleus or changes its DNA in any way.
Verified view Scott said he heard the mRNA in the COVID-19 vaccine can stay in your body a long time after you get the shot. So is that true? Let's verify. Our sources the CDC, the national library of medicine, university of Missouri health care, Nebraska medicine and Stewart Ray, an infectious disease professor at Johns Hopkins University. mRNA acts as a set of instructions telling cells how to make certain proteins. Ribosome's, the protein making machines inside the cells, use those instructions. Once they're done making the protein they discard the instructions which then naturally break down. The ribosomes create a little bit of that protein which by itself is harmless, then the ribosome's discard the instructions. All our sources say once discarded the mRNA breaks down usually with in a few hours.
So mRNA is a recipe for DNA, but it can't be used to change DNA. It's only a recipe to make proteins, similar to the proteins that are in other vaccines. So no mRNA can't change your DNA, and in fact we make millions of copies of it on a daily basis.
Does the COVID-19 vaccine change your DNA? No, the mRNA vaccines or any of the COVID-19 vaccines in development don't have potential to change our DNA. mRNA is only outside the nucleus, so there is no integration with DNA and all the activities of the vaccine and how it creates immunity is done outside our own DNA, so there is no concern that this could change our DNA.
The U.S. C.D.C is busting some myths about the Vaccine. One claim out there is that the vaccine changes your D.N.A. That's false. Let's verify. Let's start with the claim. Will the COVID-19 mRNA vaccine change my DNA? Nearly every state health department is taking to twitter to fight this myth. The material never enters the nucleus of the cell, which is where our DNA is kept. So we can verify this claim is false.