You know how it goes. Medical people see these specks in electron microscopes. The specks are "dead," so anybody can make up all kinds of stories about what they are and how they work without ever seeing them do anything.
This is the last chance the medical has to make some money off viruses. The Microsphere Nanoscopes are watching living viruses in ways EMs never could. Turns out that viruses are really exosomes that have been ejected from the cells with the idea of cells warning other cells about bad nutrition.
A few years down the road, once MN information comes completely out into the open, the medical will call the vaccine companies of today some of the most retarded medical operations of the primitive past.
Of course, by then, the medical will have new lies to disrupt the people with in their attempts to make more money.
firstly. though its true if a bunch of cells has no heart or brain its defined as dead. but that means exosomes are dead too.. as are embyros/zygotes
secondly an exosome and a virus are totally different things. shape/size/function/effect of the body.
the bitcoin client software is not the same as a PS5 spiderman game. yes they both contain code. but that is all that is similar.
an exosome is is different. the mechanisms and function are different.
when a virus infects a cell. the replication effect to make new viruses are separate. yes some viral rna can then be trapped in the exosome path which can lead to those exosomes transporting patches of rna to another cell and make that target cell malfunction and trigger cell death.
but the separetly is replicating viruses
..
here is a nice little picture for you
the left square is the initial cell being infected by a virus
the image shows the virus entering at the top(1&2)
the virus gets stripped/broken up at 3 (it becomes the wiggly line)
the main lengthy wiggle goes down(4.5.6) and becomes another virus
small sections of waste rna(small wiggle) goes to the right and gets locked into exosomes
viruses excrete at the bottom and exosomes excrete on the right.
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a virus if attacking another cell will cause viral replication
an exosome containing waste rna will cause the next cell to malfunction and thus trigger cell death
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the interesting part is. for a virus to survive longer in community and be more spreadable has to be a virus that doesnt have as much of the waste rna exosome path. thus less neighbouring cell death. thus allowing the main virus to infect that neighbouring cell instead ..to multiply more