(09-13-2021, 11:24 PM)JoeKW Wrote: there is no mechanism of action that would cause adverse effects to occur years/decades later; These aren't prions. If something is going to happen it will happen in the first few weeks.
This. You need a plausible mechanism of action.
The dose makes the poison, and mRNA vaccines are given in tiny doses that are cleared from the body within 48 hours. All the examples of bad long term effects, like hydrogenated oils, aren't from eating them once, they're from lifetime exposure. Same with drugs that had nasty side effects discovered later, they're drugs that are taken regularly over a period of time.
Life is incredibly resilient and self correcting to small doses of things. To kill someone, or have serious effects, you have to get over some threshold of exposure. Either a high dose with immediate effects, or a low dose for a long period of time. This is the reason there's never been a long term side effect of a vaccine, but they happen occasionally for drugs. The two classes of products are simply not comparable in this area, due to vastly different exposure profiles.
Anyone that suggests a vaccine might have a long term effect simply isn't following the data.