Vaxxbots Are a Mind Virus

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In 1986, the molecular engineer Eric Drexler released a mind virus with his book Engines of Creation: The Coming Era of Nanotechnology. He described armies of microscopic robots built on the nanoscale (a nanometer is one billionth of a meter). These lil’ dudes would be smaller than blood cells and able to self-assemble into any imaginable form. Some are dream-like, others nightmarish.

Ray Kurzweil, the village elder of transhumanism, got obsessed with the idea. Tiny robots will swim through your bloodstream, he promised. They will deliver drugs, repair damaged tissues, or gnaw tumors down to nothing.

The nanobots will fill your brain and attach to every neuron. They will connect to the digital cloud, read and write your thoughts, and merge your mind with superhuman artificial intelligence. It’ll be a mini-me Singularity.

On the other hand, Eric Drexler warned that if self-replicating nanobots got out of control, they might convert everything in their path into more and more nanobots—including us—eventually covering the entire planet with a pulsating layer of micromachines.

Then it happened. As the dubious Covid jabs rolled out in 2020, mental images of nanobots started multiplying like viruses, turning millions of brains into gray goo. This undulating swarm has given me headaches ever since.

Today, there’s a thriving subculture of folks convinced that the Covid jabs contain tiny, molecular robots—or “vaxxbots,” as I call them. At this point, they’ve dreamt up every possible scenario. This crowd is super skeptical of official narratives—rightly so—but they’ll believe anything about vaxxbots. They’re the Flat Earthers of microbiology.

Not that I’m getting high and mighty here. You wouldn’t believe some of the dumb things I’ve thought were true. Hell, I wouldn’t believe the ones I still do.

In any case, if our medical establishment hadn’t lied through their teeth for the past three years, these alternate realities would never have mass appeal. But in the absence of official facts about the vaccines’ contents, their long-term effects, their ineffectiveness, and their serious dangers, a yawning void has opened where reliable information should be.

Even though serious analysts are filling that space with valid data, it’s being crowded out by the vaxxbot mind virus.

I caught the early edition in late 2020, when a friend sent an explainer video. A pretty blonde lady clasped a gold cross pendant in her gentle fingers. Knowing how to shine on camera with that sweet smile, she explained that the Covid vaccines contain hydrogel and luciferase, so they must be the work of Satan.

I informed my friend that hydrogel isn’t being used in the Pfizer or Moderna vaccines. Yes, it’s been proposed as a vaccine delivery system, similar to how lipid nanoparticles are used to sneak mRNA into the cell. Its polymer net can function as a matrix for biosensors, and can be manipulated to do all sorts of strange things in controlled environments. But it possesses no malevolent powers of its own.

That said, I wasn’t about to take the experimental shots. Keep me in the control group.

I also assured him that luciferase, creepy as it sounds, is a bioluminescent protein used to track gene expression in drug discovery. It’s been in use for decades. There would be no reason to put luciferase in the actual vaccines—except as a …

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