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[–]zyxzevn[S] 2 insightful - 1 fun2 insightful - 0 fun3 insightful - 1 fun -  (0 children)

Additional observations:

1 Clots form lines. - The big clots are filling the arteries or veins, but not blocking them completely. This may give us an insight of what these clots are made of. Probably long chains. Starting like the stacked red bloodcells that we see in the microscope.

2 Inflammation - The immune system ALWAYS attacks the cells producing the spike-proteins. This can cause damage in vital organs, and severe inflammations.

What process can make these clots so big?

A - Repeated mRNA injection? - The mRNA has artificial codes that also disable the immune system to enter the cells. Can they break it apart? What if the mRNA (or DNA) becomes active again in the immune cells that killed the original cell? This could go on again and again. And this might be a process of the long clots.

B - Continuously triggering of platelets? - The spike-protein also has some weird side-effects. The clotting is one of them, probably caused by connecting with the platelets. It also affects certain immune system cells, DNA-repair,etc. A mRNA-infected cell can keep on producing spikes that start more platelets to burst and clot together.

C - Cell merging? - The spike-protein can also merge cells together, like they merge a virus with cells. I just read about this possibility. And this may cause mRNA-infected cells to grow like big clots.

[–]zyxzevn[S] 1 insightful - 1 fun1 insightful - 0 fun2 insightful - 1 fun -  (0 children)

Update:
[Ryan Cole studied the clots and found white blood cells sticking together.
interview

The neutrophils and Eosinophils (white blood cells) are sticking together with Intercellular adhesion molecules. They can all be made visible under the microscope, and are observed in those weird sticky clots and even in small clots.. They also contain Amyloid. They are not visible via D-dimer, nor on most scans.

Dr. Resia Pretorius took plasma that didn't have platelets in it and just putting the spike in clumped all the fibrin... and all the different splits that have to happen and latticed it all together without platelets was causing all that protein to stick together as well.