Saturday, 31 May 2025

Mark Playne's New Book AI & I

 



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THE LIPIDS THAT ARE THE SMOKING GUN!

Hello  , writes Mark Playne in an email 


 


Morning all!


Here is some lunchtime reading for you...:)


I have some great news re: dentists to release tomorrow.


I believe, it will be a huge relief to many.


 


Meanwhile, the feedback and reviews have been flooding in for 'AI & I'.


One thing has surprised me. Few have mentioned the revelation that the lipids within the vaccines appear to be unsuitable for delivering mRNA.


 


Pfizer-BioNTech uses a cationic lipid called ALC-0315 and Moderna uses a cationic lipid called SM-102 and neither of which appear suitable for their stated purpose.


If true, is this the smoking gun that leads to revealing the possible real purpose of the C19 mRNA injectable, as discussed in my new book 'AI & I'?


 


I decided to revisit this subject with another series of questions and answers that I hope create a clearer picture of the fundamental question: what are these cationic lipids designed to do?


 


Enjoy the biochemical investigative ride!


 


 


INTRODUCTION:

 


Something has been bothering me. I've made liposomal supplements at home. I dove deep into this when my mother was ill and needed IV Vitamin C (which is a wonderfully powerful anti-cancer agent) and we could not find providers.


 


The equipment needed is basic and affordable, with the ingredients being cheap, safe and effective.


 


The main lipid used is lecithin, which is readily available at local health shops. Encapsulating a compound in such a lipid which is very similar in make-up to our cell walls, meaning the encapsulated particle is welcomed in inside the cell, enabling delivery in a method similar to that of a ‘Trojan horse’.


 


The liposomal delivery system enables the enrichment of our cells with compounds such as Vitamin C, matching the efficiency of IV delivery.


 


Since this works so well and is so simple and cheap to make, I’ve wondered about the seemingly complicated methods used in the C19 mRNA vaccines to basically do the same thing, getting mRNA into our cells.


Why use a lipid like PEG with a poor safety profile?

Why use such complicated lipids that have not even passed safety tests?

Why use cationic (positively charged) lipids that are known to be problematic?

 


Put simply, if these advanced lipids (fat-based compounds) are NOT helping mRNA into the cells, what are they intended to do?


 


But first, let's see if these cationic lipids could work as suggested by the manufacturers...


 


The basic issue is that the cationic lipids are positively charged.


They will attract anything negative, but how would they 'let go'?


Imagine a magnet trying to release a magnet...


 


Again, discussing lipid might seem boring, but if this theory is correct, it brings down the whole COVID-19 vaccine narrative, exposing the real intention .


 


This rips the sheep's camoflage off the wolf...


 


Here we go:


'AI & I' the extended interrogation on the lipids....


 


MP: What electrical charge would a fragment of mRNA hold?


 


AI: An mRNA fragment would carry a negative charge.


 


MP: Could a cationic (positively charged) lipid bind around a negatively charged mRNA particle without affecting it dramatically?


This is Joe Rogan particularly after 44th minute 




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