
Unvaccinated “pure bloods” could possibly have messenger RNA transferred to them from vaccinated people, according to renowned cardiologist Dr. Peter McCullough.
Speaking to Action4Canada founder Tanya Gaw, McCullough referenced a study covered on his Substack last month, in which French researcher Helene Banoun concluded it was possible to transfer, or “shed,” mRNA between unvaccinated and vaccinated people.
“Banoun summarizes – this is disturbing – ‘It looks like the messenger RNA is transferring from the vaccinated to the unvaccinated now,” McCullough told Gaw.
McCullough went on to point out a paper by Tudor Emanuel Fertig and other scientists additionally found mRNA can be detected in the blood up to two weeks after vaccination.
“And the curves were not going down. That’s as long as they looked,” the doctor noted, adding that another study found mRNA was also discovered in the blood of vaccinated mothers up to 15 days after vaccination.
The studies suggest the very likely possibility that mRNA can be transferred between people, McCullough says.
“So it’s now clear, I think the mRNA – that’s the greatest concern was could you take a vaccine inadvertently by close contact [i.e.] kissing, sexual contact, breastfeeding – and it looks like the answer is yes.”
The Dallas-based physician went on to say, based on the studies, he’s revised his own advice to patients who ask how long they should abstain from close contact with vaxxed people.
“Now the question on the table is, ‘How long do you wait before contact?’ No one knows,” he said.
“The mRNA vaccines have never been demonstrated to actually leave the body,” Dr. McCullough noted. “They look like they’re permanent, as well as the spike protein that’s produced after them.”
“This is very disturbing. So it’s hard to guide. I was saying 30 days refrain from kissing, sexual contact with a vaccinated person. But I’m now extending that to at least 90 days and conservatively maybe extend it from that point forward.”
“The vaccines because they stay in the body so long, it looks like they do permanently install into the human genome through what’s called ‘reverse transcription.’”
Watch Dr. McCullough’s full interview below:
H/t: LifeSiteNews.com
Dr. Peter McCullough and other medical experts took part in a congressional roundtable discussion hosted by Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wisc.) in Washington DC Wednesday.