It's a normal response to a perceived error/overreaction.
It is/was also reasonable to expect that the shots would induce autoimmunity, by virtue of causing a self-attack. In the purest sense, they *do* induce some level of acute autoimmunity in *everyone* who takes them, because the otherwise-healthy cells that produce spike are attacked and often killed by the immune system. This is quite likely the cause of the myocarditis and other acute inflammation.
I suspect that they do induce chronic autoimmunity in a subset of people, and that the ongoing multi-system debilitating hell that is described by many of the Real Not Rare sufferers is primarily autoimmune in origin.
The key point though is that repeated genetic vaccination creates an *unstable equilibrium* situation. The periodic self-attack on spike-producing cells - which is perceived as an error - will need to be resolved. The most satisfactory way to resolve it - to stop the attack while avoiding general autoimmunity or general immune suppression - is to learn to tolerate the spike protein when it appears. So I am not surprised to see tolerance as the most common response to repeated injection, while autoimmunity is a less common response that usually occurs after the first or second injection.
Re: Some thoughts on IgG4 tolerance
It's a normal response to a perceived error/overreaction.
It is/was also reasonable to expect that the shots would induce autoimmunity, by virtue of causing a self-attack. In the purest sense, they *do* induce some level of acute autoimmunity in *everyone* who takes them, because the otherwise-healthy cells that produce spike are attacked and often killed by the immune system. This is quite likely the cause of the myocarditis and other acute inflammation.
I suspect that they do induce chronic autoimmunity in a subset of people, and that the ongoing multi-system debilitating hell that is described by many of the Real Not Rare sufferers is primarily autoimmune in origin.
The key point though is that repeated genetic vaccination creates an *unstable equilibrium* situation. The periodic self-attack on spike-producing cells - which is perceived as an error - will need to be resolved. The most satisfactory way to resolve it - to stop the attack while avoiding general autoimmunity or general immune suppression - is to learn to tolerate the spike protein when it appears. So I am not surprised to see tolerance as the most common response to repeated injection, while autoimmunity is a less common response that usually occurs after the first or second injection.