It takes a long time for a chronic disease to do you in, but an overreactive immune system can kill you within a few minutes. The authors admit that using adjuvants is a way to get a more robust adaptive immune response. In other words, they are injecting you with extra stuff to force the immune system to look at the thing that is in the shot, or the protein antigen that will be made from the mRNA in the shot. The goal is to get as many antibodies as they can, thinking that this will protect you from disease symptoms when you get infected. Admittedly, these serum antibodies do not protect a person from getting infected, they ADAPT or REACT to the infection. Unfortunately, as the authors point out, these antibodies can cause autoimmune reactions or activation of the complement system through various mechanisms, both of which are deadly.
The authors also point out that adjuvants can also be used to cause a better dendritic cell to T-cell response, hoping that these trained T-cells will get deployed to the epithelial barrier and be able to protect a person against infection. They admit the protection against infection is cellular, not involving serum antibodies. What the authors fail to mention is the fact that by doing this, the T-cells will be focused on looking for what was injected, not what is coming through the epithelial barrier. Therefore, infections will continue to occur as natural mutations occur, and viruses associated with other communicable diseases will get through as well.
Science has got to stop playing God by tricking the immune system. Let’s refocus on building up the protective mechanisms in natural ways, and treat infections when they happen.