Will vaxed with mRNA people die within 5 years? Immunologist Dolores Cahill and geneticist Alexandra Henrion-Caude state in several European media outlets that people vaccinated with mRNA COVID-19 vaccines will die within five years due to cytokine storms. This opinion is based on data from previous studies. Cahill references a 2012 article in PLoS ONE titled "Immunization with SARS coronavirus vaccines leads to pulmonary immunopathology on challenge with the SARS virus" (https://shorten.ly/EKlSDz). The study demonstrates that introducing RNA encoding the SARS-CoV spike protein induces a cytokine storm - a hyperactive immune response - that results in the death of animals. Similarly, the RSV (respiratory syncytial virus) vaccine in the 1960s led to severe illness in most vaccinated children (out of 35), with two fatalities, and the disease was worsened by vaccination. Cahill explains the mechanism: mRNA penetrates cells, prompting them to produce viral proteins (such as the spike protein). The immune system perceives this as a threat and attacks the body's own cells, leading to organ failure, septic shock, and death. In natural infection with coronavirus (or RSV), antibodies attack all cells expressing the viral protein, causing severe pneumonia and organ failure. Autopsies can distinguish this from typical COVID-19: cytokine storms cause uniform inflammation throughout the lungs, with organ failure. Alexandra Henrion-Caude warns about the risk of antibody dependent enhancement (ADE), especially in the elderly, due to TH2 lymphocytes. The risks of ADE should be disclosed in informed consent to adhere to ethical standards (https://shorten.ly/NiCpM). Without this disclosure, vaccination violates the right to physical integrity. In fact, this is a mass murder, saying scientists. For prove this theory: (https://shorten.ly/YTLI) Moderna has released a television advertisement for its new mRNA vaccine, mNEXSPIKE (https://shorten.ly/5NGVV). And while the smiling actors play upbeat scenes in the ADS, the fine print scrolls through a grim list of possible side effects: headache, fatigue, muscle pain, chills, swollen lymph nodes, nausea, vomiting, and even heart inflammation. This marketing blurs the line between science and satire, but the point is clear. Nex is Latin for "death" or "end." In May 2025, a similar story happened with AstraZeneca, as Google translated the set of words "A stra ze neca" from Latin as "the road to death." So, as you can see, no one is hiding anything.