The Mithridates Conundrum
Poison comes from dose. Most vaccines are cytotoxic but well-dosed. If poisonous, the dose dynamics are necessarily broken...
For three years, friends and foes, genuine skeptics or biased detractors, have challenged the Bolus Theory without any argument other than “It can’t be the only explanation!”.
Most scientists and doctors paid lip service to the Bolus Theory’s seriousness to immediately sideline it without evidence of its marginality. This has been the best way to ignore the Bolus Theory for three years and to continue harming people, notably children, who are getting their vaccine schedule.
Everybody is focused on “a bigger fish to fry,” a fantasy hypothesis that allows some to contribute more to scaremongering or unsubstantiated science fiction. For those who can still have an honest perspective on all this, it's time to acknowledge the scientific reality that poison is a combination of toxicity and dose.
I have repeatedly demonstrated that most vaccines are (cyto)TOXIC. So, there’s no need to find any other mechanism of harm. Vaccines can indeed be harmful, but they are dosed so as not to harm. Therefore, only a change in the dose dynamics can drive harm.
Without a sufficient dose, there can be no vaccine harm…
Mithridates VI of Pontus (135-63 BC), known historically for his remarkable resistance to poisons, famously inoculated himself against potential assassination attempts through controlled exposure to various toxins. This ancient ruler took minute amounts of poisons, a method which has since been dubbed "Mithridatism."