In my case, I’d estimate that I’ve spent around two hundred hours over the last several months coming sufficiently up to speed on the topics that I can reason about them. I started with about your level of biology (or possibly less), but probably a slightly stronger chemistry background.
For the basics, I started with cell biochemistry, DNA/RNA, mRNA and protein construction. From the vaccine side of things, I just started looking up things I found in the whitepaper which I didn’t understand, and once I understood all the terms I started looking for and reading research papers. When I found something I wasn’t sure about, I researched it and learned about it.
As examples, in early January, I spent about ten days reading up on VED (vaccine enhanced disease). Shortly after, I spent a few days digging into chitosan, and trying to understand how sensitive nanoparticle creation is to changes in the mixing process (hint: not very.) Everything I searched for I was able to find, and pretty much everything reinforced the same internally consistent view of the world.
When you find something that doesn’t make sense and you’re stuck, write it down, file it away and come back to it later. Eventually you’ll be able to make sense of it.
When you’re able to read through most or all of the whitepaper and understand both what’s being discussed and why specific things were selected, you’ll be in pretty good shape.
It’s not particularly difficult, it just takes time and effort.
In my case, I’d estimate that I’ve spent around two hundred hours over the last several months coming sufficiently up to speed on the topics that I can reason about them. I started with about your level of biology (or possibly less), but probably a slightly stronger chemistry background.
For the basics, I started with cell biochemistry, DNA/RNA, mRNA and protein construction. From the vaccine side of things, I just started looking up things I found in the whitepaper which I didn’t understand, and once I understood all the terms I started looking for and reading research papers. When I found something I wasn’t sure about, I researched it and learned about it.
As examples, in early January, I spent about ten days reading up on VED (vaccine enhanced disease). Shortly after, I spent a few days digging into chitosan, and trying to understand how sensitive nanoparticle creation is to changes in the mixing process (hint: not very.) Everything I searched for I was able to find, and pretty much everything reinforced the same internally consistent view of the world.
When you find something that doesn’t make sense and you’re stuck, write it down, file it away and come back to it later. Eventually you’ll be able to make sense of it.
When you’re able to read through most or all of the whitepaper and understand both what’s being discussed and why specific things were selected, you’ll be in pretty good shape.
It’s not particularly difficult, it just takes time and effort.