(This is Part-2 in a series; for Part-1, click here.)
A nanostructure is a very small THING.
How small?
If you took the smallest manmade nanostructure, you could…
I want you to try to visualize this…
You could place 76,000 of these structures side by side…
Across the WIDTH of a single human hair.
76,000.
You might want to snip a few of your hairs at this point, separate them, look at one, and reacquaint yourself with its thinness.
That’s right. Look at it. Now imagine laying 76,000 THINGS side by side across its width.
Add to this stunning situation…the notion that many of these nanostructures are manmade molecules which are imbued with the command to…
…Self-assemble. Meaning they interact and construct a made-to-order “machine.” Which will perform assigned functions.
And everyone in the nano community swears they have means to check their own work and confirm that the characteristics of these nanostructures and nanomachines are turning out in exactly the way intended.
There’s more. These experts will also say that, when huge, huge numbers of these nanostructures have to come off an assembly line, to serve a public use, the manufacturing process is spot-on, consistently, from nano to nano. With never a misstep.
What this means, in a practical sense, is…
…When you have a vaccine, which consists of nanos, which is all nanos…
…You can be sure the jab recipients are getting the exact thing…
…Every time, all the time.
As in: the RNA COVID shot.
Given to the whole world. Which is the first time this nanotech has ever been deployed for public use.