Page 123 - The Microworld Miracle
P. 123
How Does a Virus Install Itself in Human
Beings?
A living virus can enter a cell and turn its inner workings to its
own purposes. Before entering a cell, the virus determines whether
the cell is suitable for it. If it is, the virus empties out itself into that
cell. The cell generally detects nothing odd about this new DNA en-
tering in and therefore does not recognize it as foreign and is there-
fore unable to declare war on this substance that it has failed to
identify. The cell transports the virus's DNA to where the DNA
should be in the cell, in other words directly toward the nucleus,
where the virus combines with the cell's own DNA.
Following this, the cell begins to produce new viruses, believ-
ing itself to be manufacturing new proteins.
It is exceedingly difficult to distinguish this "new" DNA mole-
cule concealed inside the cell, akin to looking for half a line piece of
text in a 20-volume set of encyclopedias. For that reason, the cell
keeps producing the virus without stopping.
The cell is an organism that performs delicate processes with-
in a delicate balance. A different DNA included within that delicate
structure would impair that entire order. It will continue to dis-
charge its responsibilities to the letter, but the result will have a dev-
astating impact on the entire body. If the importance of the impair-
ments is only minor then the cells with the virus inside them add HARUN YAHYA
the virus's nucleus element to their own chromosomes and begin
dividing in a different manner. This is uncontrolled cell multiplica-
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tion, and the cells in question soon turn into cancer cells. This ir-
regularity may sometimes lead to a person's death. Herpes viruses (ADNAN OKTAR)
may settle in a human nerve cell and wait there quietly, giving no
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