I'd bet most of Steve's readers aren't familiar with the key findings of the USS Teddy Roosevelt antibody study. Here they are:
1) At least sixty (60) percent of the crew had been infected by this virus by early April (based on positive antibody results). Previously, PCR results had suggested maybe 20 percent had been infected. Sixty perc…
I'd bet most of Steve's readers aren't familiar with the key findings of the USS Teddy Roosevelt antibody study. Here they are:
1) At least sixty (60) percent of the crew had been infected by this virus by early April (based on positive antibody results). Previously, PCR results had suggested maybe 20 percent had been infected. Sixty percent is about 3,000 crew members. Only one crew member died (and he was 44). This means the infection fatality rate among crew members under the age of 44 was ... 0.0000 percent. The virus posed zero mortality risk to healthy younger people.
2) Also, from info in the report, I'm able to state with high confidence that at least two crew members almost certainly came on board the ship with the virus. Significantly, the ship didn't leave San Diego until January 17, 2020. That means the virus was already spreading in San Diego before January 17th. In another CDC "paper," the CDC said they'd found "no indications" of any American who'd contracted the virus before ... January 19. From their own damn study, they have strong evidence this was wrong (a lie).
If they'd tested more sailors (not just 382 crew members) for antibodies, they would have had even more possible "early spread" candidates .... so they intentionally limited the number of sailors they tested for antibodies ... IMO to conceal evidence of early spread.
I'd bet most of Steve's readers aren't familiar with the key findings of the USS Teddy Roosevelt antibody study. Here they are:
1) At least sixty (60) percent of the crew had been infected by this virus by early April (based on positive antibody results). Previously, PCR results had suggested maybe 20 percent had been infected. Sixty percent is about 3,000 crew members. Only one crew member died (and he was 44). This means the infection fatality rate among crew members under the age of 44 was ... 0.0000 percent. The virus posed zero mortality risk to healthy younger people.
2) Also, from info in the report, I'm able to state with high confidence that at least two crew members almost certainly came on board the ship with the virus. Significantly, the ship didn't leave San Diego until January 17, 2020. That means the virus was already spreading in San Diego before January 17th. In another CDC "paper," the CDC said they'd found "no indications" of any American who'd contracted the virus before ... January 19. From their own damn study, they have strong evidence this was wrong (a lie).
If they'd tested more sailors (not just 382 crew members) for antibodies, they would have had even more possible "early spread" candidates .... so they intentionally limited the number of sailors they tested for antibodies ... IMO to conceal evidence of early spread.