Please clarify what it means when you say all these various people "got Covid." I hear this bizarre expression (i.e., using very loose language) from people everywhere now, even from those who are supposedly enlightened about the scam (including the fact that the so-called "virus" has never been actually isolated and thus identified, i.e…
Please clarify what it means when you say all these various people "got Covid." I hear this bizarre expression (i.e., using very loose language) from people everywhere now, even from those who are supposedly enlightened about the scam (including the fact that the so-called "virus" has never been actually isolated and thus identified, i.e., via scanning electron microscopy). Accordingly, there cannot be any “new” disease derived from said non-existent virus. Remember that something can only be unique and thus given a new name as a new disease (e.g., Covid) if it derives from a new type of pathogen proven to cause disease and in turn produce unique symptoms. So what were the symptoms of these people who you say "got Covid"? And was the so-called "virus" actually identified in these people? Thanks for your reply in advance.
Hi Michigan Rob, yes, the person I am talking about is a teen that tested positive in the spring and tested positive this weekend. The test for positivity this weekend was an at home test. His test in the spring came at a healthcare facility. Before it became mainstream, I had trouble with the amplification of the PCR test, so it really becomes hard to know who had it and who hasn't.
Please clarify what it means when you say all these various people "got Covid." I hear this bizarre expression (i.e., using very loose language) from people everywhere now, even from those who are supposedly enlightened about the scam (including the fact that the so-called "virus" has never been actually isolated and thus identified, i.e., via scanning electron microscopy). Accordingly, there cannot be any “new” disease derived from said non-existent virus. Remember that something can only be unique and thus given a new name as a new disease (e.g., Covid) if it derives from a new type of pathogen proven to cause disease and in turn produce unique symptoms. So what were the symptoms of these people who you say "got Covid"? And was the so-called "virus" actually identified in these people? Thanks for your reply in advance.
Hi Michigan Rob, yes, the person I am talking about is a teen that tested positive in the spring and tested positive this weekend. The test for positivity this weekend was an at home test. His test in the spring came at a healthcare facility. Before it became mainstream, I had trouble with the amplification of the PCR test, so it really becomes hard to know who had it and who hasn't.