Also false positives- a 1 dollar nose swab would have tested positive for many reasons. Kids discovered that adding orange juice to it was a great way to get off school.
Not to mention all the stories they ran about perfectly healthy high schoolers who died from it where they would reveal the high schooler was 350 pounds after the seventh or eighth paragraph.
As far as I can tell, this was a lie too. Hardly any cases were symptomatic. The entire "two weeks of asymptomatic spread" was fictional. They thought that was the case, but the virus actually just doesn't tend to spread asymptomatically.
Considering it manufactures a spike proteins that can knock you flat on your ass, it makes you how it could possibly be asymptomatic at all. Those spike proteins sure as shit aren't asymptomatic. The injections literally manufacture them, and it can cause you to pass out within 15 minutes, and disable the use of your arm.
My understanding is that most cases were indeed asymptomatic, its just that it didn't spread asymptomatically. I distinctly remember a meta analysis of people who lived under the same roof. The conclusion was if the person didn't have symptoms they wouldn't spread it to the person living with them.
How would you even have an asymptomatic case, though? The virus does tons of crazy things, and makes a poisonous protein. Why would it do nothing? Unless you just have it in such low concentrations in your body that it doesn't effect you.
Just like any virus. You got exposed to it but the initial exposure was small enough, or your body developed an effective response quickly enough, that the spread within your body was quelled before symptoms developed. One of the fundamental pillars of the scamdemic was the notion that you could be in this state and still be contagious, but all the data I saw suggested otherwise. (I stopped paying attention though so idk about any more recent strains)
Also the media would gleefully report covid cases skyrocketing but never mentioned that the vast majority were mild or asymptomatic
Also false positives- a 1 dollar nose swab would have tested positive for many reasons. Kids discovered that adding orange juice to it was a great way to get off school.
tests so scientific and foolproof you can rub fanta on them and test positive.
Not to mention all the stories they ran about perfectly healthy high schoolers who died from it where they would reveal the high schooler was 350 pounds after the seventh or eighth paragraph.
Oh yea. I remember that one. No surprise
In at least one case local newspapers in different parts of the world used the same kid's picture and claimed he was a COVID death in their town.
As far as I can tell, this was a lie too. Hardly any cases were symptomatic. The entire "two weeks of asymptomatic spread" was fictional. They thought that was the case, but the virus actually just doesn't tend to spread asymptomatically.
Considering it manufactures a spike proteins that can knock you flat on your ass, it makes you how it could possibly be asymptomatic at all. Those spike proteins sure as shit aren't asymptomatic. The injections literally manufacture them, and it can cause you to pass out within 15 minutes, and disable the use of your arm.
My understanding is that most cases were indeed asymptomatic, its just that it didn't spread asymptomatically. I distinctly remember a meta analysis of people who lived under the same roof. The conclusion was if the person didn't have symptoms they wouldn't spread it to the person living with them.
How would you even have an asymptomatic case, though? The virus does tons of crazy things, and makes a poisonous protein. Why would it do nothing? Unless you just have it in such low concentrations in your body that it doesn't effect you.
Just like any virus. You got exposed to it but the initial exposure was small enough, or your body developed an effective response quickly enough, that the spread within your body was quelled before symptoms developed. One of the fundamental pillars of the scamdemic was the notion that you could be in this state and still be contagious, but all the data I saw suggested otherwise. (I stopped paying attention though so idk about any more recent strains)