I don't think it would have mattered. The first case was in Washington state in December of 2019. I was getting fucking nervous in February, and it felt like everyone was ignoring a major crisis. The media only seemed to pick up that there would be problems by April/May. After that first 14 day period of lockdown, they would have seen new cases in every county in the US, and that would have meant the disease was endemic by the time they reacted at all. There was no chance.
The ventilators probably killed even more people than the vaccines TBH. Then the lockdowns, then the vaccines. The masks didn't kill people, but it did make them retarded.
I don't think it would have mattered. The first case was in Washington state in December of 2019. I was getting fucking nervous in February, and it felt like everyone was ignoring a major crisis. The media only seemed to pick up that there would be problems by April/May. After that first 14 day period of lockdown, they would have seen new cases in every county in the US, and that would have meant the disease was endemic by the time they reacted at all. There was no chance.
The ventilators probably killed even more people than the vaccines TBH. Then the lockdowns, then the vaccines. The masks didn't kill people, but it did make them retarded.