Yesterday I went to the local urgent care because I was experiencing flulike symptoms. Of course they tested for COVID, as well as strep and something else. While the doctor was in the room with me, I asked if they'd been seeing a lot of COVID cases recently. She said yes. I said, really? More? She said yes, we're seeing more now. I asked her "how is that possible with all these vaccines going out?" And she said:
"The COVID vaccine isn't keeping people from getting COVID, it's just making it less likely that they die. We'll see what your results say, but I've just been telling people to take Zinc, Vitamin C and Calcium, and maybe take an antibiotic or something if this doesn't clear up in a day or two."
By the way, my results were strep and covid negative.
how can an antibiotic take care of covid? Is Covid a bacteria now? I wouldn't be surprised if it's mutated from a virus to a bacteria, since it's causing everything from "leg pain" to fatigue to foot pain to rashes to cough to gunshot to influenza to pneumonia to absolutely nothing.
^ Post of the day.
It is now bacterial because we have to wear the masks all the time. The masks are causing an increase in bacterial infections. Including bacterial pneumonia and bacterial sinus infections. That is all.
Great point! However, the white coats are not smart or honest enough to realize this or care.