The personal stories are interesting. Even the interviews from the CDC site. I researched this when we first started hearing pandemic at all. I watched every interview I could find and read quite a few more. The one thing that really struck me was that they for the most part (except in large cities) didn't even know what was going on at all, took care of their own communities, bored through it as well as they could. That was a real and true extra virulent flu, from what I could see, and propaganda and politics only made things worse in close cities where people let themselves be a part of the mass hysteria... so a lot like today, though the hysteria is harder to avoid.
I’ve read an interesting perspective. Aspirin was brand new, and doctors handed it out like candy. Dosages were way too high, so the real cause of death for most people? Liver failure from aspirin poisoning.
That is interesting. I thought it was interesting how many personal accounts of people whose families seemed to weather it well were of very simple things, like everyone ate an orange every night.
The personal stories are interesting. Even the interviews from the CDC site. I researched this when we first started hearing pandemic at all. I watched every interview I could find and read quite a few more. The one thing that really struck me was that they for the most part (except in large cities) didn't even know what was going on at all, took care of their own communities, bored through it as well as they could. That was a real and true extra virulent flu, from what I could see, and propaganda and politics only made things worse in close cities where people let themselves be a part of the mass hysteria... so a lot like today, though the hysteria is harder to avoid.
That's the true meaning of influenza. Influenced by stupidity.
The research you are looking for is called "terrain theory" as opposed to "germ theory."
Yup. This is what I think. It’s a helpful, not harmful, effect.
Alfa Vedic has a podcast that talks about this.
ok, i'm stealing that one!
I’ve read an interesting perspective. Aspirin was brand new, and doctors handed it out like candy. Dosages were way too high, so the real cause of death for most people? Liver failure from aspirin poisoning.
That is interesting. I thought it was interesting how many personal accounts of people whose families seemed to weather it well were of very simple things, like everyone ate an orange every night.
Drank water with 1/2 t baking soda on empty stomach every am
And vaccines killed more people thzn the flu itself.