Is this related to exosome theory? I've been hearing a bit about that and sounds fascinating. One thing I don't understand is if viruses don't cause illness, why are there certain illnesses that people only get once and subsequently have apparent lasting immunity (e.g., chicken pox, measles)? Maybe only a very small number of viruses actually cause illness?
Yes, it's related to exosomes, which are often identified as viruses. Anti-virus theory people think all these illnesses are due to toxins or system shocks that come from the environment. Tracking the history of every virus against its vaccine is convincing evidence that the vaxxes had nothing to do with ending the targeted disease.
Once that step is taken, the obvious next step is to question that the disease was even caused by a virus. The shoddy work that passes as virology is another arrow in the hide of the virus theory, as far as I am concerned. For example, they always use the word "isolate" by which they mean cell culture. Not the same things as all. How can this not be a conscious attempt to obfuscate what goes on in the field?
I recommend Virus Mania, 3rd ed. I managed to find a PDF on-line, but will likely buy a copy. I'm only into the 2nd chapter at the moment.
China is laughing at the rest of the world:
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-china-53816511
The CCP is laughing. The Chinese people are fucked. Between floods and new lockdowns from COVID variants, they are fucked
Variants my ass
If there is no test to prove Covid, how can there be a test for a variant?
Get this through your head, viruses do not cause illness. Check out The Contagion Myth by Dr. Thomas Cowan.
5g causes the symptoms of covid..
vaccines are based on fraud..
Guys im worried, they shilled vaccines for a 100 years (Polio is not cause by a virus by DDT that was sprayed everywhere)
vaccines are entirely useless and actually poison people.
They changed the definition of a vaccine, safety, heard immunity.. iv been in denial of how bad things really are.
Is this related to exosome theory? I've been hearing a bit about that and sounds fascinating. One thing I don't understand is if viruses don't cause illness, why are there certain illnesses that people only get once and subsequently have apparent lasting immunity (e.g., chicken pox, measles)? Maybe only a very small number of viruses actually cause illness?
Chicken pox can reappear later in life as shingles...unless they're lying about that, too.
Yes, it's related to exosomes, which are often identified as viruses. Anti-virus theory people think all these illnesses are due to toxins or system shocks that come from the environment. Tracking the history of every virus against its vaccine is convincing evidence that the vaxxes had nothing to do with ending the targeted disease.
Once that step is taken, the obvious next step is to question that the disease was even caused by a virus. The shoddy work that passes as virology is another arrow in the hide of the virus theory, as far as I am concerned. For example, they always use the word "isolate" by which they mean cell culture. Not the same things as all. How can this not be a conscious attempt to obfuscate what goes on in the field?
I recommend Virus Mania, 3rd ed. I managed to find a PDF on-line, but will likely buy a copy. I'm only into the 2nd chapter at the moment.
weren't the american indians wiped out by smallpox? How did that work?
smallpox is a combination of bed bugs and bad nutrition..
Their Wuhan new year celebration says a lot
Yep, but mostly at resident xiden.