In about 30 minutes, Dr. Tom Cowan explains how virology lies about viruses.
Viruses do not exist. They do not make people sick. They are just fragments of material that is created in a laboratory. They do not exist in the human body, or any other animal.
Watch this, and the whole thing makes sense.
SARS-CoV-2 does not exist. Whatever has been making people sick, it is not a virus.
No more vaccines. No more face masks. No more lies. No more funding these criminals.
Good point. And I’m genuinely curious but how come the Europeans weren’t wiped out as well? The isolation would work both ways - we also know there was previous interactions with trade then reported. How accurate are the numbers? So much is theory, so much is unknown. People do get sickS Bacteria infections exist. Siphilis is a bacteria infection, so are most std’s.
There are microscopic things that make people sick - germs, and all of these things are parasites because they require a host. Penicillin is a cure and it is made from mold. The argument is that the virus as it has been described doesn’t exist - and it may be mostly a linguistic argument for the laymen or not medically educated - landscape theory argues instead the ‘virus’ is a byproduct of a reaction, and illness is caused from other issues mostly. So the argument is that the virus is a symptom rather then the cause, and any treatment to the symptom is not curing the cause. The test for viruses and original studies themselves are a fallacy - and it’s recognized as a theory. This is okay, and still useful and amazing. See the studies on the tobacco plant epidemic and the system they used to test for viruses and see if you can spot the ‘problem’. Ask if you have more questions and I’ll try to explain more if I can. Additionally, I won’t rule out either I am still researching but the very idea that something is incurable is strange. HIV especially is strange if you research it.
Good points.
Better sanitation?
Possibly, but natives didn’t have the same overpopulation issues Europeans did and practiced personal hygiene close to the earlier Arabs. And sanitation issues we’d expect to be related more to bacterial infections again - much larger problem then for viruses - few viruses live outside the body long.
Again my medical knowledge is limited this could very well be exactly the reason - but again I am skeptical and instead argue that if a layman is able to cast doubt then certainly some more studies are worth investigating and investing in.