I don't understand how I thought I was surrounded by more based friends, now all of a sudden they're getting colds and jumping to go get tested. Or the other situation is when I share info proving it's a scam, the tests dont work, etc, and they say "no we all got covid a few months ago, it wasnt that bad but i lost my taste and smell" or "my dads in the hospital with covid and he isnt doing good so it's real". I really just dont get how my conservative, gun loving, anti mask/vax, pro trump/america friends can be so naive i guess is the right word for it, or just half awake? I'm learning to just stop myself after asking a few questions like how the tests dont work and such. I see the gears going in their head where I think they get it and then they resort to "nope covid is real..." Just frustrating that the people that have stood on the sidelines demanding no masks, no mandates, are now jumping to test. My brain cant process it.
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They clearly waited too long. That said, their situation was avoidable. That's why I wrote this post using a cheap over-the-counter proven remedy: "when vitamins and ivermectin don't work, try this before going to the hospital." https://greatawakening.win/p/140cbVkN65/when-vitamins-and-ivm-dont-seem-/ Also O2 and equipment can be bought without a prescription in most places.
All that said, obviously many people have survived the hospital. But the hospital is a chancy proposition, especially without an advocate on the inside. (In my mom's area, one hospital was essentially a death sentence for anyone over 70, immediate strong painkillers and debilitating therapy for minor falls, sometimes followed by a short stay in a nursing home, while another one further away had a much better record.) Even with all that, if I walked in and found a couple completely unconscious, the hospital offers better chances than walking out and leaving them alone.