I’ve had same theory. Been going to the beach same week for 20 years. Weirdest weather this year. Had a storm that hit gulf coast of alabama and then went east to Atlantic side of Florida where my friend was. Everyone got sick at the beach (40 of us) except the older people, who never went swimming. My friend got shingles and I got a fever blister a few days after the storm, we’ve both never had. I started paying attention to storms and how they correlated to the rises in cases. When there’s a large storm most older drainage systems (older cities) can’t process and filter the rain runoff from the sewer drains at an acceptable rate which allows more contamination of tap water. I believe it’s how they’ve been spreading this the entire time.
I’ve had same theory. Been going to the beach same week for 20 years. Weirdest weather this year. Had a storm that hit gulf coast of alabama and then went east to Atlantic side of Florida where my friend was. Everyone got sick at the beach (40 of us) except the older people, who never went swimming. My friend got shingles and I got a fever blister a few days after the storm, we’ve both never had. I started paying attention to storms and how they correlated to the rises in cases. When there’s a large storm most older drainage systems (older cities) can’t process and filter the rain runoff from the sewer drains at an acceptable rate which allows more contamination of tap water. I believe it’s how they’ve been spreading this the entire time.