We all know there's no such thing as a variant. If there ever was a virus, I suspect it would be long gone by now.
The government wants us to believe that the virus is still alive after three years.
We all know there's no such thing as a variant. If there ever was a virus, I suspect it would be long gone by now.
The government wants us to believe that the virus is still alive after three years.
They keep making it.
Isn't there something like herd immunity? I mean if the people still had their immune system intact.
Yes. Catching covid prevented my brother from getting the booster. I didn't tell him that he probably didn't have immunity.
According to the notes I've taken over the years, virologists assert that viruses will mutate uniquely in EVERY new body they enter to best stay alive in that body and flourish until the body defeats it. The virus's need to multiply and keep itself alive causes it to make itself more contagious as it mutates, but ironically less potent.
After several mutation cycles, it becomes more easily spreadable, but so weakened that it will be easily overcome by a normal natural immunity and it will fade out into nothing more than a cold or light 'flu'.
And, left to its own devices, a new virus will travel throughout a community and be completely faded out and benign within 18 months, maximum.
SHOULD YOU VAX?? The constant cycle of mutation renders ANY vaccine worthless because by the time the vaccine is manufactured, the original virus will have mutated thousands of times and be nothing at all like the strain it started as and will be a whole new and different virus in the end.
Depends on how often they keep seeding it. If they dont, it will last as long as a typical flu.
How long does the typical flu live?
See my other comment on this post.