Is there really such a thing as a virus with a 50% mortality rate? The assumption here of course is also that it will be a human-to-human transmissible virus. These types of “Breakings” stories are virtual non-starters. Until we can be certain there are invisible pathogens called viruses that spread and cause disease, and until we are equally certain there is such a phenomenon as contagion, we’re in the realms of speculation and pseudo-science. It’s like saying invisible carbon dioxide is responsible for all climate change, and that it is specifically the human-generated carbon dioxide that is worst.
I’ll go up against the “virus” if I get unfettered access to all available, uncensored remedies, mainstream and alternative, without fear or favor, if you take the vaccine. And only the vaccine.
Ironically I had to already take the vaccine for rabies, when I was bitten by a raccoon. So considering I already took the vaccine - when we will get this update to your scientific study with your personal exposure to rabies and the natural remedies you used?
Taking a vaccine after you were bitten by a raccoon - which, even if rabid would be no guarantee of your own exposure to the infectious agent - in a country with next to zero human cases per year makes zero sense but then very little makes objective sense when it comes to vaccines or the people administering them. But as we now know, “imagine how bad it could have been for you without it.” For my original position to be challenged, I would first have to contract the rabies “virus” from human to human transmission, display symptoms and require treatment, but:
“Despite there being tens of thousands of rabies cases each year worldwide, there has never been a laboratory-documented case of human-to-human transmission, other than a very few cases resulting from organ or tissue transplant. Despite the lack of evidence for human-to-human transmission, people who are identified as contacts of a patient with rabies will sometimes be offered immunisation, purely as a precautionary measure. Spread of rabies by kissing or intimate contact remains a theoretical route of transmission that has never been laboratory confirmed. However, rabies virus can be found in saliva and other body fluids after the onset of rabies symptoms and clinical disease, so there is a small theoretical risk of infection at this stage of disease.”
https://www.gov.uk/guidance/rabies-epidemiology-transmission-and-prevention
What if I just contract the condition known as rabies directly from a raccoon bite? Well, that would be rough, of course, and I would have to seek out remedies to which I referred (and definitely avoid any rabies “protocols” if I am in the iatrogenic pharma-controlled West!) Clearly, while species to species transmission of a pathogen and the role of a bite might be assumed, it wouldn’t be proof of a virus. In much the same way if I got sick from eating the faeces of a wild dog, it wouldn’t be proof of a virus.
Is there really such a thing as a virus with a 50% mortality rate? The assumption here of course is also that it will be a human-to-human transmissible virus. These types of “Breakings” stories are virtual non-starters. Until we can be certain there are invisible pathogens called viruses that spread and cause disease, and until we are equally certain there is such a phenomenon as contagion, we’re in the realms of speculation and pseudo-science. It’s like saying invisible carbon dioxide is responsible for all climate change, and that it is specifically the human-generated carbon dioxide that is worst.
Rabies virus has a much higher fatality than 50% but if you want to test the actuality of the virus and it’s contagion, be my guest.
I’ll go up against the “virus” if I get unfettered access to all available, uncensored remedies, mainstream and alternative, without fear or favor, if you take the vaccine. And only the vaccine.
Ironically I had to already take the vaccine for rabies, when I was bitten by a raccoon. So considering I already took the vaccine - when we will get this update to your scientific study with your personal exposure to rabies and the natural remedies you used?
Taking a vaccine after you were bitten by a raccoon - which, even if rabid would be no guarantee of your own exposure to the infectious agent - in a country with next to zero human cases per year makes zero sense but then very little makes objective sense when it comes to vaccines or the people administering them. But as we now know, “imagine how bad it could have been for you without it.” For my original position to be challenged, I would first have to contract the rabies “virus” from human to human transmission, display symptoms and require treatment, but:
“Despite there being tens of thousands of rabies cases each year worldwide, there has never been a laboratory-documented case of human-to-human transmission, other than a very few cases resulting from organ or tissue transplant. Despite the lack of evidence for human-to-human transmission, people who are identified as contacts of a patient with rabies will sometimes be offered immunisation, purely as a precautionary measure. Spread of rabies by kissing or intimate contact remains a theoretical route of transmission that has never been laboratory confirmed. However, rabies virus can be found in saliva and other body fluids after the onset of rabies symptoms and clinical disease, so there is a small theoretical risk of infection at this stage of disease.” https://www.gov.uk/guidance/rabies-epidemiology-transmission-and-prevention
What if I just contract the condition known as rabies directly from a raccoon bite? Well, that would be rough, of course, and I would have to seek out remedies to which I referred (and definitely avoid any rabies “protocols” if I am in the iatrogenic pharma-controlled West!) Clearly, while species to species transmission of a pathogen and the role of a bite might be assumed, it wouldn’t be proof of a virus. In much the same way if I got sick from eating the faeces of a wild dog, it wouldn’t be proof of a virus.
I’ll give Dr Sam Bailey the last word:
https://odysee.com/@drsambailey:c/What-About-Rabies:a?src=embed&t=815.2237693834287