Show me where "Rabies" or "Ebola" became more deadly. They didn't because they killed those who had them, without time to spread, which is exactly as expected. No pathogen in the history of modern medicine has mutated into a deadlier strain, except some strains of antibiotic resistant bacteria, due to overusage of antibiotics, because it is an organism like all others, which strives to survive. Killing off your host quickly is the route to extinction. A "novel" coronavirus (one of thousands of common colds) can be this, that or other, depending on the day's narrative, a narrative that so many are choking down without using brain or hundreds of years of medical history.
Show me where "Rabies" or "Ebola" became more deadly. They didn't because they killed those who had them, without time to spread, which is exactly as expected. No pathogen in the history of modern medicine has mutated into a deadlier strain, except some strains of antibiotic resistant bacterium, due to overusage, because it is an organism like all others, which strives to survive. Killing off your host quickly is the route to extinction. A "novel" coronavirus (one of thousands of common colds) can be this, that or other, depending on the day's narrative, a narrative that so many are choking down without using brain or hundreds of years of medical history.
Show me where "Ziika" or "Ebola" became more deadly. They didn't because they killed those who had them (supposedly), and then disappeared, which is exactly as expected. No pathogen in the history of modern medicine has mutated into a deadlier strain, except some strsins of antibiotic resistsnt bactetium, fuevto overusage, because it is an organism like all others, which strives to survive. Killing off your host quickly is the route to extinction. A "novel" coronavirus (one of thousands of common colds) can be this, that or other, depending on the day's narrative, because it is a novel cold, a narrative that so many are choking down without using brain or hundreds of years of medical history.