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Old December 18, 2020, 06:35 AM
Dien Rice Dien Rice is online now
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Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 3,381
Default Re: Covid pandemic could be over (in the USA) by mid-2021

Hi Millard,

I'll just mention something first...

I used to sometimes read articles at www.LewRockwell.com (though I find it hard to read now)...

A few months ago, I was reading an article there about how Covid was all fake.

I went to the end of the article, to see what the credentials of the writer was...

The author (who had written a lot about this at LewRockwell.com)... was a tax accountant!

I usually don't get my medical advice from tax accountants... just like I usually don't get my taxes done by a brain surgeon...

This is not a dig at anyone. It's just an illustration of how many people writing articles nowadays think they are infectious disease experts - including accountants, some marketers, and probably even the occasional lion tamer...

Quote:
Originally Posted by Millard Grubb View Post
It seems to me that a lot more is going on here.

After all the years dealing with the common cold, they haven't found a vaccine.

What about the flu?

And in less than a year they have a vaccine for Covid?
I don't think there's money in vaccines for the common cold, as to my knowledge, it's rarely deadly.

Pharmaceutical companies - like most businesses - are in it for the money.

Flu vaccines have been around for many decades now. The first flu vaccine was developed in 1938 (I just looked it up), and was used to inoculate the US forces in World War 2.

While I don't get it every year, I've sometimes gotten the flu vaccine myself. (Because of changing flu strains and mutations, you have to renew your flu vaccination every year...)

Another anti-virus vaccine is the polio vaccine, which was developed by Joseph Salk in 1954. It is a vaccine against the poliovirus.

Polio is now almost completely eliminated from the world population, thanks to the vaccine...

Different diseases are different. They infect you using different mechanisms. It can be harder to develop a vaccine for some diseases compared to others because of these differences...

(An old female friend who I've known for about 25 years became a medical doctor... And one of her friends, who is an expert in the field of developing vaccines, explained it to me a few months ago...)

Quote:
Additionally, the AMA has released stats that in households with asymptomatic carriers of Covid that is only a .7% chance of someone getting it. Moreover, those without other conditions have over a 99% chance of recovering.
Yet... it turns out over 3,500 people are dying a day from Covid in the USA right now.

That's more than one 9/11 every day.

I would look at who is interpreting the statistics. Statistics is not necessarily an easy field. (I took a course in it at university, as my undergraduate degree was in both mathematics and physics...) Yet it seems as well as infectious disease experts, we have a lot of commentators who are now suddenly statistics experts too...

(This is not directed at you, but at various commentators...)

Quote:
One more thing, just this morning a news report came out about a nurse who passed out shortly after receiving the vaccine.
I saw an article about that...

The nurse apparently said, "I have a history of having an over-reactive vagal response, and so with that if I have pain from anything, hangnail or if I stub my toe, I can just pass out."

(The vagal response is related to the vagus nerve... probably not what you dirty minded people out there were thinking!)

Quote:
Medical researchers like Mike Adams of www.naturalnews.com indicate that zinc and vitamin D go a long way in fighting off Covid.

Just a few things to think about.
I agree!

I take vitamin D and zinc myself!

Best wishes,

Dien
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