DI Wiki Epstein Archive ATS Archive PDF Archive North Korean TV
 

Sickness rates rising
#41
(08-29-2025, 03:36 PM)DontTreadOnMe Wrote: The thing is.....SARS 2 was a novel virus, right?
And it was a virus that was played around with by mad "scientists"
So, the human kind was attacked with something humans never had before.

Then to make it worse, those same mad folks made a "vaccine" for this "virus".


And we are paying the price now.

well speculatively i agree with you about the gain of function and such
but sarscov2 was coronavirus? which archeobiology claims is 10k years in humans
tbh i was never clear on what they meant by 'novel'
the effects? the propagation? the response? that certainly was
or perhaps like a fiction-novel book with a narrative

ha ha

mad scientists indeed!
#42
In a paranoid world where the people do not trust the government. The one thing as far as a conspiracy theory which has not gained following which should have considering the proof. Is the fact that people with the shot are putting out MAC addresses, if you look at the tests done which are never in the English language the evidence seems pretty indisputable, unless its a hoax with no financial reward. The Addresses do not show the devise which is illegal and are emitted from a human body  with no other devises on it.
 If you consider the amount of data which this would generate then it is reasonable to ask where are the data center's ? well they are going up all over the world in Russia and China and the West. In fact they use massive amounts of electricity for cooling.I read one article where Irelands electrical production was using seventy five percent on these centers. If a mass casualty event is in the pipeline this would be a main contender. If You only want to get the target and not the perpetrator's this if the tech is available would be the most efficient way, if John Smith is being too troublesome just activate a delete code on his Bluetooth signal.
#43
mac addresses have a vendor code and a sequence id. i wonder what the vendor code they're detecting is?

also, haha

everyone knows bluetooth gets installed when you go to the dentist

it's right there in the name

duh
#44
(08-29-2025, 03:43 PM)UltraBudgie Wrote: well speculatively i agree with you about the gain of function and such
but sarscov2 was coronavirus? which archeobiology claims is 10k years in humans
tbh i was never clear on what they meant by 'novel'
the effects? the propagation? the response? that certainly was
or perhaps like a fiction-novel book with a narrative

ha ha

mad scientists indeed!


Novel would mean to me that they made a new virus with all the gain-of-function changes.  So not a natural change to the virus.

We know they did it so how is it speculative?

And don't forget when we were told there could be NO vaccine for the "common cold" which is a corona virus.....am I right?
#45
(08-29-2025, 03:43 PM)UltraBudgie Wrote: well speculatively i agree with you about the gain of function and such
but sarscov2 was coronavirus? which archeobiology claims is 10k years in humans
tbh i was never clear on what they meant by 'novel'
the effects? the propagation? the response? that certainly was
or perhaps like a fiction-novel book with a narrative

ha ha

mad scientists indeed!

In epidemiology, the term "novel" refers to a virus that has not appeared in humans before.  That means that essentially 0% of the population has any pre-existing acquired immunity to it.  The opposite of "novel" is "endemic".  An endemic virus is one that has been around in the human population for a long time.  Like seasonal influenza, or the rhinovirus that causes the common cold.  There's probably almost nobody (maybe with the exception of newborns) who hasn't already been exposed to rhinovirus or influenza virus.

The difference is in how fast your immune system responds. If you get infected with an endemic virus that your immune system has encountered before, it takes about 4 to 7 days for your immune system to remember how to produce antibodies to that virus and start churning them out in large numbers. For a novel virus, it takes more like 12 to 14 days.  And virus populations in your body grow at an exponential rate.  So the number of viruses in your body from a novel viral infection is going to end up being much more than just twice as many as for an endemic viral infection.  And that means that your risk of dying or having a severe reaction from a viral infection is maximum the first time your body experiences that particular virus. If you survive the first infection, and your immune system is in reasonable shape, you will probably have a less threatening reaction the second and third times, and so on. 

This is why public health experts all over the world went on red alert over Covid.  They knew that everyone who was going to get infected with Covid was going to be doing so for the first time, and that the virus was spreading very fast, so the entire population was going to be facing maximum risk of mortality and/or serious illness (however large or small that risk might be for any individual) all within a very short period of time.