I agree with you but need to add a few comments for context.
1) Not a single employee on the Diamond Princess got sick, much less died. This after being locked up for 5+ weeks in a close-quarters environment with zero "prophylactics" such as masking or special air filtration, etc. Furthermore, anyone who's ever been in the crew area of a …
I agree with you but need to add a few comments for context.
1) Not a single employee on the Diamond Princess got sick, much less died. This after being locked up for 5+ weeks in a close-quarters environment with zero "prophylactics" such as masking or special air filtration, etc. Furthermore, anyone who's ever been in the crew area of a ship knows just how little space there is.
2) There actually WAS something special that occurred in the winter of 2019-2020: extremely high levels of air pollution. All of the early "Covid-19" epicenters: Wuhan, Tehran, and northern Italy, were (and still are) places with some of the worst air quality in the world. So it wasn't "just seasonal respiratory illnesses" that occur naturally, but a winter season with a hefty dose of nasty air pollution.
One addendum: if you look at where "Covid-19" struck first and hard in England and France, you'll see it also followed the pattern of places where air pollution is the worst.
For instance, northeastern France (the Benelux area) was so much worse off than Paris that they were shipping patients by rail from the border all the way to Paris. Yet the Paris metropolitan area is both a) the most mixed in terms of # of people coming and going and b) the most densely populated area in the country. Logically, it should've been Paris that was hardest hit, but it wasn't.
Just google "cities with the worst air pollution in country X" and you'll find a perfect correlation to where the worst "Covid-19 outbreaks" occurred in that country in early 2020.
I agree with you but need to add a few comments for context.
1) Not a single employee on the Diamond Princess got sick, much less died. This after being locked up for 5+ weeks in a close-quarters environment with zero "prophylactics" such as masking or special air filtration, etc. Furthermore, anyone who's ever been in the crew area of a ship knows just how little space there is.
2) There actually WAS something special that occurred in the winter of 2019-2020: extremely high levels of air pollution. All of the early "Covid-19" epicenters: Wuhan, Tehran, and northern Italy, were (and still are) places with some of the worst air quality in the world. So it wasn't "just seasonal respiratory illnesses" that occur naturally, but a winter season with a hefty dose of nasty air pollution.
Yeah. Where there's more incidence of respiratory disease due to air bad quality is easier to relabel it as something else.
That's all covid is, a relabelling of other stuff, from bad air quality to outright murder with midazolam and remdesivir and ventilators.
One addendum: if you look at where "Covid-19" struck first and hard in England and France, you'll see it also followed the pattern of places where air pollution is the worst.
For instance, northeastern France (the Benelux area) was so much worse off than Paris that they were shipping patients by rail from the border all the way to Paris. Yet the Paris metropolitan area is both a) the most mixed in terms of # of people coming and going and b) the most densely populated area in the country. Logically, it should've been Paris that was hardest hit, but it wasn't.
Just google "cities with the worst air pollution in country X" and you'll find a perfect correlation to where the worst "Covid-19 outbreaks" occurred in that country in early 2020.