Coronavirus (CV) is real. It includes things like SARS, MERS, Covid-19, the common cold, and maybe hundreds or thousands of variations of all of these, that don't cause many or any symptoms in people or animals.
People were infected by CV for decades - maybe hundreds of years - before they realized that it was real... in the way they recognize it today. Over all those years, many people died from it, but most didn't, just like today. In addition, people die from all kinds of other diseases, as well. Most of the time nobody can tell for sure which disease is killing a person simply from the symptoms. A detailed test often isn't successful at determining, for sure, which disease is killing a person.
The statistics for deaths are inconclusive that it is CV that is killing many people. This is made worse when medical leaders tell their people to call all kinds of deaths CV deaths, even if they are not connected to CV at all, or even if they could have died from all kinds of things other than CV. The statistics are all mixed up. Even if the reported deaths were accurate, because of the lies about cause of death, and the duplicity about cause of death, there is no way of knowing if we are even close regarding how many CV deaths exist.
If you really are interested in seeing for yourself, many of the lies about CV, watch Del Bigtree at
The Highwire interview dozens of professionals from around the world, who show what is really happening with CV. But, there are hours of videos to watch. So, be ready to spend some time. Del and his people are only one small group interviewing the professionals. Search for others so you can see that there is a coup against
people happening around the world.
Go to
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCq6oOuhSx7ESreh6m9LGy6Q/videos to watch
The Highwire videos. Go and watch now. Youtube is starting to take these videos down, and has censored many other such videos.
What Spike? Hospitalization Data Show No Indication Of A Second WaveThe only way to answer that question is to watch as the data roll in. Arguably the best data to look at to see if a second wave is beginning are the hospitalization numbers. The media frequently reports the biggest and most dramatic numbers, often devoid of context. The number of cases has been reported regularly since the early days of the pandemic, and yet we know that the number of cases
can be misleading.As more people are tested and re-tested for the virus, more results will come back positive, with the current number of confirmed cases exceeding 2 million in the U.S. But if we know anything, it is that increases in the number of confirmed cases do not accurately convey how quickly and widely the virus is spreading.
Antibody tests and even the
examination of sewage in some cities suggest that the number of infections is likely much higher than the number of confirmed cases.
But on the other side, some of the confirmed cases are
double-counted in some states partly because both antibody and active virus tests are being counted separately but then combined in the total number of cases. While the antibody tests have been
criticized for their false positive rate, another criticism has been that the antibody studies can
underreport infection rates because they are not sensitive enough to detect a past mild infection.