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Bill Rice, Jr.'s avatar

I cut this section for space reasons - this also develops reasons why I think the virus was, in fact, "contagious."

If one believes (like I do) that many people who were sick with Covid symptoms actually had Covid, one must believe this virus has always been very contagious.

I reached this conclusion because I’ve read probably thousands of anecdotes from readers who came to believe they had “early” Covid. (I’ve saved probably 500 such anecdotes). Several common features emerge from reading or saving so many of these testimonials:

* This illness was different in key respects from other flu-type illnesses or “bugs.”

* The symptoms were often quite serious and lasted several days to several weeks (or months). While many people with Covid have mild or even asymptomatic symptoms, many report that this was one of the harshest illnesses they’d ever endured.

* The person reporting his or her symptoms reports that others in his or her family (or workplace or school) also became sick at the same time.

* Many people report they tested negative for influenza (or never went to a doctor to get a flu test).

* Many people report they never got a PCR-confirmed case of Covid in the ensuing year or years after the were sick, which suggests they may have acquired natural immunity (at least to the original strain of the virus … if this was the “original” strain).

Per my research, the original strains of any virus are typically the most virulent and subsequent mutations are less lethal or cause milder symptoms. Under this theory, it would seem that the novel coronavirus mutated to a more deadly or serious form many months after it had begun to circulate, which would be atypical for viruses.

Tens of millions of Americans were “sick” with some virus in this flu season, more people than had been sick in perhaps any flu season of the past 10 or 20 years. (It should be noted that the revised CDC ILI estimates dispute this conclusion, but numerous contemporary reports - including from ILI data compiled by state and national health agencies - support this conclusion).

For these reasons and from details culled from a library of anecdotes, I believe millions of people had symptomatic cases of Covid before the WHO declared a global pandemic. Many of these cases were NOT “mild” and the r-naught number was not below 1.5.

It seems to me that for one to believe the theory that the virus suddenly mutated into a more virulent form, one would have to dismiss all the claims of the millions of people who believe they had this virus months earlier.

If one does believe at least some percentage of these correspondents had Covid and their own conclusions are correct, then the virus was contagious and wasn’t mild or less virulent.

Since these possible cases were reported across the USA (and many other countries), logic says the virus would have been spreading in thousands of communities.

I’ll conclude with this contrarian observation: The virus was noted. Scores of schools in dozens of states across the country were closed. Hospitals and doctors’ offices were seeing more ILI patients and administering more flu tests. ILI reports from 45 states were showing that ILI was “widespread” and “severe.” Journalists were writing articles on this early and bad “flu season.”

However, no expert knew or confirmed that some of this increase in “sick” people might be caused by a novel coronavirus.

My belief is that at least a few key officials must have known this, and among the army of public health experts in our country, more should have suspected this possibility.

I’d also add that the same experts tell us we should ignore ALL of the millions of people who think they have been harmed by the Covid vaccine. Every person reporting “anecdotes” to this effect are wrong as well.

We have all been conditioned to trust the experts. My research and journalism tells me we should do the opposite.

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Joe Skwara's avatar

I say it was released in the Ukraine in a US funded biolab in summer 2019. It was adapted to be rereleased in China in winter when it didn’t have the desired impact.

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