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Bill Rice, Jr.'s avatar

Four reasons I think at least 10 million Americans had already been infected by, say, mid-February 2020:

1) The results of the CDC’s ONE antibody study of “archived” Red Cross blood revealed that 2.03 percent of blood donors in California, Washington and Oregon already had Covid antibodies by November 2019 (if not earlier for some of these positive donors). 2.03 percent extrapolated to the U.S. population would equal 6.7 million cases … In November. If this virus is indeed contagious, how many Americans would have been infected four months later? Probably more than 10 million.

https://billricejr.substack.com/p/the-dog-that-didnt-bark?utm_source=profile&utm_medium=reader2

2) I’ve identified hundreds of people in at least five countries who had Covid in the latter months of 2019 based on positive antibody results (and this doesn’t include the unknown people who infected these people). In America, I’ve identified citizens from at least 17 states who had antibody-confirmed Covid before January 1, 2020. The fact there are so many antibody-confirmed cases in so many far-flung states strongly suggests this virus was spreading person-to-person across all 50 states. That is, this virus didn’t fall out of the sky and infect these people, none of whom had recently been to China. I also don’t think I’ve come close to identifying every person who later received a positive antibody test. I also think state health agencies are covering up reports of positive antibody cases that could be “early cases.”

https://billricejr.substack.com/p/early-spread-evidence-in-one-document?utm_source=profile&utm_medium=reader2

https://billricejr.substack.com/p/case-zeroes-in-world-did-not-come?utm_source=profile&utm_medium=reader2

3) Per my research, cases of “Influenza Like Illness” were far greater in the “flu season” of 2019-2020 than the previous 10 flu seasons (at least before the CDC revised its ILI estimates).

ILI was “widespread” and “severe” in virtually every state in America with ILI outbreaks being far above baseline in six Southern states in November 2019 (also in Washington). The number of “flu tests given” was significantly higher than previous flu seasons. I believe the reason for this spike in ILI is that some percentage of these ILI cases were probably “early Covid.” I’ve also shown that “school closings due to illness” were far greater than all recent flu seasons (with the possible exception of January 2018).

https://billricejr.substack.com/p/flu-season-of-2019-2020-was-one-of?utm_source=profile&utm_medium=reader2

https://billricejr.substack.com/p/influenza-like-illness-probably-tells?utm_source=profile&utm_medium=reader2

https://billricejr.substack.com/p/school-closings-galore-documented?utm_source=profile&utm_medium=reader2

4) Perhaps the main reason I believe “Early Spread” probably happened is because I’ve noted all the investigations into virus spread public health officials could and should have done … but did NOT perform. This includes more antibody studies of “archived blood,” interviews with people who had tested positive for antibodies and delayed utilization of widespread PCR and antibody tests, among other curiosities that don’t make sense if officials were sincerely interested in dating possible early cases.

I’ve also identified 27 ways I think officials might have intentionally concealed evidence of early spread.

I think officials didn’t perform these common-sense investigations for one reason only - Because they know what they would have found if they did.

https://billricejr.substack.com/p/theory-officials-intentionally-concealed?utm_source=profile&utm_medium=reader2

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Bill Rice, Jr.'s avatar

I made an edit on the caption under the Voltaire Quote. What officials said with their 3.4 percent IFR quote is that 1-in-29 Americans who became infected - or became a Covid "case" - would later die from the disease. My first caption said "1-in-29 Americans" would die - that was wrong. Just those who were infected.

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