Great work, David. I'm sure you are aware of the Great Barrington Declaration, which laid out a good plan for dealing with COVID but was dismissed, censored, and suppressed by social media and the mainstream media. Had it been followed, we would be far better off now. Now one of the authors is the head of NIH!
Great look back at COVID and application of queue theory. You could extend it to the application of a "vaccine" that doesn't work and instead has long-term consequences that in some cases are even worse. The question now is, what have we learned from COVID and what should we do the next time a lethal man-made virus is released into the public.
The problem with your queue theory is you can't evenly distribute the spread. It doesn't work that way. We had hot spots (NYC, Southern California, Houston) were hospitals were overrun and we were literally have people dying faster than they could process them in the morgues. We were renting freezer trucks to create makeshift morgues in those areas. Houston had to convert their children's hospital to a COVID ward. And that was despite the relatively loose restrictions we had compared to most of the world.
In Italy if you were caught on the streets you better have a doctors appointment or you were escorted by police straight back home. Only shop at the closest grocer to your property.
Yes seniors were the most vulnerable. And the sad part was that it got to that point. We could have controlled it better at the source if we'd been prepared but we weren't.
What did happen was exactly what the doctors said. The virus would become more contagious and less deadly over time. And it did. We just needed to get there. Vaccines prevented it from becoming even more deadly that it was, probably cutting down the projected deaths by 2/3rds. You can thank Trump and his perfect vaccine for that.
I mean … your freezer truck stuff … all hype. This was an easy theory to implement and it didn’t take school lockdowns. And the vaccine was terrible. Watch for the proof post next week. It’s pretty clear.
But it wasn't something we had ever had to do in 100 years. That's the point. We were doing things that weren't normal just to keep our medical facilities open. And yes, because I'm regularly around a 90 year old father, I still get vaccinated. And having watched people literally die around me while I was asymptomatic after testing positive, to say it was terrible is ignoring what the vaccine was and what it did.
Great work, David. I'm sure you are aware of the Great Barrington Declaration, which laid out a good plan for dealing with COVID but was dismissed, censored, and suppressed by social media and the mainstream media. Had it been followed, we would be far better off now. Now one of the authors is the head of NIH!
Great look back at COVID and application of queue theory. You could extend it to the application of a "vaccine" that doesn't work and instead has long-term consequences that in some cases are even worse. The question now is, what have we learned from COVID and what should we do the next time a lethal man-made virus is released into the public.
Remember the original post and passed on to several people. Well done!
The problem with your queue theory is you can't evenly distribute the spread. It doesn't work that way. We had hot spots (NYC, Southern California, Houston) were hospitals were overrun and we were literally have people dying faster than they could process them in the morgues. We were renting freezer trucks to create makeshift morgues in those areas. Houston had to convert their children's hospital to a COVID ward. And that was despite the relatively loose restrictions we had compared to most of the world.
In Italy if you were caught on the streets you better have a doctors appointment or you were escorted by police straight back home. Only shop at the closest grocer to your property.
Yes seniors were the most vulnerable. And the sad part was that it got to that point. We could have controlled it better at the source if we'd been prepared but we weren't.
What did happen was exactly what the doctors said. The virus would become more contagious and less deadly over time. And it did. We just needed to get there. Vaccines prevented it from becoming even more deadly that it was, probably cutting down the projected deaths by 2/3rds. You can thank Trump and his perfect vaccine for that.
I mean … your freezer truck stuff … all hype. This was an easy theory to implement and it didn’t take school lockdowns. And the vaccine was terrible. Watch for the proof post next week. It’s pretty clear.
But it wasn't something we had ever had to do in 100 years. That's the point. We were doing things that weren't normal just to keep our medical facilities open. And yes, because I'm regularly around a 90 year old father, I still get vaccinated. And having watched people literally die around me while I was asymptomatic after testing positive, to say it was terrible is ignoring what the vaccine was and what it did.