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To: Scooter100

It never did, from what I read. It just showed that the person had a virus or the remnants of one, I thought. And that was one of the reasons they changed the testing protocol from 25 cycles to 40 cycles(or however they describe the process). At the standard 25 it detected a virus. At 40 it detected a virus or something your body’s immune system had already dealt with. Perhaps, some of the more medically literate folks can verify that.

Amazing how last year the traditional flu disappeared, completely.

No telling how many folks had nothing more than than the traditional flu, a cold, bad allergies or bronchitis, each one of them a stat for Fauci, Birks and Gates.

On a side note, I have a question for some of the medical type folks on here:

Person A, who is in a ‘high risk’ category, gets whatever strain of the flu that is predominant in a particular year, say 2020. It goes untreated. They die. Is what they die from, ie what happens in/to their body that causes the death, the same as what was causing some folks to die from complications of COVID?


12 posted on 07/29/2021 7:45:54 AM PDT by qaz123
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To: qaz123
At the beginning of the "pandemic" last year I was Excel/charting the CDC's raw data stats on pneumonia, flu and Covid deaths. Soon thereafter, they rolled pneumonia and flu together. Then they combined everything...it was just "upper respiratory" deaths. Then they stopped releasing flu data entirely. At that point my charting exercise came to an abrupt and hopeless end. Meaningless. Done on purpose if you ask me.

A whole barn-load of people at the CDC stats office need to be horse-whipped.

17 posted on 07/29/2021 7:54:39 AM PDT by Scooter100
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