Shouldnt you be interviewing someone more in the field rather than a pediatric urologist?
He is not a pediatric urologist. He did my operation when I was 50 or so, having prostate cancer. He is known to be very accomplished, if not brilliant, and is apparently not prone to hyperbole. One additional question I have is how long does the virus’ RNA last in your body. If I had it two months ago, but get tested today (for the virus, not the antibodies), I would still show positive if I still had virus RNA in my body, and I am counting as a ‘new’ case. The focus on cases is ridiculous for a host of reasons. Increased testing, changing methodology, reporting probables as positives, etc.