Are All Viruses the Same? https://t.co/MqIWsPHjgt
— John Cullen (@I_Am_JohnCullen) January 12, 2022
Well, I like John Cullen's Twitter page labels:
"To sin by silence when they should protest makes cowards of men." --Abraham Lincoln.
Still aren't 5,000 dead in China.
Still not 10 dead in Beijing or Shanghai.
6:39 Dr. Joel Graff, Assistant Professor at Montana Tech University, explains in Episode #9 of Life and Biology that they resurrected the Spanish Flu. Wait, what?
Yes, a famous experiment where they resurrected the 1918 Spanish Flu in 2005 "after all the virus had been extinct from the world"? Okay, wait, who, what, where . . . ? And the severe damage was due to something called a cytokine storm. Cytokines are proteins that cells use to communicate with each other. Cytokines often tell if there's danger, and so cells start making these danger signals and it brings in more immune cells and the immune cells are all acting up and they can cause damage to your tissue, and that causes severe pathology from the virus. And then we talked about secondary bacterial infections earlier. Those secondary bacterial infections can then take advantage of a damaged lung or airway, get hold, and cause really severe pneumonia that could be lethal. 7:50
9:40 FluMart is mentioned, it's the site that tracks the flu worldwide.
10:15 During the 2019-2020 flu season, Miami alone had 400,000 hospitalizations for the flu alone.
10:26 The CDC has a seasonal flu tracking interactive, called FluView.
It may be difficult to pinpoint a specific month but the seasonal flu usually starts at the beginning of the fall, September 21 to the end of April or about the beginning of spring. Flu season typically falls sometime between the start of fall and the end of spring. Duquesne University defines it as such,
For the past three decades, flu activity has peaked at some point between the months of October and February but always tapers off by April.
19:20
50+ million people died globally of the Spanish Flu.
2019/2020 SARS-CoV-2 caused 2.3 million deaths globally.
The global cases for that same year were interesting.
The U.S. had 27,897,166 cases.
India had 16,847,304.
So the two countries were the top
two in cases around the world. Yet,
India fared much better, and the U.S. with only 4.5% of the world’s populationhad 25% of all COVID deaths. Who is
trying to kill Americans?
About 675,000 people died in the U.S. alone from the Spanish Flu.
465,000 people died from SARS-CoV-2 in 2019/2020 in the United States.
20:25 Dr. Jeremy Brown of the National Institutes of Health says that remedies for the Spanish flu were unknown because they didn't know that a virus was causing it or about the secondary bacterial infections, so they did what they usually did back then--they did bloodletting, they gave people enemas, whiskey, champagne . . . I noticed that Bayer aspirin was left out of the equation. Bayer aspirin was depleting the body of vitamin C.
21:11 More soldiers during the 1918 Spanish Flu died of flu than died in battle on the fields of Europe.
1957 Asian Flu.
1968 Hong Kong Flu. Why are all the cases of flu named after foreign nations?
2003 Avian Flu, H5N1 flu.
2009 Swine Flu, or H1N1.
Back in December 2015, I cited Bill Sardi's astute observation that the serial vaccines year after year were destroying herd immunity. The more people that get vaccinated year after year, there is a cumulative stresser on immunity as Bosche pointed out too.
However, if recovery takes place with all the requisite treatment modalities, ‘it might end up with a scar formation in the lungs which could lead to a radical sequel of the same in the future. There is quite a bit of chance of recurrence of respiratory problems even after recovering from the flu,’ says Dr Jiandani. Prevent the spread of swine flu following these 10 dos and don’ts.
24:45 These numbers are
utterly bizarre. They’re bizarre because
they conflict with seasonal averages and they conflict with expectations.
CBS News reports that 4,800 people died from the flu, while nearly 10 million were sickened. “Sickened” does not mean hospitalized, nor does it mean cases. Both of those, as far as I understand, require the confirmation of a doctor’s visit and exams run on the patient.
In fact, in the U.S., over 4,000 people would die each week from influenza from January 1, 2020. 4,000 + people per week, dead . . . from influenza every single week in 2020.
January 29, 2020: so, wait, there was a huge influenza outbreak in the winter of 2019/2020, then in late January we hear of a Coronavirus outbreak. Did the good folks in the Pharmaceutical and vaccine industries hijack the flu season and ride the wave of the numbers per week and then pitch that to the Americans as a new threat never seen or heard before in all the world? Methinks that’s exactly what went down.
27:55 February 4, 2020.
October 1, 2019, to January 25, 2020: 19 million to 26 million flu illnesses. Deaths: 10,000 to 25,000. [Source: CDC]
28:10 If 10,000-25,000 died from the flu between October 2019 through to January 30, 2020, how did we end up with only 22,000 dead for the entire season, 9 months later?
28:30 February 21, 2020. Wow! Fauci on record, saying "Not the perfect vaccine. Not favorably efficacious. Likely not going to more than around 30%."
29:20 Adam Curry podcast. "He believes the combination of having the flu in December, an inflamed trachea, and then non-stop work once the pandemic hit may be to blame." Wait a minute . . . . Does the flu vaccine not work on Dr. Fauci? He had the flu. Did he get the vaccine? Of course, he did. Listen . . . , The nation's top expert is going to tell you all the remedies he's tried.
FAUCI, 29:59 By the time I got to March, it was clear my voice was shot because I would wake up in the morning and do the Today's Show live and it would be like I had a frog in my throat no matter how much I gargled with salt or drank a hot soup or a hot coffee. When I would get in front of the TV, I couldn't get my normal voice.