Precisely! Isn't our first reaction to blame some external pathogen, like a virus that doesn't exist, because we've been taught to think that way? Once we come to the conclusion, we look no further. What if (and I'm going out on a limb here, I know), people in the same room became exposed to new carpet fibers that weren't there before, o…
Precisely! Isn't our first reaction to blame some external pathogen, like a virus that doesn't exist, because we've been taught to think that way? Once we come to the conclusion, we look no further. What if (and I'm going out on a limb here, I know), people in the same room became exposed to new carpet fibers that weren't there before, or some malfunction in the air filtration system that spewed chemicals or some other toxins; what if a community all became ill after crop spraying nearby or a change in the wind caused fumes or other toxic smoke to drift over the whole community, etc.? We don't know, because we don't look. There could be any number of things causing respiratory illnesses, but we nearly always attribute illness to some external pathogen, when the answer may not be that simple. But for big pharma, that is exactly the conclusion they want us to come to, because it sells medicines we don't need and that often make us more ill. The one single piece of information that I am so glad to have learned as a result of the covid is that the "science" of virology is a complete sham. (Sorry for rambling.)
I'm all for looking into those possibilities. The carpet fiber scenario doesn't make much sense to me, because the same people tend to get sick at the same periods of time every year (roughly December through February). Why wouldn't those fibers make them sick in May or October?
People have come down with flu symptoms for ages, before there was carpet or cell phone towers.
Okay, you sawed off the limb I was climbing out on, but I knew it could happen. You're right, something like that does need investigating so we can answer your questions, and mine. But no one looks for alternative explanations - that's the point I was driving at. Thanks for taking time.
I have become a much bigger believer in the importance of Vitamin D and changes in temperatures and sunlight having something/much to do with seasonal "bugs."
If that's true, the guidance that everyone stay inside was 100-percent backwards. Ron Paul, a doctor, said that early on in Covid.
Precisely! Isn't our first reaction to blame some external pathogen, like a virus that doesn't exist, because we've been taught to think that way? Once we come to the conclusion, we look no further. What if (and I'm going out on a limb here, I know), people in the same room became exposed to new carpet fibers that weren't there before, or some malfunction in the air filtration system that spewed chemicals or some other toxins; what if a community all became ill after crop spraying nearby or a change in the wind caused fumes or other toxic smoke to drift over the whole community, etc.? We don't know, because we don't look. There could be any number of things causing respiratory illnesses, but we nearly always attribute illness to some external pathogen, when the answer may not be that simple. But for big pharma, that is exactly the conclusion they want us to come to, because it sells medicines we don't need and that often make us more ill. The one single piece of information that I am so glad to have learned as a result of the covid is that the "science" of virology is a complete sham. (Sorry for rambling.)
I'm all for looking into those possibilities. The carpet fiber scenario doesn't make much sense to me, because the same people tend to get sick at the same periods of time every year (roughly December through February). Why wouldn't those fibers make them sick in May or October?
People have come down with flu symptoms for ages, before there was carpet or cell phone towers.
Okay, you sawed off the limb I was climbing out on, but I knew it could happen. You're right, something like that does need investigating so we can answer your questions, and mine. But no one looks for alternative explanations - that's the point I was driving at. Thanks for taking time.
I have become a much bigger believer in the importance of Vitamin D and changes in temperatures and sunlight having something/much to do with seasonal "bugs."
If that's true, the guidance that everyone stay inside was 100-percent backwards. Ron Paul, a doctor, said that early on in Covid.