Bobby. wrote on Mar 31
st, 2023 at 5:27pm:
At the start of the Pandemic:
you only had to be in an infected room for 1 minute and you'd get it and 1 week later you'd be dead -
the first Covid-19 was deadly -
it wiped out entire nursing homes and killed 100s of healthy doctors and nurses in Italy -
but later it morphed into Omicron which was a very weak version that we most people got
which acted as a free vaccine -
we didn't have to pay for any vaccines -
nature provided a free vaccine as it always does -
same happened with Spanish flu -
if nature didn't do that then the human race
would have been wiped out 1,000 times in ancient history.
Good morning Bobby.
As I've said many times before - newer variants of SARS-CoV-2 should have been given new Greek letters a long time ago but (nearly) everyone has been sold on the mistaken belief that Omicron is "mild".
https://twitter.com/D_Bone/status/1641867775219212288 Quote:Just spoke with my good friend @suhaskashyaps
in India. He said there is an explosion of cases there, and people are shocked by how sick they are getting despite breezing through their omicron infections
https://twitter.com/vipintukur/status/1641119072141164546 Quote:After successfully employing ‘convergent evolution’ at the Spike protein, the SARS-CoV-2 virus has now adopted a new strategy: to evade T cells immunity by inducing more mutations in the non-spike regions like in the N protein & ORF proteins.
Quote:These changes are manifested in new emerging sub-lineages like XBB.1.16, XBB.1.9.1, CH.1.1.12 & other offsprings of XBB.1.5.
XBB.1.16 & these newer sublineages are more efficiently blocking the communication between virus-infected cells & T cells….
Quote:Hence, making it difficult for T cells to detect and target infected cells, thus allowing the virus to replicate, spread unhinderedly and persist longer in the body.
Quote:So, if SARS2 succeeds in its new strategy, the infected people will find it difficult to get rid of the virus, may lead to persistent inflammation & higher incidence of long covid & autoimmunity
Buckle up, folks... we're in for a wild winter here in Australia.