160 Comments
Feb 16, 2022·edited Feb 16, 2022Liked by Igor Chudov

I am still wondering when are they going to go after these bastards that used gain of function to make the WuFlu in the first place and started all of this. If we don’t this is just the start.

Expand full comment

You were certainly not wrong about Omicron in my book and this too sounds concerning. I saw wise words elsewhere, which is that we should all take this lull between waves to prep and get ourselves a little more off the grid, before the next wave of disease panic and totalitarianism hits.

Expand full comment
Feb 16, 2022Liked by Igor Chudov

Why isn't anyone talking about the fact that these new variants seemed to come out of nowhere? Seems like they were concocted in a lab. Is someone trying to kill us all?

Expand full comment

Looks like a Marek's scenario *may* be unfolding. For clarity, "humoral immunity" is another name for adaptive/acquired immunity.

So the unvaxxed innate immune system should still have good innate protection, and if you've kept exposures minimal, won't even have progressed to adaptive.

The vaxxed are mutation factories. So of course the geniuses at the helm allow them to travel!

Just keep exposures low -- both size by avoiding crowded events and # of exposures to avoid exhausting the poor innate system. But allow some exposure to enable your immune system to jeep up with latest developments.

.

How much is "just right" is anybody's guess. Therein lies the challenge.

Expand full comment
Feb 16, 2022Liked by Igor Chudov

Well,cant say we were not warned-this is truly terrifying

Expand full comment
Feb 16, 2022Liked by Igor Chudov

Looks like heparin can help the lungs as well as dissolving clots.

"Nebulized Heparin for Post-COVID-19-Related Hypoxia"

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/labs/pmc/articles/PMC8324424/

Expand full comment
Feb 16, 2022Liked by Igor Chudov

Any indication of whether Ba.2 has more affinity or pathology to vaccinated vs unvaccinated or # of doses? Is it worse because we have hurt immunity with too much boosting? Too soon to tell?

Expand full comment
Feb 16, 2022Liked by Igor Chudov

As a South African, I also find the stats here a bit confusing – my hypothesis: I suspect that people on the whole have stopped unnecessary testing. Many people would just ride out the “covid-cold” at home without bothering to see a doctor or get tested. A case in point : In early Jan, while on holiday virtually our entire household/family caught the “cold” from one of the teenagers staying with us who had picked it up at a new-years bash. The kid who passed it on to us tested positive, and the rest of the household who caught it (5 out of 8 people) did not bother to test or even go to a doctor. (3 days later all were over it except my 92 year old father took a bit longer). I believe this is the norm since the spread of Omni-con. The unfortunate few who land up in hospital, are added to the case rate (and sometimes death rate) and as such the case rate to death rate is being skewed. (Most cases counted are already “serious” cases.) I would also take the death rate with a pinch of salt – I am convinced this rate is exaggerated as much as possible by the ”with” instead of “of” covid deaths in order to keep up the vax narrative which is still being pushed quite strongly here. Compared to last year, the summer covid cycle started a bit later than last year and so death rate should be peaking shortly and then dropping again… In my layman’s opinion.

Expand full comment

Reading about Omicron sounds bad but empirically what have you seen? Most people I know who have had it, haven't been that ill.

Due to the GoF aspect of this virus it has the potential to do anything but right now it is definitely not as deadly as Delta.

Expand full comment
Feb 16, 2022Liked by Igor Chudov

I imagine Ba.2 in the US will catch up in a couple of weeks.

Expand full comment
Feb 16, 2022Liked by Igor Chudov

Typo here: "The short of it is that Ba.2 is much more pathogenic than Ba.2"

Expand full comment
Feb 16, 2022Liked by Igor Chudov

I've had this concern all along that omicron was/is a proof-of-concept trial. It is a very successful one. Experts who are real experts have said omicron is even more well-crafted for human infection that SARS2 is. Splice something along the lines of that nice functional adenovirus sequence in Omicron into the SARS2 platform and voila! Another corona virus "vaccine" needed. And more resultant cancers and immune disruption (much more HIV coming, see DMED stats) needing all the treatments recently approved by FDA. You've seen Project Veritas' interview of the FDA exec in the counterterrorism subdepartment of FDA? Dr. Malone identified him and his position laughing at FDA saying they do not know who the guy is. I have an ever-growing home "pharmacy" battle kit for my family.

Expand full comment
Feb 16, 2022Liked by Igor Chudov

I don't know if this variant is already in Portugal but daily deaths are quite high since january compare to Ireland, Belgium, Austria etc countries less vaccinated. Portugal is more sunny than Danemark, so D vitamin level will maybe play a role for the next weeks evolution.

Expand full comment

Dear Igor,

thanks for staying on top of this. As someone who--like you--elected to forego these injections, I came down with "Covid" about a month ago (I think I didn't have "Covid" earlier, but since my first test occurred "only" in late spring 2021, I don't know or care.)

Now, the way you write about the increased risk of (re-) infection after my (presumed) exposure to "Omicron"--I'm guessing Ba.1--a month ago makes me wonder about the wording you used:

Are you talking about (re-) infection risks deriving from Ba2 that are directed primarily against injected people or would that be also something to consider in earnest for those "unvaccinated with natural immunity" from Omicron?

Could (would) you dare to venture a guesstimate?

Expand full comment
Feb 16, 2022Liked by Igor Chudov

As the virus spread differs with climate, can't that explain part of the difference?

Denmark is 42,933 km2 (16,577 sq mi), about the size of Tennessee, but has only one climate zone. The US is huge and has lots, not to mention lots of big cities in various climes, adding smog to the equation.

Also, Denmark still has a pretty homogenous population regarding race, whereas the US is heterogenous looked at as a whole, and we know the virus affects darker skinned people more easily due differences in vitamin D production and uptake (behavioural differences not withstanding).

Just throwing ideas at the wall, really. Anecdotal reports from swedish healthcare seems to point to race being a definite secondary factor for severity of infection when comorbidites are discounted. Apart from those with known comorbidities and/or of advanced age, the virus hit migrants from Africa, especially somalis. Enough to show up as a statistical anomaly. Unfortunately, what little data there was has been pulled and taken down.

Expand full comment
Feb 16, 2022Liked by Igor Chudov

Thank you Igor. This is very helpful. I appreciate the heads up and warning. No one else seems to be providing such warnings.

Expand full comment