They tested me for covid19, the flu and strep throat at the clinic. I was positive only for covid. That was last September. I was sick over 8 days. Unvaxxed. I took vitamin C, D3, zinc and quercetin.
They tested me for covid19, the flu and strep throat at the clinic. I was positive only for covid. That was last September. I was sick over 8 days. Unvaxxed. I took vitamin C, D3, zinc and quercetin.
Can you explain what you mean by "the VAXX is transmissible to unvaxxed people"? And if you believe that, would that not be an argument that Pablo did indeed have Covid?
For the second part of your query, I agree that the PCRs etc are pathetic ways to try to determine if anyone has ANY particular illness, because firstly they are not designed for that, and secondly, most people run them at stupidly high cycle thresholds anyway, which makes them sometimes have 99% false positive rates, and thirdly, when you run at such high rates, who knows WHAT sort of crap you're picking up in this supposed 'test'. They are a terrible way to test - and PCRs are used for influenza, covid, and some other ones as well. Have been for years. Just a huge waste of time.
Symptomatology is a better way to determine an illness, but again, it is not perfect. If the problem is bacterial, a swab should be able to show that one up. But if not, well, who really knows? And honestly, some people get sick simply because of stress! Just because someone has XYZ symptoms doesn't always mean they have XYZ disease/illness. Sometimes people only show SOME of the symptoms, not all, and unless it's a 'textbook case', it can be hard to narrow it down. Feeling crappy is one thing, but the CAUSE of why you're feeling crappy is usually far more complex.
Anyway, to answer the first part of your query above, the Pfizer documents DO say that skin-to-skin transmission is possible from the jabbed to the unjabbed. What is being transmitted, however, I am not sure. I certainly had problems with my cycle when dealing with jabbed patients. Things are pretty well OK since I stopped working, though. But as for the nanotechnology inside these jabs: does that get transmitted? I don't think it would, because it would have to creep out of the skin and into someone else's skin- and it only got into the jabbed person in the first place by the skin being breached via an injection, so I don't think the nanotech can be passed on. But SOMETHING gets transmitted. I'm just not sure what exactly.
The symptoms of Covid-19 (not flu or cold) are easily distinguished by patients, if not their physicians.
1. Slow, detectable onset of 2-3 days. Colds/flu happen much more quickly; flu usually within 12 hours for me.
2. Extreme fatigue -- Worse and longer than cold or flu
3. Pressure in the head (not just sinuses) -- a fullness (not painful, just annoying) not experienced with colds/flu
4. Less nausea than from flu, and no dizziness
5. Decreased oxygen saturation -- not typical of flu
6. Protracted illness/slow recovery -- I've never had a cold or flu affect me significantly for a full week. Others have reported much longer illnesses from Covid.
7. Hair loss -- (temporary, luckily) maybe 25%, 2-3 months after. I've never lost hair after an illness.
Argue all you want about viruses and germ theory, but the illness is both real and unique.
I didn't say the illness wasn't real. I just said that symptoms don't always equate to the illness. Take Measles, for instance. All 5 of us had it through our house (mine and my hubby's childhood injections had worn off by then & our kids are unvaccinated) a number of years back. Our youngest was only 1&1/2. Being so young, she got the classic 'textbook case' of symptoms. She had tepid baths and got better in no time. My older 2 got breakthrough mini-rashes that came & went, and breakthrough mini-fevers that came and went, yet I could detect Koplik spots in their mouth. They had tonnes of energy and weren't bothered by it at all! My husband and I had diarrhoea for a few weeks - not a well-known symptom of Measles, but one nevertheless. We had no rashes. Mild fever only. The only one who would be diagnosed by a GP would've been our youngest, yet we all probably had it. But, I can't be certain, can I?
Symptoms are different for every person. Who's to say who had what illness? Yes, you felt crappy. Yes, you had these symptoms. Yes, they're different to when you had illness X or illness Y or illness Z. But when we have some bug do the rounds in our family, EVERY time with our family, we get 5 different lots of symptoms to some degree - or sometimes only 2 or 3 because sometimes only one or two of us get sick. That's just how we work. Your family could be the same.
With your illness, other people could've reported full-on dizziness, no hair loss, a different onset phase, lots of nausea, or no nausea. A different system = different symptoms. And depending on how your system is tracking at the time you got ill (obviously not great anyway, because you got ill in the first place!), you may have more severe symptoms or less severe symptoms. Maybe you went into this illness with less sleep under your belt than when you had the flu, or maybe your diet was better - or worse - than last time you were sick. Maybe your zinc reserves were lower. There are SO many possibilities!
That's a lot of words to say "Symptoms vary." Yes, of course they do. Yet somehow, people are able to determine they had a cold, or they had the flu, or they had food poisoning. In the same way, and for the same reasons, it is not difficult to say "I had Covid-19."
As a health professional for 17 years now, can I just say that people usually have NO idea what sort of illness they have. For the most part, they are not particularly aware of things. Some people moreso than others, yes, definitely, but on average?
On average I think people are very bad at science and logic. Most can't determine the difference between food poisoning and a tummy bug. And so many women have no idea if they're having a bad period or a failed implantation. So many people don't even know what a migraine is and use the term inappropriately.
You may be more on the ball with your body, but most people out there seem to have very little idea. That's why they give their health over to health professionals instead of taking care of it themselves!!
You're putting words in my mouth. I'm not saying people haven't had these things. I'm not saying "you haven't had covid" - I'm just saying that there's a decent chance people may not - or may - have had these illnesses.
As for the flu? I have a blood test that says I'm positive for mycoplasmic pneumonia many years ago, but the actual 'flu? I honestly don't think I've had that in my life as strange as that may sound! I may have, but if I did, it wasn't too bad. If we're going by the simple medical symptoms of 'cough & fever' then I think every man and his dog has had it. But since I'm not running off to the doc to have a silly PCR test to see whether I've had illnesses or not (because as we know PCRs aren't much good at determining WHAT you've got or WHEN you had it!), then I honestly wouldn't know. But as a health professional, if a patient says "I had the 'flu" (and they DO say this, regardless of whatever it was they had and regardless of whether they were tested or not), I don't tell them "you've never had the flu". I just acknowledge that they were unwell, I usually ask some symptomatology Qs, and I look at it as the person's immune function is down and how can I improve it with my care?
The problem is, "more often than not" is a good enough response for the general population to figure out if they think they've had something or not - but it's NOT good enough for a scientific test. So coming full circle, given this covid crap wouldn't have stayed off the ground without the PCR test in tow, perhaps we need to give some thought to the accuracy of these so-called tests, the illnesses they purport to test for, and the symptoms involved. When you label covid as "cough & fever", the exact same thing they do for influenza, and then add in a few more things like loss of smell, or diarrhoea, or whatever is the flavour of the month, then what are you really testing for, labelling or having?
We need to stop keeping these things in a box, like 'cough & fever'. We need to look at the body holistically and realise that when we have symptoms, something isn't right. Keeping symptoms in a box keeps our thinking in a box.
The Covid vaccine bio weapon that is making everyone sick or killing them is transmissible to other people. I don’t know what other type of English to explain it if you don’t understand.
The covid tests have been exposed over and over as 95% FALSE positive. I cant believe i still have to say this after it was reported by medical experts in early 21.
They tested me for covid19, the flu and strep throat at the clinic. I was positive only for covid. That was last September. I was sick over 8 days. Unvaxxed. I took vitamin C, D3, zinc and quercetin.
Again…tested you how? The fraud PCR test? Sounds like you had a bacterial infection for sure.
As I said…the VAXX is transmissible to unvaxxed people.
Can you explain what you mean by "the VAXX is transmissible to unvaxxed people"? And if you believe that, would that not be an argument that Pablo did indeed have Covid?
I'll try to answer your Qs here, axons007.
For the second part of your query, I agree that the PCRs etc are pathetic ways to try to determine if anyone has ANY particular illness, because firstly they are not designed for that, and secondly, most people run them at stupidly high cycle thresholds anyway, which makes them sometimes have 99% false positive rates, and thirdly, when you run at such high rates, who knows WHAT sort of crap you're picking up in this supposed 'test'. They are a terrible way to test - and PCRs are used for influenza, covid, and some other ones as well. Have been for years. Just a huge waste of time.
Symptomatology is a better way to determine an illness, but again, it is not perfect. If the problem is bacterial, a swab should be able to show that one up. But if not, well, who really knows? And honestly, some people get sick simply because of stress! Just because someone has XYZ symptoms doesn't always mean they have XYZ disease/illness. Sometimes people only show SOME of the symptoms, not all, and unless it's a 'textbook case', it can be hard to narrow it down. Feeling crappy is one thing, but the CAUSE of why you're feeling crappy is usually far more complex.
Anyway, to answer the first part of your query above, the Pfizer documents DO say that skin-to-skin transmission is possible from the jabbed to the unjabbed. What is being transmitted, however, I am not sure. I certainly had problems with my cycle when dealing with jabbed patients. Things are pretty well OK since I stopped working, though. But as for the nanotechnology inside these jabs: does that get transmitted? I don't think it would, because it would have to creep out of the skin and into someone else's skin- and it only got into the jabbed person in the first place by the skin being breached via an injection, so I don't think the nanotech can be passed on. But SOMETHING gets transmitted. I'm just not sure what exactly.
Hope this helps.
The symptoms of Covid-19 (not flu or cold) are easily distinguished by patients, if not their physicians.
1. Slow, detectable onset of 2-3 days. Colds/flu happen much more quickly; flu usually within 12 hours for me.
2. Extreme fatigue -- Worse and longer than cold or flu
3. Pressure in the head (not just sinuses) -- a fullness (not painful, just annoying) not experienced with colds/flu
4. Less nausea than from flu, and no dizziness
5. Decreased oxygen saturation -- not typical of flu
6. Protracted illness/slow recovery -- I've never had a cold or flu affect me significantly for a full week. Others have reported much longer illnesses from Covid.
7. Hair loss -- (temporary, luckily) maybe 25%, 2-3 months after. I've never lost hair after an illness.
Argue all you want about viruses and germ theory, but the illness is both real and unique.
I didn't say the illness wasn't real. I just said that symptoms don't always equate to the illness. Take Measles, for instance. All 5 of us had it through our house (mine and my hubby's childhood injections had worn off by then & our kids are unvaccinated) a number of years back. Our youngest was only 1&1/2. Being so young, she got the classic 'textbook case' of symptoms. She had tepid baths and got better in no time. My older 2 got breakthrough mini-rashes that came & went, and breakthrough mini-fevers that came and went, yet I could detect Koplik spots in their mouth. They had tonnes of energy and weren't bothered by it at all! My husband and I had diarrhoea for a few weeks - not a well-known symptom of Measles, but one nevertheless. We had no rashes. Mild fever only. The only one who would be diagnosed by a GP would've been our youngest, yet we all probably had it. But, I can't be certain, can I?
Symptoms are different for every person. Who's to say who had what illness? Yes, you felt crappy. Yes, you had these symptoms. Yes, they're different to when you had illness X or illness Y or illness Z. But when we have some bug do the rounds in our family, EVERY time with our family, we get 5 different lots of symptoms to some degree - or sometimes only 2 or 3 because sometimes only one or two of us get sick. That's just how we work. Your family could be the same.
With your illness, other people could've reported full-on dizziness, no hair loss, a different onset phase, lots of nausea, or no nausea. A different system = different symptoms. And depending on how your system is tracking at the time you got ill (obviously not great anyway, because you got ill in the first place!), you may have more severe symptoms or less severe symptoms. Maybe you went into this illness with less sleep under your belt than when you had the flu, or maybe your diet was better - or worse - than last time you were sick. Maybe your zinc reserves were lower. There are SO many possibilities!
That's a lot of words to say "Symptoms vary." Yes, of course they do. Yet somehow, people are able to determine they had a cold, or they had the flu, or they had food poisoning. In the same way, and for the same reasons, it is not difficult to say "I had Covid-19."
As a health professional for 17 years now, can I just say that people usually have NO idea what sort of illness they have. For the most part, they are not particularly aware of things. Some people moreso than others, yes, definitely, but on average?
On average I think people are very bad at science and logic. Most can't determine the difference between food poisoning and a tummy bug. And so many women have no idea if they're having a bad period or a failed implantation. So many people don't even know what a migraine is and use the term inappropriately.
You may be more on the ball with your body, but most people out there seem to have very little idea. That's why they give their health over to health professionals instead of taking care of it themselves!!
Yes, but how many of them were actually right? ;-)
Who knows? "More often than not" is good enough.
What is your response to someone who tells you "You've never had the flu."?
You're putting words in my mouth. I'm not saying people haven't had these things. I'm not saying "you haven't had covid" - I'm just saying that there's a decent chance people may not - or may - have had these illnesses.
As for the flu? I have a blood test that says I'm positive for mycoplasmic pneumonia many years ago, but the actual 'flu? I honestly don't think I've had that in my life as strange as that may sound! I may have, but if I did, it wasn't too bad. If we're going by the simple medical symptoms of 'cough & fever' then I think every man and his dog has had it. But since I'm not running off to the doc to have a silly PCR test to see whether I've had illnesses or not (because as we know PCRs aren't much good at determining WHAT you've got or WHEN you had it!), then I honestly wouldn't know. But as a health professional, if a patient says "I had the 'flu" (and they DO say this, regardless of whatever it was they had and regardless of whether they were tested or not), I don't tell them "you've never had the flu". I just acknowledge that they were unwell, I usually ask some symptomatology Qs, and I look at it as the person's immune function is down and how can I improve it with my care?
The problem is, "more often than not" is a good enough response for the general population to figure out if they think they've had something or not - but it's NOT good enough for a scientific test. So coming full circle, given this covid crap wouldn't have stayed off the ground without the PCR test in tow, perhaps we need to give some thought to the accuracy of these so-called tests, the illnesses they purport to test for, and the symptoms involved. When you label covid as "cough & fever", the exact same thing they do for influenza, and then add in a few more things like loss of smell, or diarrhoea, or whatever is the flavour of the month, then what are you really testing for, labelling or having?
We need to stop keeping these things in a box, like 'cough & fever'. We need to look at the body holistically and realise that when we have symptoms, something isn't right. Keeping symptoms in a box keeps our thinking in a box.
"... real and unique"
So is 5G.
So what?
So saying Covid-19 doesn't exist is asinine, as is the claim that it is an illness of attribution.
Your argument relies on handwaving and an ad hominem fallacy, SOP these days. Recommend reading and a considered rebuttal of: https://drsambailey.com/a-farewell-to-virology-expert-edition/
There is no Covid. Virology is pure junk science and does not exist.
...and the Pope is Hindu. Post evidence or stop wasting everyone's time.
The Covid vaccine bio weapon that is making everyone sick or killing them is transmissible to other people. I don’t know what other type of English to explain it if you don’t understand.
Such a great & detailed explanation ! You're the best - thanks !
My pleasure. Please tell everyone you know.
Strep throat IS a bacterial infection. I did negative for that.
A sane person …… finally .
The covid tests have been exposed over and over as 95% FALSE positive. I cant believe i still have to say this after it was reported by medical experts in early 21.