You're right..it's completely bonkers. SARS cov-2 is effectively a cold now and you don't make permanent adaptive immunity to colds (that's the immune trade-off with highly mutable respiratory viruses). The best biological explanation I have encountered this far is that SARS cov-2 was a infectious viral clone made, in a lab, using the ba…
You're right..it's completely bonkers. SARS cov-2 is effectively a cold now and you don't make permanent adaptive immunity to colds (that's the immune trade-off with highly mutable respiratory viruses). The best biological explanation I have encountered this far is that SARS cov-2 was a infectious viral clone made, in a lab, using the backbone of a coronavirus with a novel and particularly immunogenic spike protein. Such lab clones have high fidelity of reproduction of virions, are initially very stable and would therefore lead to significantly severe effects. However, once widely spread, the virus would begin to combine with endemic coronaviruses and since RNA replication of wild type viruses is fraught with errors and most viral particles are not of high fidelity, things start to change. Coronaviruses, on the whole, are generally not dangerous to most people. Essentially, the original man-made viral clone has been watered down and blended into the ever-present coronavirus swarm. Coronaviruses, along with many other respiratory viruses DO kill people every year (yes, colds can kill but it's usually the elderly or compromised). They are not diagnosed by tests but lumped into a symptom-based category of PLI - pneumonia-like-illnesses. With the abuse of PCR, all of these deaths essentially got assigned to covid-19. Even though coronaviruses kill people every year that does not mean these are vaccine-preventable deaths, despite what pharma/gov would like to tell people. SARS Cov-2 is now just part of that swarm and is of no greater significance than of any of the other coronavirus.es (known and unknown). Immunity to coronaviruses is mostly cellular and broadly based on proteins shared across ALL similar viruses (not just a spike). Going forward, this will be a non-issue for most people. The harms/ ill effects of the vaccines, er I mean mRNA transfections, are another matter.
You're right..it's completely bonkers. SARS cov-2 is effectively a cold now and you don't make permanent adaptive immunity to colds (that's the immune trade-off with highly mutable respiratory viruses). The best biological explanation I have encountered this far is that SARS cov-2 was a infectious viral clone made, in a lab, using the backbone of a coronavirus with a novel and particularly immunogenic spike protein. Such lab clones have high fidelity of reproduction of virions, are initially very stable and would therefore lead to significantly severe effects. However, once widely spread, the virus would begin to combine with endemic coronaviruses and since RNA replication of wild type viruses is fraught with errors and most viral particles are not of high fidelity, things start to change. Coronaviruses, on the whole, are generally not dangerous to most people. Essentially, the original man-made viral clone has been watered down and blended into the ever-present coronavirus swarm. Coronaviruses, along with many other respiratory viruses DO kill people every year (yes, colds can kill but it's usually the elderly or compromised). They are not diagnosed by tests but lumped into a symptom-based category of PLI - pneumonia-like-illnesses. With the abuse of PCR, all of these deaths essentially got assigned to covid-19. Even though coronaviruses kill people every year that does not mean these are vaccine-preventable deaths, despite what pharma/gov would like to tell people. SARS Cov-2 is now just part of that swarm and is of no greater significance than of any of the other coronavirus.es (known and unknown). Immunity to coronaviruses is mostly cellular and broadly based on proteins shared across ALL similar viruses (not just a spike). Going forward, this will be a non-issue for most people. The harms/ ill effects of the vaccines, er I mean mRNA transfections, are another matter.