Has anyone ever heard of any Long Flu in the history of the world before the lab created C-19 or the shot they created for it? Was there a Long Spanish Flu for instance? 🤔 💭
Has anyone ever heard of any Long Flu in the history of the world before the lab created C-19 or the shot they created for it? Was there a Long Spanish Flu for instance? 🤔 💭
Not to the level as today. I am sure some people experience an extended time of malaise after getting the flu etc. But the gaslighting and psyops regarding covid, the vaxx etc is off the charts.
I believe that yes, there were/are uncommon cases of long-virus. Look at mono/chronic EBV. Or chronic Lyme (technically a bacteria, but frequently evades the immune system and lingers for years). However, we generally never heard of them because they were so rare. So, obviously *something* is different in this scenario.
We have an engineered virus designed for human morbidity. And a jab designed for human morbidity and mortality.
Has anyone ever heard of any Long Flu in the history of the world before the lab created C-19 or the shot they created for it? Was there a Long Spanish Flu for instance? 🤔 💭
Not to the level as today. I am sure some people experience an extended time of malaise after getting the flu etc. But the gaslighting and psyops regarding covid, the vaxx etc is off the charts.
Exactly.
I believe that yes, there were/are uncommon cases of long-virus. Look at mono/chronic EBV. Or chronic Lyme (technically a bacteria, but frequently evades the immune system and lingers for years). However, we generally never heard of them because they were so rare. So, obviously *something* is different in this scenario.
We have an engineered virus designed for human morbidity. And a jab designed for human morbidity and mortality.
Were they isolated / few in number cases, or as prevalent as the claims of long covid are today?
Well, did YOU ever hear about them?
We all have heard of chronic EBV or mono. And some of chronic Lyme.
I think your point was that we never heard of them. They were there, but not common.