"It's tough to make predictions, especially about the future.” ― Yogi Berra (world-famous vaccinologist)
We will have a better idea by the depths of winter, January, say, the time that used to be called "peak flu season" here in the northern hemisphere. I'm holding my breath to see what happens, especially in the kool-aid soaked college town where I live.
Worst case: the IGg4 induced tolerance from the vax leads to high viral loads without many symptoms until multiple organ failure, as well as high viral loads for everyone, meaning even the purebloods get quite sick because of all the virus present everywhere. This is a compelling story to me, because it makes me "right," But it is, of course, just a story. God knows I don't know enough to predict how likely it is to happen.
Very possible: continued muddling through, with high disability rates , high rates of sickness, cancers, cardiovascular disease, automimmunity-- all the things that Ed Dowd has documented and that have been studiously ignored by the mainstream. I don't see any signs yet that these rising rates are headed back to what was previously normal. But muddling through might be the best we can hope for.
If we make it through the winter without absolute immune carnage, I'll be ready to put Geert up closer to the tinfoil hat end of my bookshelf.
Re: Moving into Autumn
Date: 2023-08-31 04:52 pm (UTC)― Yogi Berra (world-famous vaccinologist)
We will have a better idea by the depths of winter, January, say, the time that used to be called "peak flu season" here in the northern hemisphere. I'm holding my breath to see what happens, especially in the kool-aid soaked college town where I live.
Worst case: the IGg4 induced tolerance from the vax leads to high viral loads without many symptoms until multiple organ failure, as well as high viral loads for everyone, meaning even the purebloods get quite sick because of all the virus present everywhere. This is a compelling story to me, because it makes me "right," But it is, of course, just a story. God knows I don't know enough to predict how likely it is to happen.
Very possible: continued muddling through, with high disability rates , high rates of sickness, cancers, cardiovascular disease, automimmunity-- all the things that Ed Dowd has documented and that have been studiously ignored by the mainstream. I don't see any signs yet that these rising rates are headed back to what was previously normal. But muddling through might be the best we can hope for.
If we make it through the winter without absolute immune carnage, I'll be ready to put Geert up closer to the tinfoil hat end of my bookshelf.
*Ochre Harebrained Curmudgeon*