Also, there was a new study in Italy that I looked at yesterday that claims 70% of the cases under the age of 60 are asymptomatic. Some studies indicate they can’t spread it either.
We also know from earlier studies on serology testing that some fight it off early and don’t create any antibodies.
That's one other thing I did not entirely get. They said early on that you would need to have a specific amount to really get sick. Like the amount you would get from a cough or a sneeze... Which means you are not asymptomatic and why they are preaching the 6 ft thing. Now they are changing it to simply talking or breathing I guess (if they are concerned about asymptomatic cases spreading the virus), which does not produce a ton of droplets and would not travel nearly as far. Are they saying it lingers in the air or accumulates on surfaces enough that you can get it from these minimal droplets? Well if it is on surfaces, then wash your hands and surfaces... Which you should be doing anyways. If it is in the air, which I seriously doubt, then that is another issue which I have not heard them talk about very often.
That is another issue altogether in my opinion --- cause of death. As I understand it in US and Canada if someone tests positive and dies then it is a COVID death in da books. But you could die of a heart attack with COVID and it goes down as COVID death. Now when guy is 86 years old you never know truly what caused death but if heart stops pumping to me that should be a heart attack death not a COVID death. Another issue that we will never ever be able to uncover.
Exactly what I said in the Arizona-Covid thread. I knew someone who died due to a heart condition, but they did not have Covid. However first thing they asked was whether they had Covid-19. I would be willing to bet that if it was a 'yes', and they could not clearly determine that Covid was not the cause, they would attribute it to Covid. Hence inflating the numbers...
I also mentioned that the person I knew who died was unable to see the doctor for two months before they died, and it is already known that people who needed surgery or treatment for cancer or other things that was not deemed an immediate emergency were being turned away out of fear for Covid-19 spread. How many people are going to die because they can't properly see doctors for their other issues? A lot more than Covid-19 deaths to low risk people I would bet. Maybe it wouldn't make a difference, but you are giving them little to no chance at that point.