UPDATE:
one of the “strange and unique” COVID symptoms, cited to prove “the
virus must be the cause,” is loss of the sense of smell. Try this. On a
search engine, type in, “Mayo Clinic, loss of smell, causes.” You’ll
find a long list of conventional explanations. Nothing new or unique…
Recently,
I published an article explaining why people are dying without the
presence of a virus. It’s the great COVID re-labeling scam.
All sorts of traditional lung problems are re-packaged as “COVID.”
Of course, I’ve also been writing many articles showing that SARS-CoV-2 has never been proven to exist.
I’ve
made it clear that in every so-called epidemic, there are “outlier
cases.” People with unusual symptoms. Commenters pick up on these
outliers and weave all sorts of stories around them.
COVID
is no different in this respect. The stories begin with reports that
“some patients” have extreme shortness of breath, or their chest X-rays
reveal “ground glass” lung patterns.
Therefore,
the stories go, SARS-CoV-2 must exist, or another massive and singular
cause is creating these highly unusual symptoms.
First
of all, in the reports, we don’t know HOW MANY patients have the
unusual symptoms. Is it 10? 50? 500? And are they all from the same city
or town? We’re fed a generality.
And
second, no one bothers to look for prosaic causes of these “strange
symptoms.” Of course not. That would be too obvious. Too simple. Less
interesting.
Let
me give you an example. Extreme shortness of breath. Hypoxia. Low
oxygen levels in the blood. That’s one of the “strange symptoms.”
Patients in New York have mystified ER doctors because they show up with this condition.
But
WebMD lists a number of obvious causes for hypoxia: asthma attack;
trauma (injury); COPD; emphysema; bronchitis; pain medicines, “and other
drugs that hold back breathing”; heart problems; anemia, “a low number
of red blood cells, which carry oxygen.”
Among
the drugs that can cause the oxygen deprivation known as hypoxia? From
drugabuse[dot]com: “…opiate [opioid] drugs also slow your breathing…and
in case of an overdose, your breathing is slowed to a virtually
non-existent and lethal level.”
Is anyone looking into THAT, in New York?
More
from drugabuse[dot]com: “In the U.S., a whopping 44 people die each and
every day as a result of respiratory arrest brought on by prescription
opioid overdose. The opioids depress your breathing, bring on heavy
sedation and make it impossible to wake up. What’s more, the opioids
found in painkillers are the same ones found in heroin, which caused
over 8,000 overdose deaths in 2013.”
2018
estimate of deaths from opioid overdoses in New York: 3000. Many more
people in the New York area are addicted to these drugs. In New York
State, in 2017, the number of people discharged from hospitals, after
treatment for opioid overdose or dependency: 25,000.
In
2020, people who have developed opioid hypoxia are misdiagnosed with
“COVID-19 lung problems.” Some of these people would be sedated further,
put on ventilators---ignoring the need to deal with their overdose,
their addiction, their withdrawal---and they die.
New York City, opioids, heroin, severe breathing problems, hypoxia, ventilators with sedation, death.
None of this requires the existence or transmission of a purported coronavirus.
And hypoxia can be alleviated with oxygen delivered through means other than ventilators.
So…it
turns out that extreme shortness of breath is not unusual. It has a
number of causes. None of them requires the existence of a virus.
Now
let’s consider the so-called “ground glass” phenomenon. From MEDPAGE
Today: “The term [ground glass] refers to the hazy, white-flecked
pattern seen on lung CT scans, indicative of increased density.”
“Chest
radiologists adopted it [the term] in the 1980s, with a first
appearance in the Fleischner Society Glossary of Terms for Thoracic
Radiology in 1984.”
"’We
see [ground-glass opacities] so often in chest imaging,’ Guo [‘Henry
Guo, MD, PhD, of Stanford University in Palo Alto, California’] told
MedPage Today. “They come in different shapes, sizes, quantities, and
locations, and they can indicate many different underlying pathologies
-- including other viral infections, chronic lung disease, fibrosis,
other inflammatory conditions, and cancers.”
So there’s nothing new or highly strange about the ground glass phenomenon.
But
wait. There’s more. “Adam Bernheim, MD, of the Mount Sinai system in
New York City, authored one of the early papers on chest CT findings in
COVID-19. He and his colleagues studied images captured from 121
patients at four centers in China mostly in late January [2020].”
"’There
are a lot of diseases that can cause ground-glass opacities, but in
COVID-19, there's a distinct distribution, a preference for certain
parts of the lung,’ chiefly in the lower lobes and periphery, and it
appears multifocally and bilaterally, Bernheim said.”
“COVID-related
ground-glass opacities also have a very round shape that's ‘really
unusual compared with other ground-glass opacities,’ he said.”
Aha. So maybe COVID patients ARE exhibiting an outlier pattern of ground glass.
Alas, there are several problems with that assertion:
First of all, how do we define a “COVID patient?” Through a PCR test for a virus that has never been proved to exist.
The
second problem with the doctor’s statement in the MEDPAGE article? All
the patients came from China, and they were diagnosed very early, at the
beginning of the “outbreak.” How were they diagnosed?
“Guess
what? We have 20 patients with unusual CT lung scans. We’re going to
call them ‘pandemic victims of a new virus.’ Why? Because they have
unusual CT lung scans.” This is called circular reasoning. It’s a
chapter in a subject called logic, which used to be taught in schools,
before “I’m triggered” and “I want to cancel everything” became major
courses on the way to a PhD in Grunge.
The
other problem has to do with deadly pollution, and what lung X-ray
patterns it can cause. In China, for example, above large cities like
Wuhan, there is a unique mixture of early industrial and modern
industrial pollutants---never before seen in human history.
The
synergistic effects of these individually toxic compounds have never
been studied. Therefore, it’s quite possible that the outlier ground
glass patterns are the result of this new and different air pollution
mixture.
What
I’m reporting, in this article, needs to be understood, before making
bald claims that a new virus, or some other esoteric cause, is
responsible for “ground glass in COVID patients” or “low oxygen levels.”
Getting the picture?
Going
off on tangents---claiming that “some COVID patients” are showing
astounding symptoms---makes for shocking stories, but it doesn’t take
into account far more likely explanations.
People
with a propensity for launching shocking stories will never be
satisfied with ordinary answers. They’ll keep driving their tales
forward. They’ll keep claiming patients are showing symptoms that have
never been seen before.
Some
shocking stories are true. Some aren’t. I suggest using a degree of
rationality and logic, to differentiate between what is merely bizarre
for its own sake, and what is strange AND true.
(The link to this article posted on my blog is here -- with sources.)
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