Well here’s the thing. He got sick in April. They didn’t have tests then, so they just told him he probably had it and to stay home.
Later took the antibody test and had antibodies for it. When they donate, the donation center said 2-6 months immunity, but I guess he still has enough and qualifies to donate.
The whole thing is really suspicious because (correct me if I’m wrong) once you have antibodies to these types of viruses, you are immune for life. You only “re-catch” them if they mutate. Even for diseases that can come back, usually its decades later (like shingles from the chickenpox virus). I have never heard anything about any immunity that lasts that shortly, and I read quite a bit about stuff like this.
I didn’t want to spend too much time grilling him because he’s a casual acquaintance, but it doesn’t add up for me.
Well this whole plannedemic doesn't add up except that globomohos want the US to fall, which is a goal they've been working towards since 1913 with the creation of the Fed.
As it happens my Mom deliberately got me a case of the chicken pox in 1969, on my first ever Christmas vacation. I was miserable the whole time, and didn't miss one speck of school. Every female on her side of the family spent their last many decades of life miserable with shingles, and it's the exact same virus. So I'm prone to that problem, and developed some persistent nasty symptoms since lockdown started. I'm 5 years too young to get the vaccine, and haven't found any other treatment. And a vaccine with symptoms is probably a bad idea generally. Which is to say I've looked into all this a LOT since February.
Anyway, the common cold is something we beat only by the normal human immune response. The old saying goes you get over a cold in 2 weeks without medicine, but with medicine it only takes 14 days. We catch a cold again precisely because said immunity is not lifelong. How long immunity lasts varies, but generally after recovery we're weaker, not stronger. So it is possible we develop antibodies to CCPvirus that aren't lifelong, aren't complete, and who the fuck knows really.
It was always wrong to claim no human has any resistance to this. It's 78% the same as either SARS or some other coronavirus I'm not sure which, and our immune response is apparently identical to ALL of it. Which is what I suspected from day 1 of antibody testing being announced. So whatever is being learned about this is being mostly obscured by disinformation, and that is quite obviously deliberate.
From what I’ve heard, the shingles vaccine is pretty nasty.
I’ve heard good things about lysine supplementation. It works to suppress viral replication of herpes viruses (same family), and there are promising preliminary studies for shingles treatment.
I like to read scientific studies on google scholar for my data. Might be a low cost/low risk treatment option for you.
Wow! Lysine has promising preliminary treatment for shingles treatment? Now you're talking my language :) OTC, cheap, no risk of side effects
Yeah since I've got weird neuropathy that even might be associated with shingles, I'd hate to try the vaccine for fear of flaring it up when otherwise I might be able to beat it and not suffer with it.
How long have his antibodies been good?
Well here’s the thing. He got sick in April. They didn’t have tests then, so they just told him he probably had it and to stay home.
Later took the antibody test and had antibodies for it. When they donate, the donation center said 2-6 months immunity, but I guess he still has enough and qualifies to donate.
The whole thing is really suspicious because (correct me if I’m wrong) once you have antibodies to these types of viruses, you are immune for life. You only “re-catch” them if they mutate. Even for diseases that can come back, usually its decades later (like shingles from the chickenpox virus). I have never heard anything about any immunity that lasts that shortly, and I read quite a bit about stuff like this.
I didn’t want to spend too much time grilling him because he’s a casual acquaintance, but it doesn’t add up for me.
Well this whole plannedemic doesn't add up except that globomohos want the US to fall, which is a goal they've been working towards since 1913 with the creation of the Fed.
As it happens my Mom deliberately got me a case of the chicken pox in 1969, on my first ever Christmas vacation. I was miserable the whole time, and didn't miss one speck of school. Every female on her side of the family spent their last many decades of life miserable with shingles, and it's the exact same virus. So I'm prone to that problem, and developed some persistent nasty symptoms since lockdown started. I'm 5 years too young to get the vaccine, and haven't found any other treatment. And a vaccine with symptoms is probably a bad idea generally. Which is to say I've looked into all this a LOT since February.
Anyway, the common cold is something we beat only by the normal human immune response. The old saying goes you get over a cold in 2 weeks without medicine, but with medicine it only takes 14 days. We catch a cold again precisely because said immunity is not lifelong. How long immunity lasts varies, but generally after recovery we're weaker, not stronger. So it is possible we develop antibodies to CCPvirus that aren't lifelong, aren't complete, and who the fuck knows really.
It was always wrong to claim no human has any resistance to this. It's 78% the same as either SARS or some other coronavirus I'm not sure which, and our immune response is apparently identical to ALL of it. Which is what I suspected from day 1 of antibody testing being announced. So whatever is being learned about this is being mostly obscured by disinformation, and that is quite obviously deliberate.
From what I’ve heard, the shingles vaccine is pretty nasty.
I’ve heard good things about lysine supplementation. It works to suppress viral replication of herpes viruses (same family), and there are promising preliminary studies for shingles treatment.
I like to read scientific studies on google scholar for my data. Might be a low cost/low risk treatment option for you.
Wow! Lysine has promising preliminary treatment for shingles treatment? Now you're talking my language :) OTC, cheap, no risk of side effects
Yeah since I've got weird neuropathy that even might be associated with shingles, I'd hate to try the vaccine for fear of flaring it up when otherwise I might be able to beat it and not suffer with it.