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Ryan G's avatar

I really appreciate the middle path you've walked between between the entrenched camps in Germ and Terrain Theory. With Germ Theory you've got microbes as demonic attackers that kill and destroy indiscriminately and that the victim is powerless to stop, and with some in the Terrain Theory camp they think viruses are a hoax and that all contagion is impossible, and even that there's really no immune system.

Fascinated by your hypothesis that the body accepts viruses generated from other organisms if it thinks they would be beneficial for clearing out toxins. That would mean viral contagion happens as generally understood, but there's less fear attached to it as it's not a random demonic attack…it's actually a choice made by your body to try to heal, which the body often succeeds but sometimes fails at.

In light of your current understanding, what's your thoughts about the danger of bioweapons released into the atmosphere? If they worked, would they only be a danger to the already sick? My current position is that direct injections are much more dangerous, and if I was a psychopathic military mastermind, that's how I'd deploy them. Take the so-called "Gulf War Syndrome" that was blamed on depleted uranium. That seemed to be a cover-up for the harm caused by the anthrax vaccines given to the soldiers at the time (I'm not asserting the vaccines were intended as a bioweapon in that case, but that the injections were very dangerous and the blame was shifted to some external cause "in the air").

What about the so-called 'lab leak' theory of Covid-19? I certainly have my doubts about this narrative, but I'd be interested to know if you think it's even possible in theory.

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Emmett's avatar

Thank you Jeff. For putting so much energy into your reply. I'll re-read the above and digest it again. After one read, it seems that your three answers are:

1. No. That is, viruses do not cause illness.

2. No. That is, viruses are never materially transmissible by any natural mechanism.

3. A virus is a particle that results from specific cellular environments and conditions and playing indirect roles in cellular detoxification.

I can see that your disagreement with the "no virus" crowd would be resolved with a simple change in the definition of a virus. Eg. If they claimed there is no such thing as a virus particle which is materially transmissible by natural means or can cause any illness, then you'd be in total agreement.

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