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I and a friend with whom I live both had bad colds in late October 2019. We live in Maryland right outside D.C., half a mile from the Forest Glen annex of Fort Detrick, which houses the mammoth Daniel Inouye Building, with medical research facilities of both the Army and the Navy.

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Thanks for sharing. To be clear, I'm not saying that everyone who was sick in these months had Covid, but I think some percentage with Covid-like symptoms (especially those who tested negative for the flu or never went to the doctor and got a flu test) did have Covid. It seems to be taboo for "journalists" to mention, but if they did their research and looked at all the ILI reports from the flu season of 2019-2020 produced by all the state health agencies and the CDC, they would see that ILI was "severe" and "widespread" in America. Scores of school closings in dozens of states also support this. The vast majority of these people did NOT test positive for the flu. If 30 million people were sick with ILI in this flu season and just five percent of these people actually had COVID, that's 1.5 million cases right there. If 10 percent had Covid. I know of one doctor who thinks 30 percent of the flu-negative sick patients actually had Covid. I would note that the CDC down-graded "estimates" of flu for this season (they now say there were only 20 million cases, which I think is a joke). The best evidence of early spread comes from two sources - people who were sick in November, December or January and later tested positive for Covid antibodies, as well as from the large numbers of Americans who had Covid-like symptoms who tested negative for flu. The "proof" this didn't happen comes from statements of public health officials who say this didn't happen. But you can probably guess what I think about such statements and the veracity of such alleged experts.

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┬┐Expertos? Tonter├нas

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De acuerdo.

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