The covid planners systematically excluded people who could effectively point out lockdown harms from policy spaces, and censored and engaged in 'devastating takedowns' of outside scholars who pointed out these harms.
I know you love to quote facts that you think fit your narrative. But, with the greatest of respect, you lack the medical knowledge to realise when facts do, or do not, fit that narrative.
There are 2 key elements in relation to communicable diseases. Firstly, how widespread they are. And secondly, how dangerous they are.
An HCID only deals with the 2nd of those criteria. Typically, an HCID has a mortality rate of roughly 50%-that is the High Consequence in the HCID. As a result, there are all sorts of rules to keep infectious people away from everyone else. Things like ebola, lassa fever and the likes. Fortunately, all extremely rare in the UK.
I don't know what the Death rate was when Covid was at its worst. Probably about 1%. Obviously, higher for at risk groups, and lower for the young. The difference was in how widespread Covid was. Rather than the %age who died.
So-for example-if 4 people get Lassa Fever, and 2 die, that's 50%. And if 1 million people got Covid, and 10,000 died, in 1 sense that is only 1%.
But in another that is 2 people dying. And 10,000 people dying. And why 2 people died in specialist units. And thousands died in the general hospital population.
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https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1657552012098301953.html
https://www.conservativereview.com/horowitz-confidential-pfizer-document-shows-the-company-observed-1-6-million-adverse-events-covering-nearly-every-organ-system-2661316948.html
Covid was officially downgraded by the government 4 days before the first lockdown.
I know you love to quote facts that you think fit your narrative. But, with the greatest of respect, you lack the medical knowledge to realise when facts do, or do not, fit that narrative.
There are 2 key elements in relation to communicable diseases. Firstly, how widespread they are. And secondly, how dangerous they are.
An HCID only deals with the 2nd of those criteria. Typically, an HCID has a mortality rate of roughly 50%-that is the High Consequence in the HCID. As a result, there are all sorts of rules to keep infectious people away from everyone else. Things like ebola, lassa fever and the likes. Fortunately, all extremely rare in the UK.
I don't know what the Death rate was when Covid was at its worst. Probably about 1%. Obviously, higher for at risk groups, and lower for the young. The difference was in how widespread Covid was. Rather than the %age who died.
So-for example-if 4 people get Lassa Fever, and 2 die, that's 50%.
And if 1 million people got Covid, and 10,000 died, in 1 sense that is only 1%.
But in another that is 2 people dying. And 10,000 people dying. And why 2 people died in specialist units. And thousands died in the general hospital population.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1232869/