The PCR Test
Are you aware that the Covid-19 virus is closely related to the common cold virus? There have been at least 60 studies that have shown that at least 20% to 50% of the people who were never exposed to the Sars-Covid-2 virus have reported T cell reactivity against the virus. This might have come from having a cold or the flu in past years as they are all related.
When a fair number of the population become immune to the disease herd immunity begins to kick in and that makes it difficult for the disease to spread. A person’s immunity can come about in a few ways. They might already be immune from the disease because of their history, they might catch the bug and their body recovers creating immunity that way, or they might have had a vaccination. Herd immunity is dependent on how easily the disease can spread. The more contagious the disease the higher the percentage of people who are immune to the disease must be to establish herd immunity.
In 1983 Dr. Kary B. Mullis invented the PCR test. On January 23, 2020, the World Health Organization (WHO) pronounced the PCR test to be the test of choice for detecting the Covid-19 virus. A year later they proclaimed that the PCR tests were flawed if they were run at a higher amplification than 35. The preferred amplification to detect the virus is 25 to 30 cycles. Anything more than that does not show how infectious the virus is. When testing first began some of the testing laboratories were known to run the test as high as 45 times magnification.
That sort of explains why they were telling us that the United States had such a tremendous outbreak of the Covid-19 virus. It also might explain why people who were told that they have the disease had no symptoms.