How covid began
2 years ago
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So right when Covid was beginning there were all kinds of news reports about it, and I think a lot of reasons why anti-vax and others kept toning it down was because they didn't find out about it much later, and they thought the news was making it out to be worse than it really was. So, here's a summary of one thing that happened in the news around January that year, long before nations started taking action against it.
Covid19, at that point just coronavirus or corona, was starting to be noticed by a doctor Li Wenliang, and he told his friends through social media to be careful because it showed signs of fast spread. The Chinese government arrested (or something similiar) him and about a dozen others for spreading misinformation and had them publicly apologize.
During this time corona was coming up more frequently in reports as hospitals started noticing an uptick in sick patients. Eventually the... district I think, was closed down, but the government took few actions beyond this to slow it, because they kept insisting it wasn't that big an issue and would sort itself out.
The doctor who was one of the first to inform the public about corona soon after was reported to be working in a hospital to try and help with the now growing amount of patients. A short time later it was reported he'd caught it, and another short time later he died from it around February.
About a month later the Chinese government commented on it, mainly by not mentioning the fact the whistleblowers had been detained for their early actions, and basically took credit for their actions, among other things to try and push back against the resentment people felt at the time.
So, that's pretty much what I can remember from the first two months, though I had to look up his name and that he was a doctor (I thought he was a medical student). So my first introduction to the virus was that a government had failed to react in a timely fashion, that it was deadly and spread fast, and that more could have easily been done right at the beginning, if not for the place it began. It was also made clear that any government trying to tone down how bad it was would be affected the worst in the long run.
I think this is why when people blame other issues or claim that the virus wasn't deadly or that they died from other causes and only happened to have covid, I just remember that doctor and all the other wasted opportunities and all the stupid shit people did to "prove" that covid wasn't something worth worrying about.
Covid19, at that point just coronavirus or corona, was starting to be noticed by a doctor Li Wenliang, and he told his friends through social media to be careful because it showed signs of fast spread. The Chinese government arrested (or something similiar) him and about a dozen others for spreading misinformation and had them publicly apologize.
During this time corona was coming up more frequently in reports as hospitals started noticing an uptick in sick patients. Eventually the... district I think, was closed down, but the government took few actions beyond this to slow it, because they kept insisting it wasn't that big an issue and would sort itself out.
The doctor who was one of the first to inform the public about corona soon after was reported to be working in a hospital to try and help with the now growing amount of patients. A short time later it was reported he'd caught it, and another short time later he died from it around February.
About a month later the Chinese government commented on it, mainly by not mentioning the fact the whistleblowers had been detained for their early actions, and basically took credit for their actions, among other things to try and push back against the resentment people felt at the time.
So, that's pretty much what I can remember from the first two months, though I had to look up his name and that he was a doctor (I thought he was a medical student). So my first introduction to the virus was that a government had failed to react in a timely fashion, that it was deadly and spread fast, and that more could have easily been done right at the beginning, if not for the place it began. It was also made clear that any government trying to tone down how bad it was would be affected the worst in the long run.
I think this is why when people blame other issues or claim that the virus wasn't deadly or that they died from other causes and only happened to have covid, I just remember that doctor and all the other wasted opportunities and all the stupid shit people did to "prove" that covid wasn't something worth worrying about.
FA+


bobingabout
WhiteChimera
Samhat1
MrSandwichesTheSecond
But yeah, the rest of the information you posted here sounds very similar to the information that I was hearing by the non-mainstream channels (about the first whistleblower being arrested and disappearing, the main doctor dying suddenly, etc).
It didn't help that the Impeachment stuff was distracting the media over here, and other groups were saying it was racist to be worrying about the disease, and actively encouraging things like hugging throughout January and February.
That there was even a disease was all 'a conspiracy theory' at the beginning, that reaction seems to have been memory holed.
either way that is an interesting thing you brought up. China still seemingly benefited from this occurrence though.
It's important that we don't need to know 1000% of the details to come to a conclusion and take action.
And anyways, this was a later conspiracy theory based on the fact Wuhan has a bio-lab in the area. We know that the outbreak came from the Wuhan Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market, which is a thing China still has, and historically these wet markets are responsible for most outbreaks, as far as I know, because they sell wild animals, keep livestock next to dead animals, and generally it's unsanitary. Imagine over a thousand stalls crammed together where every kind of meat and produce is sold, not packaged or sterilized, with live animals all over the place.
* Covid-19 is very similar to SARS; this also contributed to the high level of concern early on
* SARS has been on the radar for a while as a plague threat.
* Covid-19 sequencing shows evidence of man-made tinkering.
* Wuhan Lab published a study about modifying SARS back in 2016. They have a history of doing this behavior.
Now what are they NOT telling you?
* What are the stakes if China was indeed doing this and the truth was broadly accepted? World War 3. It doesn't have to be that dramatic but decoupling our economies at the minimum, which would be a very expensive affair.
* Who benefited from this plague? Large multinational corporations and their pet politicians.
* Would they love to see another plague unleashed so they can sell more "solutions"? You bet! They don't want the bioweapon treaty enforced.
There's a big reason they don't want to tell you the truth.
It's plausible that Fauci discussed in secret what the origins could be for Covid, but does that say where the origin actually was, or was this more of a brain-storm session? I'd need to read more from the report than from a news site that may be more economically motivated than motivated to tell the facts.
I've said it before that this brainwashing system is a trillion dollar industry. They've done tons of research and learned lots of tricks for how to mislead you.
Some shit happened, totalitarian government kept all information held up, when it was too late, the damage was far too much to cover it up.