"A virus is not a miasma, a cootie, or red goo like in the children’s book Cat in the Hat.
 There is no path toward waging much less winning a national war against
 a virus. It cares nothing about borders, executive orders, and titles. A
 virus is a thing to battle one immune system at a time, and our bodies 
have evolved to be suited to do just that. Vaccines can give advantage 
to the immune system through a clever hack. Even so, there will always 
be another virus and another battle, and so it’s been for hundreds of 
thousands of years.
If you read the above carefully, you now know more than you would know from watching 50 TED talks on viruses by Bill Gates."
 (...)
"“Communities faced with epidemics or other adverse events respond 
best and with the least anxiety when the normal social functioning of 
the community is least disrupted.”
And that’s what we did for the one hundred years following the 
catastrophic Spanish flu of 1918. We never again attempted widespread 
closures or lockdown precisely because they had failed so miserably in 
the few places they were attempted.
The cooties theory attempted a comeback with the Swine flu of 2009 
(H1N1) but the world was too busy dealing with a financial crisis so the
 postwar strategy of virus control and mitigation prevailed once again, 
thankfully. But then the perfect storm hit in 2020 and a new generation 
of virus mitigators got their chance to conduct a grand social 
experiment based on computer modeling and forecasting."
https://www.aier.org/article/smart-society-stupid-people/
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