There were screams about a new virus but no tests available for anyone to find out if we had the dreaded disease or not.
If there were no tests, how do we know that there was a reason to panic? If there were only a handful of positive tests, how do we know for sure that the virus wasn't here and spreading months earlier? Maybe what they were calling COVID-19 was here for a year or more.
How did we know how many ventilators were going to be needed and where? And ventilation itself is a strange approach in any case, since it's so deeply damaging and even deadly.
As the months went on, there were other crazy things happening, such as the gradual discovery that the PCR tests were good only for discovering the presence of the virus but nearly useless for delineating sick from not sick.
We were told to test, test, test, but there was never an action item of what to do with a positive case.
Over the following week, the social media site Parler was shut down by Amazon, which was hosting its website, just before the app was removed from Apple.
We now have emails from April 2020 showing that Twitter officials knew for sure that the Election Integrity Partnership of the Stanford Internet Observatory was being established by the Cybersecurity and Information Security Agency of the Department of Homeland Security precisely to monitor and control social media.
No comments:
Post a Comment