Without causation, that makes as much sense as saying the average german has lighter skin than the average African american
Without causation, that makes as much sense as saying the average german has lighter skin than the average African american
Lactose has been screened to inhibit the replication of the virus. That is the causation. You would maybe expect that lactose intolerant people consume less lactose.
Purell Frank wrote:
Corey Giles wrote:
Do you have any source for any of this?
This is a theory and conjecture.
You could have just said no.
I believe that this implies that virus induced megaloblastic anemia has been been shown to be causal. I don't know if sucking up the B12 is the mechanism though.
https://ashpublications.org/blood/article/108/11/3757/127006/Viral-Infection-Induced-Acute-Megaloblastic-AnemiaCorey Giles wrote:
Purell Frank wrote:
This is a theory and conjecture.
You could have just said no.
There are plenty of sources that show the prevalence of B12 deficiency in the elderly and that diabetes drugs and that PPIs inhibit B12 uptake. That is sort of general knowledge.
still here? wrote:
cwarcarblue11 wrote:
I live in AZ. My wife and I have been experiencing minor covid symptoms, and my wife went to the ER since she had some unusual effects. They did labs but did not test her because there were "no life threatening symptoms". They could tell she had a virus and said it was likely covid, but they only test those who have severe symptoms.
This is why we have such a high death rate compared to Germany and South Korea. They are only testing people with severe symptoms.
We are doing ok now and after 2 weeks we are much better.
Getting tested would not have made a whit of difference in you or your wife’s cases. The outcome of the test would not have altered your course of treatment.
Did you do division at school, it’s the denominator stupid.
Germany's chancellor has a PhD in physics. America has Trump.
Compare this (*subtitles in video, translation below):
https://twitter.com/BenjAlvarez1/status/1250563198081740800
"The curve has become flatter. It still needs to be in a way so our health system does not get overwhelmed. We have looked at models, we are currently at an R0 (basic reproduction number) of about 1.0. If we get back to an R0 of 1.1, then we will reach full capacity of ICU beds in October. And if we get an R0 of 1.2 - that means out of five people, one person infects two others, while four persons infect one other person each - then we will reach maximum load in July. And if we get to 1.3 - only a tiny change in the R0 - then we will reach this point in June already. So you can see in which small margin we are currently operating. The whole development depends on that we have an R0 that we can know, that we can track and that we have more protection policies, and more protection policies might enable us to loosen up more. But it's a fragile situation in which caution is the name of the game and not overconfidence."
To this:
https://twitter.com/joshtpm/status/1248699275355328512
"This is very complex, it's a very brilliant enemy. You know it's a brilliant enemy. They develop drugs, like the antibiotics. You see it, antibiotics used to solve every problem. Now one of the biggest problems the world has is the germ has gotten to brilliant that the antibiotic can't keep up with it. And they're constantly trying to come up with a new. People go to a hospital and they catch, they go for a heart operation that's no problem but the end up dying from ... from ... problems. You know the problems I'm talking about. " (Note: Antibiotics have nothing to do with viruses, they work on bacteria.)
The head (chancellor) of Germany has a doctorate in quantam chemistry. Not to say that she (like we all) doesn't have moments of moran-acy[sic], but so far they're in very good hands.
Apologies - didn't see your post.
I think Billy Madison could've given a better explanation. Holy Sh*t.
lcl2006 wrote:
"This is very complex, it's a very brilliant enemy. You know it's a brilliant enemy. They develop drugs, like the antibiotics. You see it, antibiotics used to solve every problem. Now one of the biggest problems the world has is the germ has gotten to brilliant that the antibiotic can't keep up with it. And they're constantly trying to come up with a new. People go to a hospital and they catch, they go for a heart operation that's no problem but the end up dying from ... from ... problems. You know the problems I'm talking about. [There’s a whole genius to it.]" (Note: Antibiotics have nothing to do with viruses, they work on bacteria.)
There are many more PHD's than billionaires in this World. Trump created a financial empire and then guided the US into a economic era that has never been seen in history. Liberal losers are delusional.
I could probably do a PHD on WW2 I'm learning so much about it
I know many many PHDs. They certainly have an important place in society, but i wouldnt put one of them in charge of anything. Most of them would agree, those that wouldnt, are in charge of things, and are complete nutters.
Merkel is definitely a nutter. Sadly, only when we see the excess deaths in Germany will we know the truth.
rando odnar wrote:
The head (chancellor) of Germany has a doctorate in quantam chemistry. Not to say that she (like we all) doesn't have moments of moran-acy[sic], but so far they're in very good hands.
Who are you quoting? Otherwise, I don't think you know how to use (sic) correctly.
I'm sure you felt smart when you typed it though.
Trump should send fat, well-armed idiots to Germany to protest! They’re making him look stupid.
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