![]() | "Most viruses in nature don't become more problematic as they go through the human the human system. They become less problematic. Remember remember the the whole COVID thing. Like, in the beginning, people were getting super, super sick. It was it wasn't as contagious, but it was more virulent." "And as it attenuated into the human bodies, it sort of spilt it kind of fizzled out a bit. And then we got the omicron, which was, you know, less it was more spreadable, but it was much less pathological. And that's the natural process that happens." "So when you're gonna have problems real problems with, microbes, they're usually going to be reverse attenuated, meaning made more lethal in a lab, and then they're introduced into the population. And look." "I'm not making this up either. Nineteen sixteen, Upper East Side Manhattan, there was a Rockefeller lab that their their specific stated goal was to try to create the most pathological, neuropathological strain of polio possible. And they did that by taking monkey brains and human, spinal serum and injecting it into monkeys. And, there was a big problem with that, which was released into the public by accident. And the world experienced the worst polio epidemic on record, twenty five percent mortality." "That's unheard of. Really freaked the public out. But as it as it and then you can see the epicenter as it fanned out. And as it fanned out and as time went on, never heard of it again. It it attenuates as it moves through the body because it's a normal human commensal that goes back to its normal state when it's in a human." "And that's generally what happens. If you have a highly lethal virus and it kills a lot of people, those people are dead. They can't spread anything. So that's kind of a different story if you wanna talk about hantavirus or something like that. But as far as polio goes, no." "Polio was only made more lethal by the stupid things that humans did around it. So make it more invasive into the body just like you can go do stupid things and end end up with herpes outbreaks and, you know, staph outbreaks." [link] [comments] |