So a question and a point.
If the tests can't tell the difference between the flu and COVID, both corona viruses, how the hell can they tell if it's variety A or D? Answer: they can't and it's all B.S.
Iceland and Gibraltar have some of the highest vaccination rates in the world and they are both having big outbreaks. I was downvoted for pointing this out last week.
Here is a good watch incase you haven't seen it.
I will be posting about a podcast tomorrow that explains where we are headed, the prison the prisoners can't see. The futures so bright, I gotta wear shades.
I'll check it out. I have seen some of these guys before.
The tests only test for antibodies, not specific diseases. If you have an infection of any kind your body produces antibodies so the test will come out positive. Koch's Postulates and the Rivers Criteria both specify that to determine the tocicity of any pathogen it must first be isolated. This makes viruses particularly difficult as they need a host to stay alive. The SARS-CoV-2 virus has never been isloated so it can't be tested for as of yet.
So then in order to find a "Delta variant" your body would have to put out a different antibody to a "Alpha variant" correct?
I don't believe that there's a delta variant, it's just the virus present in the vaccine strengthened by additional spike proteins. It isn't a mutated form of the alpha variant. Viruses don't mutate, they have to be manipulated in a lab. Ever wonder why polio never mutated after a vaccine was found, or why you only needed one dose of the vaccine?