Reminder - they changed the definition of "cases" in August, then increased the number of tests being done by a huge margin. What happens is you get more cases simply because they laxed the requirements to encompass more false positives and upped the testing to get more of the fake cases.
20k tests per day at height of scamdemic vs 40k to 80k per day. If you tests 100k people every day, youll get fucking false positive "cases" of common coronavirus family. No one is getting hospitalized. No one is fucking dying. We magically cured influenza and wiped it out this past year.
They fucking changed the graph when people looked at the data a week or so ago - it used to list the number of confirmed influenza cases. It was changed after people noticed we had I think 6 confirmed cases listed or some shit to "*below average influenza levels" and a link to bullshit. The numbers were for the first couple weeks of influenza season, but the average for the same time period over the past several decades is numbered in the hundreds and thousands compared to virtually none now for the first month or so of flu season (it starts sometime in august for reporting and data lags, so only first month or so is available so far).
Reminder - they changed the definition of "cases" in August, then increased the number of tests being done by a huge margin. What happens is you get more cases simply because they laxed the requirements to encompass more false positives and upped the testing to get more of the fake cases.
https://www.statista.com/statistics/1111726/covid-19-tests-carried-out-daily-in-canada/
20k tests per day at height of scamdemic vs 40k to 80k per day. If you tests 100k people every day, youll get fucking false positive "cases" of common coronavirus family. No one is getting hospitalized. No one is fucking dying. We magically cured influenza and wiped it out this past year.
https://ipac-canada.org/influenza-resources.php
They fucking changed the graph when people looked at the data a week or so ago - it used to list the number of confirmed influenza cases. It was changed after people noticed we had I think 6 confirmed cases listed or some shit to "*below average influenza levels" and a link to bullshit. The numbers were for the first couple weeks of influenza season, but the average for the same time period over the past several decades is numbered in the hundreds and thousands compared to virtually none now for the first month or so of flu season (it starts sometime in august for reporting and data lags, so only first month or so is available so far).