THE FACTS OF INFECTION ARE SUPPRESSED FROM YOU TO CONVINCE YOU OF THE FALSE NARRATIVE
In the Journal of Infectious Diseases published Oct 2008 by Anthony Fauci about the 1918 Spanish Flu indicates some startling facts that Fauci today, as well as the experts, are suppressing and reversing their position on when it comes to COVID.
This excerpt is from the publishing itself indicating that the INFECTION was not the primary cause of deaths, but that those infected with secondary conditions of bacterial pneumonia is more probable. NOT THE PATHOGEN ITSELF. And that it would be difficult to prove the flu itself was the primary cause. Of course the reverse is promoted today because people do not research.
It is stated in the Abstract:
Despite the availability of published data on 4 pandemics that have occurred over the past 120 years, there is little modern information on the causes of death associated with influenza pandemics.
Here is a sample:
Published pathologic and/or bacteriologic findings from the 1918–1919 influenza pandemic. Although the cause of influenza was disputed in 1918, there was almost universal agreement among experts [e.g., 20, 27–33] that deaths were virtually never caused by the unidentified etiologic agent itself, but resulted directly from severe secondary pneumonia caused by well-known bacterial “pneumopathogens”; that colonized the upper respiratory tract (predominantly pneumococci, streptococci, and staphylococci). Without this secondary bacterial pneumonia, experts generally believed that most patients would have recovered [20]. In type, pattern, and case-fatality rate, influenza-associated bacterial pneumonia was typical of pneumonia that was endemic during periods when influenza was not prevalent [25, 28, 33, 34]. As described above, in cases for which a single lung pathogen was recovered from culture, the anatomical-pathological type of the pneumonia usually corresponded to what was expected. Bacteria were commonly observed in cases of pneumonia caused by each of these pathogens. Such findings reflect the characteristic pathology of bacterial pneumonia [10, 25, 27].
Publishing:
https://academic.oup.com/jid/article/198/7/962/2192118
Other sources: