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Coronavirus Timeline, S and L Strains

Grandy

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S Strain is older than L Strain. S is red. And S is weaker.
The code for the virus has been published and the introduced mutations documented. Some of the documentation – for example the Indian paper suggesting that HIV was introduced – has been discounted subsequently but there is no question but that the Wuhan virus was lab-engineered.

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Maatje Benassi had the S Strain of CoronaVirus from the beginning.

Benassi Infected US teammates Before Wuhan, China

Mar 26, 2020. "Patient Zero - Maatje Benassi - Maatje Benassi infected many of her American teammates before arriving in Wuhan. Five of them were sick enough to be hospitalized in Wuhan during the games and evacuated back to the US where they later died. I wonder how the contingent of 300 military personnel who descended on Wuhan just prior to the first outbreak in Wuhan are faring? How many fell ill? How many more died?
What we do know for sure:
- 300 American military personnel stayed at the Wuhan Oriental Hotel during the World Military Games in Wuhan
- 172 American athletes won ZERO events, picking up 5 bronze and 3 silver
- 5 Americans soldiers were so sick they had to be hospitalised and evacuated back to the US where they later died
- 42 staff at the Wuhan Oriental Hotel formed the first cluster of Covid19 where it spread out to their families and friends
- 7 people who worked at the Huanan Seafood Market and had contact with staff at the Wuhan Oriental came down with Covid19 and spread it to people who came to the market"


[US military biowarfare] George Webb Charette #8: Wuhan Games, Tracing the Coronavirus


Here are some time stamps.

1. 1 35 to 4 58
The US military's biological attack against China, Iran, and Italy used a two part bioweapon.
There are two coronavirus strains.
S strain (weak) - S strain has a single copy of covid-19. This low quantity makes it WEAK and allows the infected to recover and gain immunity. US military was infected with this strain to become immune. They become immune to all variants of covid-19.

L strain (strong)
- L strain has many copies of covid-19. This high quantity makes it STRONG and overwhelms the infected and has a much higher death rate.
The replication was done in the encoding region for the mra using the gene splicing tool, crispr.
2. 6 33 to 6 19
L strain kills by overloading the body - specifically, the lungs.
3. 6 40 - 7 01
The only difference in the L and S strains is the number of repetitions of the virus sequence.
more repetitions = more lethal.
4. 9 24 - 9 38 This is absolutely an engineered bioweapon. The periodicity/repetition is totally unnatural. It can only be achieved by human engineering.


 
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USA will try to cover it as hard as possible.

Because of this scandal is too scandalous.

Whatever it's a bioweapon leak or bioweapon attack.


But I still prefer the bioweapon leak scenario.
 
Five of them were sick enough to be hospitalized in Wuhan during the games and evacuated back to the US where they later died.

Oh brother! simply quoting a random forum commentator without any factual basis.

If they were evacuated back to the US and died..the finger pointing at China would have started in August.
 
There are THREE distinct strains of the novel coronavirus in the world and the virus 'may be mutating to thrive in different immune systems'
  • Type A is closest to the one found in bats and pangolins and has two sub-clusters
  • One sub-cluster has links to Wuhan and the other is found in the US and Australia
  • Type B is derived from type A and is the dominant variation seen in Wuhan
  • Type C is the 'daughter' of type B and was spread to Europe via Singapore
By JOE PINKSTONE FOR MAILONLINE

PUBLISHED: 10:12 EDT, 9 April 2020 | UPDATED: 12:01 EDT, 9 April 2020

There are three main types of the novel coronavirus infecting people, and the strains may be mutating to conquer the immune systems of populations around the world.

The genetic history of the coronavirus was mapped from December 24 to March 4, revealing three distinct, but closely related, variants.

Researchers from the University of Cambridge found the virus now seen in Wuhan, China and East Asia — ground-zero for the outbreak — is not the original variety.

Instead, this strain (known as type B) is derived from the original SARS-CoV-2 virus which jumped into humans from bats via pangolins (type A).

Type A is the version now most prevalent in America and Australia.

Another variation, called type C, descended from Wuhan's type B, and spread to Europe via Singapore.

Scientists believe the virus may be constantly mutating to overcome differing levels of immune system resistance in different populations.

Methods used to trace the prehistoric migration of ancient humans were adapted to track the spread of the SARS-CoV-2 virus, which causes COVID-19.

Scroll down for video
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The genetic history of the coronavirus was mapped from December 24 to March 4, revealing three distinct, but closely related, variants. Scientists believe the virus may be constantly mutating to overcome differing levels of immune system resistance in different populations

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Dr Peter Forster at the University of Cambridge told MailOnline his team began tracking the genomic evolution of the virus in February, after it became evident international spread was inevitable

Dr Peter Forster, a fellow of the McDonald Institute of Archaeological Research at Cambridge, as well as the University's Institute of Continuing Education, told MailOnline his team began tracking the genomic evolution of the virus in February, after it became evident international spread was inevitable.

Long-establish methods refined in the 1990s to trace the migration of humans out of Africa 60,000 years ago were applied to the virus to identify its root and subsequent spread.

A total of 160 largely intact genomes of the coronavirus from the GISAID database, a German-based website, were provided to the team of researchers.

These contained samples from many of the first cases in Europe and America.

'It allows you to look at the beginnings of the epidemic - this is the first genomic snapshot of this happening,' Dr Forster said.

'The root of the network is not the type seen in China, which is type B. The root is Type A which is seen in America and Australia.

'The majority of cases in Wuhan are B type while a derived C type later emerged and spread initially via Singapore.'

Type A is the closest to the one found in bats and pangolins and is considered to be the 'root' of the outbreak.


It was found in Wuhan but was not the city's most predominant variation.

Type A has two sub-clusters and the first, labelled as the T-allele, has substantial links to East Asia as it was found in Americans that lived in Wuhan.

However, the second A type sub-cluster, called the C-allele, is slightly different due to a string of mutations.

In the study, published today in the journal PNAS, the researchers write: 'It is noteworthy that nearly half of the types in this subcluster, however, are found outside East Asia, mainly in the United States and Australia.'

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Methods used to trace the prehistoric migration of ancient humans was adapted to track the spread of the SARS-CoV-2 virus, which causes COVID-19

The study had access to 93 type B genomes and 74 were in either Wuhan (22), other parts of eastern China (31) or neighbouring Asian countries (21).

A smattering were identified elsewhere, but type B had a strong affinity for Wuhan and is derived from type A via two mutations, at T8782C and C28144T.

However, the variant does not travel well beyond the region. Type B was found to be comfortable in the immune systems of people in Wuhan and did not need to mutate to adapt.

However, outside of Wuhan and in the bodies of people from different locations, the variation mutated much more rapidly, indicating it was adapting to try and survive and overcome resistance.

Dr Forster told MailOnline: 'The coronavirus mutated from type A to B and, in B form, it feels comfortable in host immune systems in East Asia and can invade it.

'But in Europe or Australia, for example, immune history varies due to exposure to different diseases over time.

'Type B of the virus may not thrive in hosts outside East Asia and it is possible it mutated to survive in different populations.

'We are currently analysing 1,000 more SARS-CoV-2 genomes to confirm this as the mutation rate appears to increase outside of China.'

The 'C' variant is the 'daughter' of type B and is the major European type, found in early patients from France, Italy, Sweden and England.

It is absent from the study's Chinese mainland sample, but seen in Singapore, Hong Kong and South Korea.

Dr Forster's latest work on more than 1,000 further genomes has not yet been published or peer-reviewed but suggests the first infection and spread among humans of COVID-19 occurred between mid-September and early December.

The scientists argue that these methods could help predict future global hot spots of disease transmission and surge.

'Phylogenetic network analysis has the potential to help identify undocumented COVID-19 infection sources, which can then be quarantined to contain further spread of the disease worldwide,' said Dr Forster.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-8204255/There-THREE-separate-types-coronavirus.html
 
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Assuming this to be more or less accurate then this poses a major and expanding threat that will not be easy to overcome, if at all.
It will become endemic to human populations and will claim millions
 
  • "Type A is closest to the one found in bats and pangolins and has two sub-clusters
  • One sub-cluster has links to Wuhan and the other is found in the US and Australia
  • Type B is derived from type A and is the dominant variation seen in Wuhan
  • Type C is the 'daughter' of type B and was spread to Europe via Singapore"
Erm.. if type B came from type A, surely it then becomes plausible that this outbreak started in USA, where type A is dominant? This type was then exported to Wuhan, where type B arose. That would be the simplest explanation.

@beijingwalker @viva_zhao
 
If A is the parent and even Gov Cuomo of NY admitted that the US could have had COVID-19 cases in late 2019 concurrently to the limited exposure in Wuhan in Oct/Nov. Then US is the founder of COVID-19.

So much for the lies about Bat Soup.

The Chinese are heroes for first identifying COVID-19 for the scientific community.

Not sorry, Rich, this is no longer a conspiracy theory:


The alibi of how could doctors fail to detect a SARS virus... is being admitted as likely by doctors around the world that they did in fact fail to detect a SARS virus when the virus was circulating North America and Europe.

That was the alibi of Rich for USA, and that alibi no longer exists.

Has Covid-19 been in humans for years?
Leading scientists tell CNN that it's possible the virus didn't just come from bats in the past months, but that it may have existed in humans many months or even years before it grew into a deadly pandemic. CNN's Nick Paton Walsh reports.
Source: CNN

 
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  • "Type A is closest to the one found in bats and pangolins and has two sub-clusters
  • One sub-cluster has links to Wuhan and the other is found in the US and Australia
  • Type B is derived from type A and is the dominant variation seen in Wuhan
  • Type C is the 'daughter' of type B and was spread to Europe via Singapore"
Erm.. if type B came from type A, surely it then becomes plausible that this outbreak started in USA, where type A is dominant? This type was then exported to Wuhan, where type B arose. That would be the simplest explanation.

@beijingwalker @viva_zhao

lol. That's not how it works.
 
But it is a plausible mechanism. In fact, it's the simplest mechanism of evolution of the three strains, assuming the research is correct of course.

Not even close buddy, what you have said makes zero sense.

"Strain A exists in Bats in US, Australia, and Wuhan."

You say it's plausible that strain A was brought to Wuhan from US, and that it then became B.

You already failed because that's not how mutations work and you never spoke about the vector.
 
Not even close buddy, what you have said makes zero sense.

"Strain A exists in Bats in US, Australia, and Wuhan."

You say it's plausible that strain A was brought to Wuhan from US, and that it then became B.

You already failed because that's not how mutations work and you never spoke about the vector.

Does Covid19 have a "vector"? This is the first I've heard about it if so.



zoonosis
/ˌzuːəˈnəʊsɪs,ˌzəʊəˈnəʊsɪs/

noun
  1. a disease which can be transmitted to humans from animals.


Vector-borne diseases include infections transmitted by mosquitoes, ticks and fleas. Common vector-borne diseases include Lyme Disease and Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever (transmitted by ticks) and West Nile Virus (transmitted by mosquitoes). Zoonotic diseases are infections spread from animals to humans.
 
Here's my opinion:

If death and infection rate data is accurate (big if), we may infer that China has a lower death rate and infection rate with variants A and B in circulation together, while those rates were higher with variant A alone. This in turn infers a lower impact on infection rate and death rate from variant B compared directly with variant A.

So, if variant B has characteristics that diminish its ability to infect and/or kill compared with variant A, the question persists:

Why would variant A, which was apparently working fine killing and infecting people in Wuhan, transform into variant B which is evolutionarily a backwards step?

It's more plausible that variant A existed earlier in USA but was never identified, then it went to China and something the Chinese gave their patients/quarantine measures was effective against variant A, leading to selection pressure and local emergence of variant B. Meanwhile, variant A, which has quietly been spreading for a long time in USA misdiagnosed as something else, dramatically explodes in count when testing is finally effective. Remember that the Chinese instituted large scale testing early and effectively.

Hence, the present figures of infections and deaths in USA exceeds that in China significantly.

USA shouldn't have such numbers of cases and deaths if the virus arrived in USA later.

Of course, this theory depends on honesty of statistics reported and also on true representativeness of those stats.
 

Does Covid19 have a "vector"? This is the first I've heard about it if so.



zoonosis
/ˌzuːəˈnəʊsɪs,ˌzəʊəˈnəʊsɪs/
noun



    • a disease which can be transmitted to humans from animals.


Vector-borne diseases include infections transmitted by mosquitoes, ticks and fleas. Common vector-borne diseases include Lyme Disease and Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever (transmitted by ticks) and West Nile Virus (transmitted by mosquitoes). Zoonotic diseases are infections spread from animals to humans.

Yes. Every disease has a vector. If you don't know that, you really shouldn't comment on it.
 
  • "Type A is closest to the one found in bats and pangolins and has two sub-clusters
  • One sub-cluster has links to Wuhan and the other is found in the US and Australia
  • Type B is derived from type A and is the dominant variation seen in Wuhan
  • Type C is the 'daughter' of type B and was spread to Europe via Singapore"
Erm.. if type B came from type A, surely it then becomes plausible that this outbreak started in USA, where type A is dominant? This type was then exported to Wuhan, where type B arose. That would be the simplest explanation.

@beijingwalker @viva_zhao
https://defence.pk/pdf/threads/abc-...g-contagion-in-november.660634/#post-12217180

ABC News: US intelligence warned of China's spreading contagion in November
 
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