sabato 21 marzo 2020

L'origine del Coronavirus



A quanto pare e che con le limitate informazioni alle quali è possibile accedere sembrerebbe che il Coronavirus non sia altro che un errore proveniente da un laboratorio militare batteriologico Cinese.

Nel 2019 un operatore è stato infettato e da lì è iniziata la pandemia.

A Wuhan si trova l'unico laboratorio per la sperimentazioni di armi batteriologiche sul continente terra (tutti gli altri sono su piattaforme marittime o isole).

E' un operazione fatta di proposito ?


Certamente no.

Qui sotto un articolo del 2017 in cui la rivista di scienza Nature (una delle più autorevoli del globo, in pubblicazione dal 1869) parla di questo laboratorio.


Una delle tante domande.

Se questo è vero perchè non veniamo informati ?

Semplice, perchè anche altre grandi potenze Occidentali e non, stanno sperimentando armi batteriologiche da decenni.

Qui sotto un interessante video del 26 Gennaio in cui Paolo Liguori riporta questa notizia ricordandoci l'importanza della Geopolitica globale e di come gli scenari stiano cambiando.



Detto questo attenzioni agli Ospedali, ogni giorno ci viene detto il numero dei morti CON Coronavirus ma non DI Coronavirus...

Una buona parte di questi sarebbe morta comunque ?
Se si il Virus ne velocizza il decesso,
Se si gli Ospedali diventano i più importanti centri di propagazione.

L'eroico personale medico, in primissima linea, deve essere sottoposto ai test regolarmente.

Allego un altro articolo di Nature del 2015 nel quale si parla di questi esperimenti, e il servizio su Leonardo tg3 conseguente.



Gli Esperti confermano che non si tratti di questo virus, bene, possibile... Ma resta una innegabile coincidenza tra questi laboratori, esperimenti e il luogo d'origine...

Altre conferme della sua origine da Laboratorio arrivano dal documento pubblicato da due studenti Cinesi (prontamente censurato) :

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8009669/Did-coronavirus-originate-Chinese-government-laboratory.html

https://www.adnkronos.com/fatti/esteri/2020/02/17/coronavirus-uscito-laboratorio-wuhan_gR57PH36KSpZcqmqwQEliM.html?refresh_ce


In quest altro interessante video della China Science Communication ci spiegano come il laboratorio di Wuhan sia efficiente nel raccogliere campioni di pipistrelli e altri animali selvatici per studiare i virus.



Altre prove:


Qui sotto anche una timeline dettagliata del Coronavirus:

Dec 16, 2019: A worker of a wildlife market in Wuhan, Hubei province, China, is the first recorded case of a new kind of pneumonia
Dec 27: Chinese scientists tell Wuhan health officials that a new coronavirus is causing the new kind of pneumonia
Dec 30: Ai Fen, director of the emergency at Wuhan Central hospital, tells other doctors about a new SARS-like virus but she is reprimanded by the hospital and forbidden to post any more information; Wenliang Li, one of the doctors that has received the information, posts to a WeChat group of his former schoolmates that a new SARS-like infection has been confirmed and his post is shared widely on WeChat
Dec 31: Wuhan health officials confirm 27 cases of covid-19 and close the wildlife market that seems related to the virus' spread, and China reports a cluster of pneumonia in Wuhan to the World Health Organization caused by a new type of coronavirus, initially labeled "novel coronavirus" or nCoV
Dec 31: Taiwan inspects all passengers coming from Wuhan
Jan 1: Wuhan's Public Security Bureau intimidates the eight doctors who had posted about the new illness on WeChat while the Hubei Provincial Health Commission orders city labs to stop testing samples and to destroy existing samples
Jan 3: Wuhan police summons Wenliang Li and reprimands him for "making false comments on the Internet"
Jan 3: Zhang Yongzhen at Fudan University in Shanghai analyzes a sample from Wuhan and realizes that it is 89.11% similar to the SARS virus
Jan 5: Fudan University in Shanghai announces that the Wuhan cluster is associated with a novel coronavirus and that it has sequenced the entire genome
Jan 6: The New York Times publishes an article about a pneumonia-like illness in Wuhan
Jan 9: The Wuhan City Health Commission declares that "there is no evidence the virus can spread among humans"
Jan 10: Chinese scientists of Fudan University in Shanghai publish the new virus' genetic sequence on Virological.org (original post)
Jan 11: A Communist Party meeting is held in Wuhan as scheduled while the Wuhan Health Commission insists there are no new cases
Jan 11: Wuhan (and therefore the world) records the first death of covid-19
Jan 12: There are no covid-19 cases outside the province of Hubei (World Health Organization)
Jan 13: The first covid-19 case is reported outside China (a Chinese woman from Wuhan in Thailand)
Jan 14: The World Health Organization reports that "preliminary investigations conducted by the Chinese authorities have found no clear evidence of human-to-human transmission of the novel coronavirus identified in Wuhan"
Jan 15: The first case in Shanghai (a woman from Wuhan)
Jan 15: Japan's first case (a Chinese man coming from Wuhan)
Jan 17: The genetic analysis of two Thai travel cases proves that human-to-human transmission is happening in Wuhan
Jan 18: The Wuhan Health Commission announces four new cases but tens of thousands of people are allowed to gather for the Annual Wuhan Lunar New Year banquet
Jan 20: Chinese scientist Zhong Nanshan determines that the virus can be passed between people and the news is broadcast to the nation by CCTV
Jan 20: The USA and South Korea both find their first cases of covid-19
Jan 20: Chinese officials confirm that there is human to human transmission of the virus
Jan 21: China's People's Daily reports the covid-19 epidemic in Wuhan and quotes a top official as stating that "anyone who deliberately delays and hides the reporting of [virus] cases out of his or her own self-interest will be nailed on the pillar of shame for eternity."
Jan 22: China's death toll jumps to 17
Jan 23: China locks down Wuhan but Wuhan's mayor Zhou Xianwang admits that more than 5 million people have already left Wuhan.
Jan 23: Taiwan bans all Wuhan residents
Jan 24: Taiwan stops exports of surgical face masks and orders local companies to increase production
Jan 24: Vietnam's first case, with evidence of person-to-person transmission
Jan 24: Taiwan stops exports of surgical face masks and orders local companies to increase production
Jan 24: The first paper is published in a scientific magazine (Wang C, Horby P, Hayden F, Gao G: "A novel coronavirus outbreak of global health concern")
Jan 24: China's Lunar New Year holiday begins with hundreds of millions of people moving around the country but China also extends the lockdown in Hubei province and starts to build a new hospital in Wuhan
Jan 25: Taiwan suspends tours to China
Jan 25: China cancels all public events for the Lunar New Year
Jan 25: California's first case, the third case in the USA
Jan 27: Germany's first case (Webasto headquarters in Bavaria)
Jan 27: China's death toll passes 100, almost all in Hubei province
Jan 30: India's first case
Jan 30: 54 academic papers about covid-19 have been published in English-language journals, mostly written by Chinese scientists (Nature)
Jan 31: Taiwan orders face mask distribution to all schools
Jan 31: After Italy discovers the first cases (two Chinese tourists in Roma), it suspends all flights from China
Jan 31: Spain's first case, a German tourist in the Canary Islands
Jan 31: The first case in Silicon Valley (a resident returning from Wuhan)
Jan 31: The first death of covid-19 outside China is recorded in the Philippines
Jan 31: Trevor Bedford at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle posts on his blog a note that the new virus spreads easily like the flu and he has been alerting authorities since Jan 20

Feb 2: The Philippines reports the first death outside of China, a Chinese man from Wuhan
Feb 3: South Korea starts testing for the virus
Feb 6: Taiwan bans all Chinese visitors
Feb 7: Wenliang Li, the doctor who first announced the existence of a new deadly coronavirus, dies
Feb 8: The death toll of covid-19 in China (811 deaths) surpasses that of the 2002-2003 SARS epidemic
Feb 11: China's death toll passes 1,000
Feb 11: China fires senior officials of Wuhan including the head of the Hubei Health Commission
Feb 12: Japan announces more than 100 cases of covid-19 on board the quarantined Diamond Princess cruise ship
Feb 13: China removes Hubei's provincial party secretary and Wuhan's party secretary, the first time since 2017 that top officials have been removed
Feb 14: The FDA stops the clinical virology laboratory at the University of Washington from testing for covid19
Feb 14: Egypt's (and Africa's) first case
Feb 14: France's (and Europe's) first death from covid-19
Feb 17: China's death toll is 1,770 with 70,548 cases but infections start slowing down
Feb 19: Iran's first case and first deaths
Feb 20: The first case in Italy's Lombardy
Feb 20: South Korea's first death
Feb 20: Russia bans entry for Chinese citizens
Feb 21: Israel's first case
Feb 22: South Korea reports 229 new cases in a single day
Feb 24: Kuwait, Bahrain, Iraq, Afghanistan and Oman report their first cases
Feb 25: South Korea's cases rise to 977 and Italy's to 229 while the epidemic stabilizes in China
Feb 26: More new cases are now reported outside China than inside, notably the first cases in Norway, Romania, Greece, Georgia, Pakistan, and Brazil
Feb 27: Italy's infections jump to 650 while Estonia, Denmark and the Netherlands report their first cases
Feb 28: Britain's first case
Feb 28: Nigeria's (and therefore sub-Saharan Africa's) first case, an Italian visitor
Feb 29: The first death in the USA. The USA has only tested 472 people.
Feb 29: South Korea reports 813 new cases in one day

Mar 2: Saudi Arabia, Tunisia and Jordan report their first cases
Mar 2: Donald Trump on national television downplays both the health effects and the fatality rate of covid-19
Mar 4: Italy has 3,089 cases and all schools and universities are ordered to close
Mar 6: The Atlantic calculates that only 2,000 tests have been performed in the USA (article)
Mar 7: There are more than 100,000 confirmed cases in the world and about 3,500 people have died worldwide, but mostly in the Hubei province of China (80,000 cases, about 3,000 dead)
Mar 9: Italy enacts a nation-wide lockdown
Mar 10: First deaths in Lebanon and Morocco
Mar 11: The USA bans all travel from Europe
Mar 11: First cases in Turkey and Bolivia
Mar 15: Spain's cases jump to 7,700 with 288 deaths
Mar 16: A study published by Imperial College London predicts that, unless aggressive action is taken, the coronavirus could kill 2.2 million people in the USA
Mar 16: Iran has a total of 14,991 infections and 853 deaths.
Mar 17: Italy has 31,506 cases with 2,503 deaths
Mar 18: Italy has 35,713 cases with 2,978 deaths
Mar 18: China reports no new cases except for Chinese returning from abroad
Mar 19: The USA is now the 6th country in the world for covid-19 cases after China, Italy, Iran, Spain and Germany
Mar 19: No new cases are recorded in Wuhan for the first time
Mar 19: The number of deaths in Italy passes China's (3,405 to 3,245)
Mar 19: More than 600 cases are confirmed in 34 countries in Africa
Mar 21: Europe is now the epicentre of the epidemic with Italy reporting 53,578 cases and 4,825 deaths and Spain reporting more than 21,000 cases and more than 1,000 deaths
Mar 21: 42 of Africa's 54 countries have cases
Mar 22: Worldwide the death toll is more than 13,000 out of more than 300,000 cases
Mar 23: Africa's cases surpass 1,000
Mar 23: As Britain and other countries join the lockdown, about two billion people worldwide are in a partial or total lockdown
Mar 24: New York has half of the 50,000 cases of the USA and 210 of the USA's 655 deaths but only a tiny percentage of the population has been tested in the other states
Mar 24: India orders a nation-wide lockdown
Mar 25: There are 452,241 cases (81,218 in China, 74,386 in Italy, 60,653 in the USA, half in New York, 47,610 in Spain) and 20,494 deaths in the world (3,281 in China, 7,503 in Italy, 3,434 in Spain, 2,077 in Iran, 1,100 in France, 819 in the USA)
Mar 26: South Africa begins a nation-wide lockdown