Reflections on Empire, Papacy and States
10 May 2025
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COVID-19 started in America, not China, a new Chinese Government report has claimed, in the latest salvo in the five-year long propaganda war over the origins of the virus.
The question of early spread of COVID-19 continues to fascinate, not least because of what it implies for the futility of interventions. So, when exactly did the virus first appear in Italy?
When he appeared at the Covid Inquiry this week, Boris Johnson had a golden opportunity to get to the heart of the issue and denounce lockdown as unnecessary and harmful. But he blew it, says Dr. Jay Bhattacharya.
U.S. Government sources have named the three Wuhan lab workers said to be Covid 'patient zero' in November 2019. However, on current early spread evidence that is too late to be the first infection.
There is much evidence the virus was spreading globally in autumn 2019. However, it was in Wuhan that it had its first explosive outbreak, shortly after being detected there. This is unlikely to be a coincidence.
When did the coronavirus first appear? The evidence from testing and sequencing of stored samples suggests it emerged some time between July and November 2019 and circulated silently across the globe during that winter.
The pandemic emergency appears to have been orchestrated by the US biodefence network, which used it to put into practice the emergency protocols it had been preparing for two decades to respond to biological attacks.
There is now lots of evidence that COVID-19 was spreading globally by autumn 2019 at the latest. But why then were there no excess deaths until March 2020? New York City may point us to the answer.
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