Quote:
Originally Posted by 'Hamas' Jenkins
Think of it this way:
Asymptomatic people have positive tests. To get a positive test you (99% of the time) have to have virus present. They're performing a nasopharyngeal swab, and the virus is there. If it's there I can't think of why it wouldn't be expelled in respiratory droplets. It already made it that far up from the lungs.
Now, I don't know if they've performed any studies on the amount of viral shedding. A fairly simple experiment might be to culture the respiratory droplets of asymptomatic vs symptomatic mild vs symptomatic severe cases.
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It just seems to me that we are finding almost like 30x more asymptomatic people to symptomatic when we do these tests in place like meat packing plants and what not. That's a lot of ****ing people to have this and not bum rushing the hospitals let alone dropping dead.
I don't now just things don't always seem to be adding up.