That's good.
Leftism sure looks bad after 2020, doesn't it?
It always looked bad.
Edited to add: "Long Covid" is about to be the bane of every employer/HR office and insurance company. I'm already tired of hearing about it, and it's only been about a year. They keep pushing the thought that long covid effects kids, but the only people I see complaining about it are middle aged fat women with comorbidities. It is unironically the new "muh fibro" and a great excuse to get on disability for life. The symptoms are super vague ("brain fog", "tiredness", "headaches", "shortness of breath" - literally things every fat person experiences daily due to being fat fucks) and there's no testing for it. It mostly effects over 25 and under 50s, so young people get over it and elderly people are laughably stronger than these middle aged women. Men tend to complain of more "concrete" symptoms (things like chest pain and low oxygen saturation) and are more likely (and quicker) to report being fully recovered.
The problem with "Long Covid" is that it makes no sense from a taxonomic standpoint.
COVID/SARS-CoV-2 is a Coronavirus, which is a temporary simple RNA virus. These types of viruses infect, spread then eventually die off in the host. They are, even at their longest infection cases, temporary.
"Long Covid" implies that SARS-CoV-2 is something along the lines of a Retrovirus (reverse-transcriptase) such as HIV/AIDS or a DNA virus (herpes, chicken pox/shingles); something that permanently infects the host and has permanently altered the hosts cells.
But this is not true.
That's not what it does.
Now, in the case of something like Polio (which is also a temporary RNA virus), its a matter of the virus infecting and doing serious damage to vital tissue (specially bone marrow & CNS).
So is it possible that COVID could do enough damage in 2-6 weeks to cause a long-term complication, HOWEVER:
1) It wouldn't be asymptomatic, if the virus is doing that much damage to your lungs, you will know you have it and know you have it bad
2) Because all actual cases of post-COVID damage come from ICU patients, there is a chance the scarring could have come from ventilators
3) One of the leading studies that "proved" COVID does long-term damage used no control group
4) The damage would also have to be so bad or your body otherwise impaired that it can't actually fix the damage the virus did. (Which again, applies to oldfats who were in the ICU and not kids with asymptomatic infection or munchies who think every "2:30 feeling" at work is "Long Covid")