You've mentioned this a few times in the thread over the last few months, so I took a look into it. Apparently the fungal spores can germinate on the filter, and then grow mycelium throughout it.....Fungus is really hardcore. I also imagine the high humidity in the post hurricane environment would only speed this process up. Not the case for a virus that happens to find itself stuck the the electrostatically charged fibers in the filter, compound this with the fact that the virus doesn't do so well on things like paper, rough surfaces, and it probably dies after a certain number of days in something like a P100 filter.
I want to preface this by saying the BIORXIV stuff is all in preprint, and not peer reviewed yet, but I still find this troubling. I have avoided the topic, but it seems to keep reappearing. It's getting harder to ignore the neurological implications of COVID, and the worse thing about it is that this neurological side of things has the longest fuse, the longest delay time to figuring out what's going on. I have a feeling it's going to take years to figure it all out. I have to ask myself do I throw all of this info away? The MSM is picking up this stuff and magnifying it, does that mean it's all spin? I think that's the hardest thing, sifting the spin from the actual information.
The macaque study you
linked spooked me. Again, it's preprint, but still. They found stuff in the brains that is associated with Parkinson's disease in all covid infected macaques. If you don't know what Parkinson's is think Michael J. Fox, he had Parkinson's disease.
View attachment 2394165
The only positive is that if this is the case, and we are going to have an epidemic of this disease, maybe it will get the attention it deserves and a ton more research. Then you might say what about the vaccine!? But then there's this to consider:
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33789211/
View attachment 2394183
They suggest the spike itself could lead to these amyloid clumps forming as well. This doesn't make me sleep better. The lag time on this is so frustrating, it takes years to develop these diseases.
@Drain Todger why do you always find the worst news? I have no idea who you are, what your motives truly are (aside from a doomposting affinity), but even so, this is a hard one to just hand wave away.
What can you do? I have to agree on the fitness/nutrition advice. There are quite a few unknows, like just how prevalent this might be, and if you can have a better chance the more fit you are (probably). If this isn't a severe wakeup for anyone who's been neglecting their fitness, diet, etc. I'm not sure what to say. Do all variants of this disease cause the neurological symptoms to the same degree? If the virus gets weaker, as it has been doing in regards to mortality rate, does this apply to it's neurological component. The thing that has me wondering now, is that you have all these vaccinated asymptomatic carries of covid now, walking around with the virus in their bodies, is that a good thing? I would want it out of me as fast as possible, not hiding under the radar. Is the immune system attacking covid as hard as it should in the vaccinated? If it hangs around in you a long time, is that more chance of it opening an "CHAZ automonous zone" in your brain? I hate having so many questions, and very few answers. I need a drink.