“The COVID-19 PCR tests were a fraud.” You have heard this before, but is it true or just more hype? Read this report and decide for yourself. It explains the fundamentals of the RT-PCR (Reverse Transcriptase – Polymerase Chain Reaction) test kits for those who want to understand the facts. Do not expect an easy read. For starters, you will need to familiarize yourself with the basic structure of DNA. Understanding how misinterpretation of the RT-PCR test results was used to create the COVID-19 pandemic will be your reward. You will be immunized against future efforts to create fear and societal discord. Rest assured; they will try again!
A serious flu-like respiratory disease began to spread in early Fall 2019 with Wuhan, China, as “ground zero.” By December, worldwide spread of the disease was underway. Images of hapless pedestrians suddenly falling dead in the streets; overwhelmed hospitals in Lombardy, Italy; government-imposed lockdowns; and nonstop coverage of worldwide COVID deaths fanned the flames of fear surrounding this unknown disease. It was not enough to be symptom-free. People demanded the development of a test to detect silent carriers of the infectious agent.
Only the genome sequence of SARS-CoV-2 was known at the time, and the only available testing method used polymerase chain reaction, a.k.a. PCR. Despite many known contraindications, RT-PCR widespread testing for COVID-19 began. According to Dr. Trish M. Perl, an epidemiologist at Johns Hopkins and past president of the Society of Health Care Epidemiologists of America, blind faith in the results of technically complex molecular tests results in “pseudo-epidemics.” [https://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/22/health/22whoop.html] The COVID-19 pandemic was one of those.
Even Kary Mullis, the Nobel Prize-winning inventor of PCR, would not have approved. PCR revolutionized the life sciences, especially molecular biology. This extraordinary biochemical tool facilitated all manner of techniques that were close to impossible without it. Unfortunately, demonstrating the presence of a VIABLE infectious agent is not within PCR’s skill set. Although Mullis was talking about HIV, the following quote is still appropriate for COVID-19. “[PCR] doesn’t tell you that you are sick, or that the thing that you ended up with was going to hurt you or anything like that.” Mullis continues, “It allows you to take a minuscule amount of anything and make it measurable and then talk about it.” [https://off-guardian.org/2020/10/05/pcr-inventor-it-doesnt-tell-you-that-you-are-sick/]