Anonymous ID: 9d9f69 Jan. 26, 2020, 2 a.m. No.7918267   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8281 >>8453 >>8561 >>8624

>>7918245

>>7918245

>i got paywalled so can't see the rest, but HIV drugs for kung-flu seems unusual

Using HIV antivirals against a totally different virus sounds unusual. But it's not inconceivable that the two may share a common mechanism in that replication process that could be targeted by this drug.

It also quite possible that the CCP wants to put on a show of "doing something"; and this is the best they got. The video of those mosquito sprayers come to mind.

Anonymous ID: 9d9f69 Jan. 26, 2020, 2:18 a.m. No.7918343   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8363

>>7918327

>42 dead, 38 recovered.

These sound like numbers for those who were so sick they needed to be admitted to intensive care. I'm sure there where a LOT more people who recovered after only mild symptoms.

Anonymous ID: 9d9f69 Jan. 26, 2020, 2:35 a.m. No.7918406   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8417 >>8453 >>8561 >>8624

>>7918345

>Corona viruses include the common cold.

>it mutates too quickly.

That is probably what this one will evolve into eventually. It's not in the interest of a virus to make its host too sick for them to interact with other potential hosts. Read:

 

Evolution from a virus's view

https://evolution.berkeley.edu/evolibrary/news/071201_adenovirus

Anonymous ID: 9d9f69 Jan. 26, 2020, 2:46 a.m. No.7918444   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8450 >>8497

>>7918417

>Perfect ELE.

>VERY deadly, long incubation, symptom less transmission period of three days.

Then why hasn't every other similar virus evolved to do this? Apparently, it's not perfect.

This is the third time in 20 years (that we know if) that a coronavirus has hopped from animal species to humans. We only now about it now because we now have the tech to recognize it as more than a bad cold. But this sort of thing has been happening for eons. Occasionally a mysterious plague appeared, and everyone blamed it on witches or comets or whatever. But there have been no mass die-offs from respiratory illnesses.