Bernd 05/13/2021 (Thu) 07:44:42 No.43593 del
>>43590
>Typically, with something like the common cold
Yes, that's what I was talking about. But at covid noone talks about how a tub of snot built up on their mucus membranes so they had runny nose and had to blow it. They don't even list it among the symptoms of covid. (And the cough, they describe it as a dry cough which means no mucus lower either.)
>So Covid's sometimes a little scary for seeming to be a little different sometimes, if it don't flat out kill you that is.
Covid doesn't kill you, pneumonia does.
Btw pneumonia, even from common cold one can get pneumonia. Since my early childhood I heard this from doctors to "be careful not so it won't spread to the lungs" (back then they were happy to administer bunch of antibiotics too for the same reason, which led to the birth of "super-bugs"). Had bronchitis twice in the last 15 years - that has a "wet" cough due to all the mucus in the lower tracts -, that can also lead to pneumonia.
>Covid gets in there and rips up most of the support cells before their body reacts properly...
>involving the part two never cells
These paragraphs sound like the speculation part. And the website of Penn I mentioned above, writes similarly. And not even longer than this.
On the other hand a very good explanation of that symptom would be psychosomatic, since this "loss of smell" symptom was thrown in on day one, and since than fearmongering did not stop, making masses of people hysterical.
This is part of the reason I brought this up here since Rusbernd experienced it first hand, and judging by his comments he doesn't sound the type of neger who would imagine a symptom.

>protein spikes
Since when can you find angiotensin converting ensymes and type II pneumocytes in the nose?
Here this pimp explain it to you:
https://tube.cadence.moe/watch?v=4J0d59dd-qM
And now maybe I'm getting sound rude but that's because in that paragraph you became a completely obnoxious tard by resorting to insults and appeal to authority, which I've no idea why you did.

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