" Excuse my VPN, but it's time to come clear with this. It has been public knowledge for a good time now that there is two strains of the virus that cause COVID19. There is the L-type and the S-type. The reason for the two different strain is not commonly known, but I know and will share it with you. The L-strain is the lethal variant of the COVID19 disease while the S-strain is a safe strain of the disease that grants immunity to both, its also alot less infecious. Neither of these were never ment to be released into the public but none the less that happened.
When we in China figured out the lethal L-strain had been released into the public in Wuhan for well over two week, we had to make a very awkward call to the government and the PLA and tell them what had happened and what had to be done. The facility was set into mass production of the S-type strain while the PLA quarantined a lot of China. The PLA also warned to KPA about this and that's why the DPRK closed its borders before anyone else.
Meanwhile during the quarantine the stockpiles of the S-strain was delivered to many PLA air bases that started air disperal of the S-type to infect all the quaranteened cities to prevent the L-type from killing more inhabitants. Unforunately the L-strain escaped China's borders and made to the US and Europe and thats a disaser because the CDC or China will never recommend the west to produce the S-type strain and purposely infect their citizen with it, because that would be admitting that they made these viruses in the first place and lose face. This is just to get the truth out there before it is to late. "
https://boards.4chan.org/pol/thread/248567569
There are two strains, S and L.
L is the bioweapon, highly transmissable, sneaky and designed to kill the enemy via an outbreak and EVADE anti-body production. Iran and Italy (and now the rest of the EU and the US, etc) have the L strain. They can't have the S strain because it is barely transmissable.
S is an almost inert version that is not transmissable (R0 less than 0.5) and has to be sprayed onto people, IT GIVES IMMUNITY TO BOTH S and L.
So, if you were a state (China) and wanted to unleash the L version on your enemies, the S version will be given to your population to inoculate against L.
Makes a LOT of sense. China won't admit they dropped the ball and released the L version by accident, hence they won't admit they have the S version to stop their people and others outside China from dying.
This information begs the question:
Were the mass mandatory vaccinations mandated by China the S strain?
Was Wuhan the fall guy to give the appearance that China was a victim as well, thus getting the L strain?
Was the timing of millions of Chinese traveling abroad for their new year celebration more than just a coincidence?
Coronavirus: Are there two strains and is one more deadly?
Jessica Hamzelou
5-6 minutes
Health | Analysis 5 March 2020
Labs in China have produced covid-19 virus detection kits
ALEX PLAVEVSKI/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock
Two strains of the new coronavirus are spreading around the world,
according to an analysis of 103 cases. But the World Health Organization insists that “there is no evidence that the virus has been changing”. So how many strains are there, and why does it matter?
Viruses are always mutating,
especially RNA viruses like this one, coronavirus SARS-CoV-2. When a person is infected with the coronavirus, it replicates in their respiratory tract. Every time it does, around half a dozen genetic mutations occur, says Ian Jones at the University of Reading, UK.
When Xiaolu Tang at Peking University in Beijing and colleagues studied the viral genome taken from 103 cases, they found common mutations at two locations on the genome. The team identified two types of the virus based on differences in the genome at these two regions: 72 were considered to be the “L-type” and 29 were classed “S-type”.
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A separate analysis by the team suggests that the L-type was derived from the older S-type. The first strain is likely to have emerged around the time
the virus jumped from animals to humans. The second emerged soon after that, says the team. Both are involved in the current global outbreak. The fact that the L-type is more prevalent suggests that it is “more aggressive” than the S-type, the team say.
“There do appear to be two different strains,” says Ravinder Kanda at Oxford Brookes University in the UK. “[The L-type] might be more aggressive in transmitting itself, but we have no idea yet how these underlying genetic changes will relate to disease severity,” she says.
“I think it’s a fact that there are two strains,” says Erik Volz at Imperial College London. “It’s normal for viruses to undergo evolution when they are transmitted to a new host.”
It is vital to know how many strains of the virus exist. Around the world,
multiple groups are working on a vaccine for the virus. Any vaccine will need to target features that are found in both strains of the virus in order to be effective.
The differences between the two identified strains are tiny. In fact, they can’t really be considered to be separate “strains”, says Jones. And many of the genetic differences won’t affect the production of proteins, and so won’t change the way the virus works, or the symptoms it causes, he says. One is not more deadly than the other.
“In all practical terms, the virus is as it was when it originally emerged,” says Jones. “There’s no evidence it is getting any worse.” The sentiment is echoed by the World Health Organization. The study by Tang and colleagues only suggests there is some genetic diversity of the virus – it doesn’t mean it is changing, a representative told
New Scientist.
But we can’t say for sure. The study only represents 103 cases. A larger, online database has collated the sequencing results from 166 cases. Both represent a drop in the ocean of the almost 100,000 officially reported cases.
Jones says we can expect more strains to emerge. Epidemiologists generally agree that, once a person is infected with the coronavirus, they are unlikely to be infected again – unless the virus mutates to allow it to overcome the immune system’s defences.
This “selection pressure” could lead to the outbreak of a new strain, says Jones. This is the case with seasonal flu – new variants crop up every year that can infect people whether or not they’ve had flu in the past.
We could see the same pattern emerge for the new coronavirus in the coming years, says Jones. “I don’t see it going away any time soon.”
https://www.newscientist.com/articl...are-there-two-strains-and-is-one-more-deadly/