Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What would you suggest people who become enlightened by this article do? COVID is in the community. 99% of the time you go out to crowded places, you won't get it, but then you get unlucky and do. Should people avoid any indoor spaces outside their home, and when they can't, cover their mouths and noses with tight-fitting masks indefinitely for that 1% of times to avoid a 3 pt loss in IQ that is of indeterminate persistence in the long term and indeterminate clinical significance? What about people with young children who can't mask properly but are at a critical stage in their social development? What about people who are hard of hearing and rely on seeing people's faces to understand what they say?
They've now found that using a CPAP device with degraded foam can cause cancer. Can you imagine what they'll find twenty years from now in people who wore synthetic and treated masks all day for several years?
In your view, do masks explain the findings of covid in the brain in autopsies of recovered people?
I'm going to say this as gently as I possibly can. NOBODY CARES unless you are a scientist who is interested in this. People do not care about things that don't affect them and these studies don't show an impact that is clinically significant.
Well, this study shows what I have personally experienced, as has my brother, my SIL, my mother, my MIL. I'm glad that you and your family have not. Regardless of your views of masking, etc.
Anonymous wrote:What do you suggest? I’d rather be slightly dumber than a hermit with no friends
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What would you suggest people who become enlightened by this article do? COVID is in the community. 99% of the time you go out to crowded places, you won't get it, but then you get unlucky and do. Should people avoid any indoor spaces outside their home, and when they can't, cover their mouths and noses with tight-fitting masks indefinitely for that 1% of times to avoid a 3 pt loss in IQ that is of indeterminate persistence in the long term and indeterminate clinical significance? What about people with young children who can't mask properly but are at a critical stage in their social development? What about people who are hard of hearing and rely on seeing people's faces to understand what they say?
They've now found that using a CPAP device with degraded foam can cause cancer. Can you imagine what they'll find twenty years from now in people who wore synthetic and treated masks all day for several years?
In your view, do masks explain the findings of covid in the brain in autopsies of recovered people?
I'm going to say this as gently as I possibly can. NOBODY CARES unless you are a scientist who is interested in this. People do not care about things that don't affect them and these studies don't show an impact that is clinically significant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What would you suggest people who become enlightened by this article do? COVID is in the community. 99% of the time you go out to crowded places, you won't get it, but then you get unlucky and do. Should people avoid any indoor spaces outside their home, and when they can't, cover their mouths and noses with tight-fitting masks indefinitely for that 1% of times to avoid a 3 pt loss in IQ that is of indeterminate persistence in the long term and indeterminate clinical significance? What about people with young children who can't mask properly but are at a critical stage in their social development? What about people who are hard of hearing and rely on seeing people's faces to understand what they say?
They've now found that using a CPAP device with degraded foam can cause cancer. Can you imagine what they'll find twenty years from now in people who wore synthetic and treated masks all day for several years?
In your view, do masks explain the findings of covid in the brain in autopsies of recovered people?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What would you suggest people who become enlightened by this article do? COVID is in the community. 99% of the time you go out to crowded places, you won't get it, but then you get unlucky and do. Should people avoid any indoor spaces outside their home, and when they can't, cover their mouths and noses with tight-fitting masks indefinitely for that 1% of times to avoid a 3 pt loss in IQ that is of indeterminate persistence in the long term and indeterminate clinical significance? What about people with young children who can't mask properly but are at a critical stage in their social development? What about people who are hard of hearing and rely on seeing people's faces to understand what they say?
They've now found that using a CPAP device with degraded foam can cause cancer. Can you imagine what they'll find twenty years from now in people who wore synthetic and treated masks all day for several years?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What would you suggest people who become enlightened by this article do? COVID is in the community. 99% of the time you go out to crowded places, you won't get it, but then you get unlucky and do. Should people avoid any indoor spaces outside their home, and when they can't, cover their mouths and noses with tight-fitting masks indefinitely for that 1% of times to avoid a 3 pt loss in IQ that is of indeterminate persistence in the long term and indeterminate clinical significance? What about people with young children who can't mask properly but are at a critical stage in their social development? What about people who are hard of hearing and rely on seeing people's faces to understand what they say?
They've now found that using a CPAP device with degraded foam can cause cancer. Can you imagine what they'll find twenty years from now in people who wore synthetic and treated masks all day for several years?
Anonymous wrote:What would you suggest people who become enlightened by this article do? COVID is in the community. 99% of the time you go out to crowded places, you won't get it, but then you get unlucky and do. Should people avoid any indoor spaces outside their home, and when they can't, cover their mouths and noses with tight-fitting masks indefinitely for that 1% of times to avoid a 3 pt loss in IQ that is of indeterminate persistence in the long term and indeterminate clinical significance? What about people with young children who can't mask properly but are at a critical stage in their social development? What about people who are hard of hearing and rely on seeing people's faces to understand what they say?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is highly concerning since lately the theme is "covid is only a cold," here is the proof that it can leave long term damage to the body including brain function. It is worth the read.
https://theconversation.com/mounting-research-shows-that-covid-19-leaves-its-mark-on-the-brain-including-with-significant-drops-in-iq-scores-224216
The Conversation is not worth reading, much less reposting. https://www.reddit.com/r/australia/comments/ogji5c/thoughts_on_theconversationcom/
Anonymous wrote:Anecdotally, I have experienced this, as have my family members. And for my family members who have had covid several times, the negative cognitive effects are huge.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Then society has to deal with a collective three-point loss of IQ. Covid is endemic. This is the world we have to live in. Wringing hands about it isn’t going to do any good.
Get vaccinated and go on with your life.
Vaxxed and unvaxxed get covid.
Yeah, but unvaxxed get more serious cases. Greater loss of IQ according to that article, as well as greater costs to society from hospitalization, etc.
Anonymous wrote:I’m sure flu and other viruses do the same but we don’t study them. What do you propose we do?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Then society has to deal with a collective three-point loss of IQ. Covid is endemic. This is the world we have to live in. Wringing hands about it isn’t going to do any good.
Get vaccinated and go on with your life.
Vaxxed and unvaxxed get covid.