That data would likely not make much difference, apart from being even less reliable.
“Case” is a blurry term to begin with and case-rates, as seen from 2020 onward, are rather arbitrary numbers.
Back when AIDS was prominent in media, definitions would be changed on-the-go: While initially only a positive test result would be a “case”, later, a collection of symptoms would suffice. Sometimes this can be seen on the charts as rather sudden deviations.
Above all, knowing a case-rate wouldn’t answer the core question:
Was there ever a virus to begin with?
The facts gathered so far - some of which outlined in the video - steer the answer towards a strong “No.”
That data would likely not make much difference, apart from being even less reliable.
“Case” is a blurry term to begin with and case-rates, as seen from 2020 onward, are rather arbitrary numbers.
Back when AIDS was prominent in media, definitions would be changed on-the-go: While initially only a positive test result would be a “case”, later, a collection of symptoms would suffice. Sometimes this can be seen on the charts as rather sudden deviations.
Above all, knowing a case-rate wouldn’t answer the core question:
Was there ever a virus to begin with?
The facts gathered so far - some of which outlined in the video - steer the answer towards a strong “No.”