5G and Coronavirus
November 22, 2020
FROM the important new book The Contagion Myth: Why Viruses (Including “Coronavirus”) Are Not the Cause of Disease by Thomas Cowan, M.D. and Sally Fallon Morrell:
On September 26, 2019, 5G wireless was turned on in Wuhan, China (and officially launched November 1) with a grid of about ten thousand 5G base stations — more than exist in the entire United States — all concentrated in one city. A spike in cases occurred on February 13 — the same week that Wuhan turned on its 5G network for monitoring traffic.
Illness has followed 5G installation in all the major cities in America, starting with New York in Fall 2019 in Manhattan, along with parts of Brooklyn, the Bronx and Queens — all subsequent coronavirus hot spots. Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Dallas, Cleveland, and Atlanta soon followed, with some five thousand towns and cities now covered. Citizens of the small country of San Marino (the first country in the world to install 5G, in September 2018) have had the longest exposure to 5G and the highest infection rate — four times higher than Italy (which deployed 5G in June 2019), and twenty-seven times higher than Croatia, which has not deployed 5G. In rural areas, the illness blamed on the coronavirus is slight to nonexistent.
In Europe, illness is highly correlated with 5G rollout. For example, Milan and other areas in Northern Italy have the densest 5G coverage, and northern Italy has twenty-two times as many coronavirus cases as Rome. Read More »