Introduction About Site Map

XML
RSS 2 Feed RSS 2 Feed
Navigation

Main Page | Blog Index

Thursday, June 16th, 2022, 12:27 pm

COVID-19 in England: Sharpest Rise, Highest Levels of Infection and Hospitalisation in Over a Month

Recent: COVID-19 in England: Testing Down to New Lows, But Cases and Hospitalisations Increase, Even in Summertime (Worst COVID Summer So Far

Today:

COVID rise in summer

FOR those who think we’re past the peak, remember we’re in summertime now. This summer is worse (more coronavirus cases and fatalities) than the summer of 2021 and the summer of 2020. More and more boosters have, at this point, become like placebos. Research into the matter concluded so at the end of last year. It was discovered that a fourth jab hardly improved anything.

Is COVID-19 going away?

No!

Even the manipulated figures from our own government are unable to hide this anymore (despite record lows in testing, doctored definitions, optimistic miscounting, and media apathy).

Meanwhile, several of my colleagues got RE-infected (my mother had been RE-infected as well) and they take it quite hard. This is no seasonal flu, not even for those who got 3 or 4 jabs. This is different, but our government does not care anymore, due to business lobbying.

Go on then… go shopping, go on holidays. That money you spend goes back to the lobbyists.

Go out! Spread coronavirus!

Technical Notes About Comments

Comments may include corrections, additions, citations, expressions of consent or even disagreements. They should preferably remain on topic.

Moderation: All genuine comments will be added. If your comment does not appear immediately (a rarity), it awaits moderation as it contained a sensitive word or a URI.

Trackbacks: The URI to TrackBack this entry is:

https://schestowitz.com/Weblog/archives/2022/06/16/covid-rise-in-summer/trackback/

Syndication: RSS feed for comments on this post RSS 2

    See also: What are feeds?, Local Feeds

Comments format: Line and paragraph breaks are automatic, E-mail address never displayed, HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Back to top

Retrieval statistics: 21 queries taking a total of 0.272 seconds • Please report low bandwidth using the feedback form
Original styles created by Ian Main (all acknowledgements) • PHP scripts and styles later modified by Roy Schestowitz • Help yourself to a GPL'd copy
|— Proudly powered by W o r d P r e s s — based on a heavily-hacked version 1.2.1 (Mingus) installation —|