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[return to "The origin of Covid: Did people or nature open Pandora’s box?"]
1. thepas+Ig[view] [source] 2021-05-07 05:20:16
>>datafl+(OP)
Something which hasn't been able to be answered for me on this yet:

Where are all the bats infected with this virus? It it came from a bat, it would have had to be circulating in the bat population a LOT to mutate enough to jump to humans, right?

So...why not go find a bad, identify the parent virus, and close this whole thing out?

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2. bigpum+8i[view] [source] 2021-05-07 05:35:14
>>thepas+Ig
For SARS (2003) It took 3 years to find the intermediate host (civets). And 14 years (2017) to find the bat parent of the virus[1].

[1]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Severe_acute_respiratory_syndr...

Guess who found the bat host? Shi Zhengli of the very WIV in question.

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3. guesst+pj[view] [source] 2021-05-07 05:46:48
>>bigpum+8i
That's a bit confusing because the OP makes an opposite point: "The intermediary host species of SARS1 was identified within four months of the epidemic’s outbreak, and the host of MERS within nine months."
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4. zumina+bo[view] [source] 2021-05-07 06:32:39
>>guesst+pj
In 2003 it was merely suspected that covers were the intermediate. It wasn't confirmed until 2006. Read further down:

"In late 2006, scientists from the Chinese Centre for Disease Control and Prevention of Hong Kong University and the Guangzhou Centre for Disease Control and Prevention established a genetic link between the SARS coronavirus appearing in civets and humans, bearing out claims that the disease had jumped across species.[62]"

It goes on to state that the bat link was confirmed in 2017.

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