"But Augie, if repeated #COVID19 infections were harming brains, wouldn't we see evidence of that?" Thanks for asking. Yes, we would. Diminished cognition, memory impairment, attention deficits, and damage to executive functions would lead to multiple growing problems, such as:

A doubling of unruly air passengers compared to before COVID: https://www.faa.gov/unruly

1/3

@augieray

In 1/3, that sounds like correlation, rather than causation, without more evidence.

Now reading on...

Edit: yeah. Not seeing evidence of 'causation' there, which does not mean it isn't there.

@bytebro You're right--correlation does not mean causation. But when you see a half dozen signals that demonstrate a profound change occurring in 2020 when the pandemic started, correlation is nothing to ignore.

If you don't like these correlations, then perhaps you'd like to read the 500+ research studies that find COVID damages brains, cognition, and mental health. Would that be sufficient causation for you?

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/12VbMkvqUF9eSggJsdsFEjKs5x0ABxQJi5tvfzJIDd3U/edit?usp=sharing

COVID-19/SARS-CoV-2 Studies

Google Docs

@augieray

Sure, and I'm absolutely not 'having a go' here. Just that stuff can, sometimes, look like a cause. Perhaps it is.

For example, personally I've experienced huge 'lethargy' since 2020 COVID. Doesn't immediately imply that I have some post-viral CFS, although that as well is a possibility.

@bytebro You continue to argue over whether the correlations (nationally or in yourself) are causal. I just shared 500 thoroughly researched studies proving it isn't.

Given the speed of your response, you obviously didn't spend 10 second clicking the link and reading any research.

What's the point of having an opinion if you're going to ignore millions of dollars of research, hard science, and data that provides you an answer?

@augieray @bytebro
The other thing is, if it's not covid, that'd mean there's something else disabling people by the million... which would be even worse