It's not. It has been starting to surface that the concept of germs causing disease originates from experiments without controls and outright scientific fraud. There's even a dude in Germany who is going to court over it, and actually another guy already went to court for it regarding the existence of the measles virus in particular and won: https://www.covid19reader.com/german-court-no-proof-that-measles-virus-exists/
Just because micro-organisms exist does not mean that they cause disease, and in fact it doesn't even suggest that they cause disease. It just means that they exist.
@Lady_Euromutt@ArdainianRight@xianc78@RustyCrab Why do elevated levels of bacteria, which can be cultured and viewed with even a child's toy microscope, exist within infected wounds? We have such a good understanding of bacterial structure and characteristics that we have specific dyes which will show specific types and help to determine treatment options. Hans Christian Gram developed the Gram Staining method in the 1800s, which is often actually the first thing used to quickly determine the type of bacteria before developing a treatment protocol. We know a lot about bacteria and how they propagate and how to treat them. We know some disease is caused by the things smaller than bacteria, because we can't see them but we can predictably replicate them through fluid transfers.
@xianc78@Lady_Euromutt@ArdainianRight@BowsacNoodle@RustyCrab Sadly, it existed long before Covid. It's a symptom of the "addicted to anything esoteric" mindset. But yeah, it's almost certainly had the dial turned up to 11 to discredit people with concerns about the Covid response.
@xianc78@Lady_Euromutt@ArdainianRight@BowsacNoodle@RustyCrab Same as the "vaccines have tracking microchips in them" thing, which was pretty obviously made to both discredit people who didn't want to get vaccinated and to distract from phones already being used to do exactly what they were claiming they needed microchipped vaccines to do.
Perhaps because those bacteria are there to help heal the wound, sort of like how firefighters probably aren't gonna be hanging out at a house that isn't on fire.
Not if those things that are smaller than bacteria are isolated from everything else.
@Lady_Euromutt@ArdainianRight@xianc78@RustyCrab We have the equivalent of firefighters already present in our bodies. White blood cell levels are substantially higher when there's an infection, sort of like calling in the reserves. An infected wound is often warm to the touch because of white blood cells raising the local temperature, much like how you often get a fever when ill. A blood draw from an infected wound will have dead and living bacteria and dead and living white blood cells. This is all observable on a cheap microscope. You can even test against your own blood from an area near a healing cut vs a healthy finger on the opposite hand to see for yourself. I've seen this first hand.