Monday, October 17, 2022

The evolution of covid - computer game physics

 


This is a good time to bring back my earlier thoughts on the physics of evolution.  We have a perfect example here.  I catch every variant out there, and right now, all the neighbours are sick.  The good news is that they aren't dying.  The number one cure is to saturate yourself with my recipe for natural cannabis oil, and stop the inflammation from taking hold.

Back to my old posts about evolution physics.  The covid virus must be considered as an Iranian buzz-bomb, full of Chinese parts.  The new addictive computer games are all about designing a robot to fight.  In this case, the designer is blind chance and selection.  Throw a million bombs and some make it, and make more like that.

This is pure physics and nothing to do with the influencers of medicine and biology who are in charge.  It's all machines.  The original machine had all sorts of garbage required for animal transmission and that caused powerful allergic and inflammatory reactions.  People built up immunity and less reaction, or they died.  Masks were worn, and the Great Machine Designer of Evolution had to come up with a better design.

Our computer game designers may be the future of physics, but all the designing here is from random mutations and mistakes in reproduction.  The machine is successful if it penetrates and makes a million copies of itself.  In order to get through the surface defence of masks and sanitation, the machine had to shed the old animal proteins and become lighter, and more resistant.  This was easy to do.

All epidemics have gone through these oscillations.  Eventually, everything becomes the common cold.  The new machines don't 'get around' vaccines, but they make them irrelevant.  They reproduce upon first contact, fast and furious.  They are a smash and grab thief.  Get in, get out.  The immune system takes a day or two to come to the party.

Does any of this mean anything?  Who knows?  Certainly, we know that the power people are clueless, but what else is new?  I would just hope this all inspires a new generation of physics people.


No comments: