South Korea’s Daily Coronavirus Infection Number Sharply Drops
As I predicted South Korea’s daily coronavirus infection numbers have dropped sharply after being artificially increased due to Russian sailors and returned expats from Iraq testing positive earlier last week:

South Korea’s new coronavirus cases dropped to under 60 on Sunday, a day after the country recorded its highest figure in nearly four months due to a surge in infections among people arriving from abroad.
The country added 58 new cases, including 46 cases from abroad, bringing the total to 14,150, according to the Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (KCDC).
Yonhap
You can read more at the link, but I think this what the new normal in Korea is going to look like, of double digit daily coronavirus infections and the occasional cluster infections pushing the number into triple digits. In other words Korea has the virus well under control until a vaccine is developed.


This won’t be cured with a vaccine like Smallpox or Polio. This will be more like another influenza thing where they manage to guess right about once every five years…
Don’t worry about it unless you hate washing your hands, you are over 90, have a compromised immune system, have lung or heart trouble, have diabetes, or like to lick the inside of subway cars. Please note we have NOT seen dead bodies “stacked like cordwood” in homeless camps–or anywhere else outside senior centers in NY and NJ…
Also, remember that infections are NOT proportional to hospitalizations. And neither are proportional to deaths from the Chinese Death Pox (or whatever the media is saying we shouldn’t call it this week).
Numbers from Reuters: graphics dot reuters dot com/HEALTH-CORONAVIRUS-USA/0100B5K8423/index.html
Hope from a Yale Epidemiologist: pjmedia dot com/news-and-politics/matt-margolis/2020/07/26/hydroxychloroquine-is-the-key-to-defeating-covid-19-says-yale-epidemiologist-n703802
So be smart, stay healthy. And see your doctor if you get sick.
The Parasite people’s numbers still got to come in.
Plandemic