has allowed five million people to flee and spread themselves around the world
Re-transmit the chapter that I sent out on March 31, 2020.
The following is a continuation of the previous chapter.
Initially, one or two people were infected in Iran.
But that was enough for the virus.
That’s because the country had mechanisms to spread the infection.
Because of fanatic religion
Jam Karan’s mosque is just like FedEx’s hub airport in Memphis, Tennessee.
Luggage from all over the United States once gather here and then scatter around the United States.
Jam Karan’s mosque also attracts people from all over the country, pilgrimage, and return home.
There need only be one infected person here.
Only one infected person can spread the virus to as many as 500 cities and villages.
Initially, Iran should have closed this mosque.
However, it does not close but insists that a miracle will cure the disease. Most important to Iran is the fanatic religion, not the life of the people.
If humans interviewed the new coronavirus, the virus that wants to spread itself to the world would first appreciate the party secretary, Wuhan’s top, who would name him a great hero.
If the party secretary did not seal off the warning of the young doctor, it might have contained them within a 1km radius of Wuhan.
Virus’d be grateful to Xi Jinping.
His isolation of the entire city has allowed five million people to flee and spread themselves worldwide.
Similarly, it would like to thank the top religions in Iran.
Perhaps the virus wants to convert to Shiites.
It created a FedEx-like spread system in Iran.
Viruses are travelers who travel the world.
Then, one after another, the “truth” is uncovered.
It should be noted that there were two contradictory phenomena in Japan regarding this coronavirus case.
First, this happened during Japan’s large-scale tourism promotion campaign.
There is a special episode on this.
I like to dive into the sea for snorkeling and recently looked at the website to go to a resort in Panama.
Then, an image of Mt. Fuji appeared.
Japan’s campaign to attract tourism through social media is so powerful that it is so extensive that it encourages U.S. residents to search for places to go to the waters of Latin America to climb Mount Fuji.
About 30 years ago, when I traveled with my wife in Japan, there were no foreign tourists, and when I went to the countryside, I rarely met foreigners.
Japan was an “unknown country” for the world’s tourists.
When I said to others, “Japan is a great place full of tourism resources,” everyone laughed at the time.
Nobody believed it was true.
In other words, Japan has launched the “Tourism Revolution” in recent decades and has established itself as a “place to visit” worldwide.
This article continues.